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Archive for 2021

Solitude: The Seedbed of Self-Discovery

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 4, 2021

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Solitude: The Seedbed of Self-Discovery

In solitude we give passionate attention to our lives, to our memories, to the details around us.

– Virginia Woolf –

Solitude: The Seedbed of Self-Discovery

“In her Journal of a Solitude (public library), May Sarton records and reflects on her interior life in the course of one year, her sixtieth, with remarkable candor and courage. Out of these twelve private months arises the eternity of the human experience with its varied universal capacities for astonishment and sorrow, hollowing despair and creative vitality.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration read, “Solitude is Where Community Begins,” by Henri Nouwen. { more }

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I Want to Play

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 3, 2021

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I Want to Play

Play is the mediator of the invisible and visible.

– Dora M. Kalff –

I Want to Play

“I work hard. Sometimes too hard. I even work hard at play. Perhaps you suffer the same affliction. Call it ‘passion’ or ‘devotion’ or ‘loving what you do,’ but it is possible to have too much of a good thing.” Writer Phyllis Cole-Dai describes a writing workshop that she gave to herself as a gift. It resulted in a lovely poem, beginning with this delightful assertion: “I want to play…” Read more about her experience at the workshop, and the full poem here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read Diane Ackerman on “Deep Play.” { more }

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Krista Tippett on Hope

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Wim Hof: The Cold as a Noble Force

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 2, 2021

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Wim Hof: The Cold as a Noble Force

Power is within us all. Anything can be overcome by going within.

– Wim Hof –

Wim Hof: The Cold as a Noble Force

“Wim Hof is an athlete and extremophile daredevil nicknamed The Iceman for his feats of withstanding extreme weather conditions. The holder of more than 20 Guinness World Records, Wim attributes his endurance to specific meditation and breathing techniques. In this intriguing episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon speaks with Wim about the Wim Hof Method of exercises, mindfulness techniques, and cold exposure, and how this regimen can shift our mental perspective as well as physical resilience. Wim describes the ways his practice dovetails with ancient Tibetan Buddhist inner fire meditation and how it alters body chemistry. Finally, Wim describes coldness as a noble force, asserting that by testing our physical limits we also gain a better understanding of the boundless capacities of the human spirit.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, watch this TED talk on “What Your Breath Can Reveal About Your Health.” { more }

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Secret Kinship With The Other

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Secret Kinship With The Other
by Richard Powers

[Listen to Audio!]

2521.jpgPerhaps genes aren’t the only thing that we’ve been shaped to try and save. Maybe altruism evolves to recognize affinity, joint purpose, shared values. Maybe nothing elicits a sense of relatedness more deeply than feeling our dependence on other living things. A predator depends entirely on its prey; that, too, is a kind of blood bond. […]

I am a novelist. All day long, I try to inhabit the hearts and souls of people who have never existed in the hopes that existing people might find, in these made-up lives, fictive kin who resemble their friends and provisional families in that realm of consensual fiction that we call the real world. In my fiction, kinship forms through conflict. Through the play of dramatic tension between seemingly inimical values, my characters come to recognize the keys to themselves that others hold.

Secret kinship with the Other—even with the ultimate enemy—is the lifeblood of fiction. (Surely you had to suspect, with a name like Darth Vader, a coefficient of genetic relationship hiding somewhere in the closet?) Leslie Fiedler once made the case that a great number of the canonical works of American literature have involved a plot in which a white person and a nonwhite person, thrown together in emergency, develop mutual dependence. Fiction challenges the barrier between “us” and “them.” It puts relations through the wringer, mangles them, and leaves the idea of family flattened but so much larger.

We’re now in the middle of a family emergency that will test all family ties. Only kin, and lots of it, from every corner of creation will help us much in the terrible years to come. We will need tales of forgiveness and surprise recollection, tales in which the humans and the nonhumans each hold half a locket. Only stories will help us to rejoin human to humility to humus, through their shared root. (The root that we’re looking for here is dhghem: Earth.) Kinship is the recognition of shared fate and intersecting purposes. It is the discovery that the more I give to you, the more I have. Natural selection has launched all separate organisms on a single, vast experiment, and kinship glimpses the multitudes contained in every individual organism. It knows how everything that gives deepest purpose and meaning to any life is being made and nurtured by other creatures.

Can love, in its unaccountable weirdness, hope to overcome a culture of individualism built on denying all our millions of kinships and dependencies? That is our central drama now. It’s the future’s one inescapable story, and we are the characters who will steer that conflict to its denouement.

To find the stories that we need, we would do well to look to the kinship of trees. Trees signal one another through the air, sharing an immune system that can stretch across miles. They trade sugars and secondary metabolites underground, through fungal intermediaries, sustaining one another even across the species barrier. But maybe such communal existence shouldn’t be all that surprising. After all, everything in an ecosystem is in mutual give-and-take with everything else around it. For every act of competition out there, there are several acts of cooperation. In the Buddha’s words: A tree is a wondrous thing that shelters, feeds, and protects all living things. It even offers shade to the axe-men who destroy it. Incidentally, the same man once said: The self is a house on fire. Get out while you can.

