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Archive for 2021

7 Principles of Gardening

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 19, 2021

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7 Principles of Gardening

When tillage begins, other arts will follow. The farmers, therefore, are the founders of civilization.

– Daniel Webster –

7 Principles of Gardening

“My first principle is to learn gardening from the wilderness outside the garden gate. As I work to keep the links alive between the wild land and the cultivated row, I get my clearest gardening instruction from listening to the voice of the watershed that surrounds our garden. I know that January is the time to prune our Japanese Elephant Heart plum in the garden, but just when in January is always linked to noticing when the first white blossoms appear on the wild plum tree. I mark it on my calendar and sharpen my red pruning shears, because in two weeks the Elephant Heart plum will flower in turn. In honor of wildness inside and outside the garden gate, every spring I leave a random corner of our garden untended. I let it go into a neglected tangle. Throughout the growing season I pass by this fallow spit of wildness and it feeds my somewhat fierce soul.” Buddhist teacher and organic gardening mentor, Wendy Johnson shares more in the following excerpt from her exquisite book, “Gardening at the Dragon’s Gate.” { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Wendy Johnson and her work here. { more }

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Water is Life – Music Video

This week’s inspiring video: Water is Life – Music Video
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Video of the Week

Nov 18, 2021
Water is Life - Music Video

Water is Life – Music Video

With depleted ground water sources, unclean rivers and streams, and dwindling springs, we are all having to get back to basics and honor just how precious water is. We cannot take her for granted anymore. This song/music video performed by Lyla June is based on a conversation with Mescalero Apache elder Oliver R Enjady in southern New Mexico, who gives us this message on how to re-understand water.
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The Power of Inside Out Congruency

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 18, 2021

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The Power of Inside Out Congruency

The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.

– Joseph Campbell –

The Power of Inside Out Congruency

Change your pants. Change your life. Change your pants. Save your life. Find out why being intentional about showing up in the world congruent with “who you are” in this world can do both. In this moving and highly personal talk, Stasia shares how her daughter taught her the importance of radically embracing who you are and who you want to be. She now helps other women fully embrace both in order to “dress for confidence and joy”. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Stasia’s approach to Inside-Out Congruency. { more }

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Presto

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 17, 2021

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Presto

How many jiffies in an hour, how many soons in an afternoon? How many fasts does it take to make a slow?

– Amy Leach –

Presto

“Early on there was no word for ‘groundhog.’ Neither were there groundhogs, or grandmothers, or event coordinators. There were events but they were uncoordinated like the Tunguska Event. There was nothing, but no word for it. In some ways it must have been nice, all that wordlessness, because sometimes now you meet somebody and all you can think is, Please stop talking. Our planet has become so much wordier than the other planets, although there are respites if you hang out with eagles or angels. Eagles never explain anything, and angels are no more voluble than they are visible: visibility is not their shtick.” The inimitable Amy Leach shares more in this inventive, and gloriously whimsical essay from her new book, “The Everybody Ensemble,” a celebration of “our oddball and interconnected world.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more delight, check out this essay by Leach, “Sail On, My Little Honey Bee.” { more }

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There Are Songs

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November 16, 2021

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There Are Songs

Life seems to go on without effort when I am filled with music.

– George Eliot –

There Are Songs

“Scientists are now affirming what many indigenous peoples and mystics have known for a long time: the world is made of sound. Everything around and within us is comprised of vibrating stuff. As a songwriter, I am always listening for the songs that are already here. My job is to catch these whispered suggestions and bring them into form.” Barbara McAfee is a singer/songwriter, voice coach, and cross-pollinator traveling among the worlds of work, music, personal development, and community.She has been “midwifing” voices for over 25 years for people from all walks of life and is the author of Full Voice: The Art and Practice of Vocal Presence. In this beautiful piece she shares the deeper story behind one of her exquisite music videos, “There Are Songs.” You can read it and watch the video here.
{ read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Barbara McAfee. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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If It Can Suffer, It’s Real

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
If It Can Suffer, It’s Real
by Yuval Noah Harari

[Listen to Audio!]

2524.jpgMany people believe that truth conveys power. Unfortunately, this is just a comforting myth. In fact, truth and power have a far more complicated relationship, because in human society, power means two very different things.

On the one hand, power means having the ability to manipulate objective realities: to hunt animals, to construct bridges, to cure diseases, to build atom bombs. This kind of power is closely tied to truth. If you believe a false physical theory, you won’t be able to build an atom bomb. On the other hand, power also means having the ability to manipulate human beliefs, thereby getting lots of people to cooperate effectively. Building atom bombs requires not just a good understanding of physics, but also the coordinated labor of millions of humans. Planet Earth was conquered by Homo sapiens rather than by chimpanzees or elephants, because we are the only mammals that can cooperate in very large numbers. And large-scale cooperation depends on believing common stories. But these stories need not be true. You can unite millions of people by making them believe in completely fictional stories about God, about race or about economics.

When it comes to uniting people around a common story, fiction actually enjoys three inherent advantages over the truth. First, whereas the truth is universal, fictions tend to be local. Consequently if we want to distinguish our tribe from foreigners, a fictional story will serve as a far better identity marker than a true story. The second huge advantage of fiction over truth has to do with the handicap principle, which says that reliable signals must be costly to the signaler. Otherwise, they can easily be faked by cheaters. If political loyalty is signaled by believing a true story, anyone can fake it. But believing ridiculous and outlandish stories exacts greater cost, and is therefore a better signal of loyalty. If you believe your leader only when he or she tells the truth, what does that prove? In contrast, if you believe your leader even when he or she builds castles in the air, that’s loyalty! Third, and most important, the truth is often painful and disturbing. Hence if you stick to unalloyed reality, few people will follow you. An American presidential candidate who tells the American public the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about American history has a 100 percent guarantee of losing the elections. The same goes for candidates in all other countries. How many Israelis, Italians or Indians can stomach the unblemished truth about their nations? An uncompromising adherence to the truth is an admirable spiritual practice, but it is not a winning political strategy.

[…]

For me, maybe the most important question, both as a scientist and as a person, is how to distinguish between fiction and reality. I’m not suggesting that everything is fiction, but that it’s just very difficult for human beings to tell the difference between fiction and reality. It has become more and more difficult as history progressed because the fictions that we have created — nations and gods and money and corporations — now control the world. Even just to think, "Oh, these are all just fictional entities," feels quite difficult.

Yet, there are several tests to tell the difference between fiction and reality. The simplest one is the test of suffering. If it can suffer, it’s real. If it can’t suffer, it’s not real. A nation cannot suffer. That’s very, very clear. Even if a nation loses a war, we say, "Germany suffered a defeat in the First World War," it’s a metaphor. Germany cannot suffer. Germany has no mind. Germany has no consciousness. Germans can suffer, yes, but Germany cannot. Similarly, when a bank goes bust, the bank cannot suffer. When the dollar loses its value, the dollar doesn’t suffer. People can suffer. Animals can suffer. This is real.

If one really wants to see reality, I would go through the door of suffering. If we can really understand what suffering is, we will receive the key to understand what reality is.

About the Author: Yuval Noah Harari is a historian, meditator, and author of multiple best-selling books including Sapiens and Home Deus. Excerpt above is edited based on various sources, including his Ted Dialogue.

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If It Can Suffer, It’s Real
What comes up for you when applying the reality test: ‘if it can suffer, it’s real’ to any ideology? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to apply this test when making an important decision? What helps you avoid getting impervious to the suffering of others?
xiaoshan pan wrote: That rock does not suffer, therefor it’s not real. My door does not suffer, therefore it’s not real. Sky does not suffer, therefore it’s not real. Hum?

It is not a test to see if somethin…

Jagdish P Dave wrote: I believe in telling the truth and living the truth. I believe truth liberates us from the prison of manipulations. But it is not easy to tell the truth and live by the truth. It causes pain and suffe…
David Doane wrote: In my experience, truth does foster personal power. Truth isn’t necessary to manipulate anything. I believe earth was conquered by homo sapiens because we are foolish, not because we can cooperate…
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Some Good News

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Wise Hope in Social Activism

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November 15, 2021

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Wise Hope in Social Activism

Hope just means another world might be possible, not promise, not guaranteed. Hope calls for action; action is impossible without hope.

– Rebecca Solnit –

Wise Hope in Social Activism

“It’s when we discern courageously, and at the same time realize we don’t know what will happen that wise hope comes alive. In the midst of improbability and possibility is where the imperative to act rises up. Wise hope is not seeing things unrealistically but rather seeing things as they are, including the truth of impermanence… as well as the truth of suffering–both its existence and the possibility of its transformation, for better or for worse.” Roshi Joan Halifax has dedicated her life to showing up and serving in a slew of seemingly hopeless contexts. She shares more in this thought-provoking essay about the difference between wise hope and optimism — and why it matters. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Roshi Joan Halifax’s work here. { more }

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The Heritage of Afghanistan

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 14, 2021

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The Heritage of Afghanistan

If you hear the language of the stars
Overnight you’ll hear the secrets of the world.
Silence of the night will sing [a] hundred songs
In your ears, the stories of the skies.

– Khalilullah Khalili –

The Heritage of Afghanistan

“Robert Abdul Hayy Darr, who since 1985, as director of the Afghan Cultural Assistance Foundation, has been helping Afghan refugees adapt to life in new homelands. He is also a long-time lover of Afghani-Persian culture who has translated several works of Persian poetry into English, and a follower of the Sufi tradition with a deep knowledge of the works of Ibn Arabi. In this conversation with Jane Clark and Richard Twinch, he gives us some rare insight into the underlying forces at play in Afghanistan.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this selection of poetry from Afghanistan. { more }

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How Does Your Worldview Affect Well-Being?

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November 13, 2021

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How Does Your Worldview Affect Well-Being?

I choose my thoughts with care. I constantly have new insights and new ways of looking at my world. I am willing to change and grow.

– Louise Hay –

How Does Your Worldview Affect Well-Being?

“Our worldview, our beliefs about what reality is, our views on what (if anything) has value and meaning, what Aldous Huxley called an individual’s philosophy of life, contributes more significantly than we often think to our mental well-being. From pessimism to existentialism, might reading certain philosophical ideas actually lead to depression? The connection is not so simple. Philosophy can both depress and inspire us. But, at the end of the day, our worldview matters.” Sam Woolfe delves deeper into the psychology of philosophy in this piece. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read Rebecca Solnit on “How to Survive a Disaster,” in which she explores the link between belief systems and how we show up for one another in times of crisis.

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A Better Place: Playing for Change

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 12, 2021

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A Better Place: Playing for Change

Music can name the unnameable and communicate the unknowable.

– Leonard Bernstein –

A Better Place: Playing for Change

Musicians from around the world come together in song to speak up for equality and social justice. Whether they are performing from backyards, city street corners, by the oceanside, or in a park, they all give voice to the rights of people everywhere to live in freedom, dignity and peace. “If you feel it, through the music, we can make this world a better place.” { read more }

Be The Change

Do you have a go-to song that always lifts you up? If so, share it with someone special in your life this week. If not, share the song in this video with that someone special.

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