About the Author: Richard Powers is the author of twelve novels. His novel The Overstory won the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction. Excerpt above from his article in Emergence Magazine.

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Secret Kinship With The Other
How do you relate to the notion that we are all in secret kinship with each other? Can you share a personal story of a time you discovered a secret kinship with someone? What helps you discover secret kinship in difficult relationships?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: We are social beings. Our life is connected with each other. We are all in secret kinship with each other. However, we may not always recognize it. It is like an underground stream which nourishes the…
David Doane wrote: I fully believe that we are in kinship with each other. We are totally interrelated and interdependent. To me, our kinship is a secret only to whomever is unaware of it, perhaps avoiding or denying th…
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Some Good News

• Wendell Berry on Hope & Place
• How Nature Helps Us Heal
• Trauma: The Invisible Epidemic

Video of the Week

• A School for Refugees, by Refugees

Kindness Stories

Global call with Gunther Weil!
592.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

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Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

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Ecosystems & the Practice of Love

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 1, 2021

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Ecosystems & the Practice of Love

In biology, every ‘I’ has been enabled by a ‘we.’

– Andreas Weber –

Ecosystems & the Practice of Love

“One of the things that I have tried to do in my work is to understand our reality as a ‘commons’ — to see the whole of reality as a shared process of mutual transformation and productivity. This term ‘”commons” has been coined to express the idea of shared culture and resources being accessible to all members of a community. I use the term because being alive means that we are always participating in community, and continually reinventing ourselves as part of a vast — immeasurable — network of relationships.” Andreas Weber, author of “Matter and Desire” shares more in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Weber’s work at Cultures of Enlivenment. { more }

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Wendell Berry on Hope & Place

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 31, 2021

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Wendell Berry on Hope & Place

And we pray, not
for new earth or heaven, but to be
quiet in heart, and in eye
clear. What we need is here.

– Wendell Berry –

Wendell Berry on Hope & Place

“It is hard to have hope. It is harder as you grow old,
for hope must not depend on feeling good
and there is the dream of loneliness at absolute midnight.
You also have withdrawn belief in the present reality
of the future, which surely will surprise us,
and hope is harder when it cannot come by prediction
any more than by wishing. But stop dithering.
The young ask the old to hope. What will you tell them?
Tell them at least what you say to yourself.”
Wendell Berry explores what it means to belong to a place in this powerful poem. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration read Wendell Berry on how to be a poet and a complete human being. { more }

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Universal Human in Training

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 30, 2021

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Universal Human in Training

Creating authentic power means aligning your personality with your soul.

– Gary Zukav –

Universal Human in Training

“We are in the midst of an unprecedented transformation in human consciousness. Unprecedented. Our perception is expanding beyond the limitations of the five senses. Together, they form a single system whose object of detection is physical reality. Now we are acquiring another sensory system: we are becoming multisensory. We are transiting from a five sensory species to a multisensory species, and this is happening very fast. From an evolutionary point of view, it will happen within three or so generations. Our evolution is no longer tied to the evolution of physical matter that’s taken 40 thousand years. This evolution is happening in you.” Gary Zukav, best-selling author of multiple books, including “Seat of the Soul,” and, “Universal Human,” shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special call with Gary Zukav this weekend. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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A School for Refugees — By Refugees

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 29, 2021

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A School for Refugees -- By Refugees

A refugee is someone who survived and who can create the future.

– Amela Koluder –

A School for Refugees — By Refugees

Refugees who have fled their native lands in search of a place to live safely and to be treated as human beings often find themselves stuck for several years in an environment which can be unwelcoming and even hostile. A group of refugees in Indonesia established a school so that their children could learn basic education while being offered a chance at normalcy through social interaction. Children and adults are helped to overcome language barriers and prepare for a future in which they can find a sense of belonging and accomplishment. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider how you can advocate for refugees in your community by aligning with local efforts to welcome refugees and asylum seekers.

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A School for Refugees, by Refugees

This week’s inspiring video: A School for Refugees, by Refugees
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Oct 28, 2021
A School for Refugees, by Refugees

A School for Refugees, by Refugees

Refugees who have fled their native lands in search of a place to live safely and to be treated as human beings often find themselves stuck for several years in an environment which can be unwelcoming and even hostile. A group of refugees in Indonesia established a school so that their children could learn basic education while being offered a chance at normalcy through social interaction. Children and adults are helped to overcome language barriers and prepare for a future in which they can find a sense of belonging and accomplishment.
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The Do-It-Ourselves Revolution

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 28, 2021

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The Do-It-Ourselves Revolution

We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.

– J.K. Rowling –

The Do-It-Ourselves Revolution

“In these trying times, ordinary people are taking matters in their own hands in extraordinary ways, confronting global problems collectively — and locally. They’re saving lives by leaving uplifting notes in areas with high suicide rates, teaching people the importance of wild plants on the sidewalks, cleaning up roads while getting fit and connecting with others, and transforming abandoned spaces into bee sanctuaries. Indeed, these everyday people are creating a true do-it-ourselves revolution.” { read more }

Be The Change

What is one way you can imagine changing your corner of the world for the better? Take a step towards making that happen today.

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