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Archive for February, 2022

The Revolutionary Power of Diverse Thought

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 28, 2022

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The Revolutionary Power of Diverse Thought

I learned silence from the talkative and tolerance from the intolerant and kindness from the unkind.

– Kahlil Gibran –

The Revolutionary Power of Diverse Thought

Elif Shafak is a Turkish author, columnist and speaker who writes stories of women, minorities, immigrants, subcultures, and youth in both Turkish and English. In this Ted Talk, she exposes the unprecedented challenges facing the world today, the attraction to and fallacy of following demagogues, and how these same problems will show us the way forward: the indispensability of democracy, the need for global solidarity, the beauty of cosmopolitanism and diversity, the portability of homeland, and the telling of stories that evoke the taste of freedom { read more }

Be The Change

Today, make an effort to learn from someone or something outside of your usual orbit. For those interested, Udemy is offering a free, hour-long introductory course on “Ukraine: History, Culture and Identities,” you can check it out here. { more }

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You Are Not Alone Across Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 27, 2022

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You Are Not Alone Across Time

Catharsis is about cleansing and healing at one and the same time — healing memories and attitudes, healing the spirit and the heart.

– Desmond Tutu –

You Are Not Alone Across Time

“Remember, Bryan Doerries likes to say in both physical and virtual gatherings, you are not alone in this room and you are not alone across time. With his public health project, Theater of War, he is activating an old alchemy for our young century. Ancient stories, and texts that have stood the test of time, can be portals to honest and dignified grappling with present wounds and longings and callings that we arent able to muster in our official places now. Its an embodiment of the good Greek word catharsis releasing both insight and emotions that have had no place to go, and creating an energizing relief. And it is now unfolding in the amphitheater of Zoom that Sophocles could not have imagined.” More in this On Being interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the work of Theater of War in addressing pressing social and public health issues here. { more }

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Bending the Arc

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February 26, 2022

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Bending the Arc

For me, an area of moral clarity is: you’re in front of someone who’s suffering and you have the tools at your disposal to alleviate that suffering or even eradicate it, and you act.

– Paul Farmer –

Bending the Arc

“The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world.” Paul Farmer, the renowned Harvard physician and medical anthropologist, died this week at age 62. While the world mourns the loss of this towering figure in global health, it recollects his incandescent legacy of profound solidarity, fierce commitment and catalytic friendships across borders in delivering high-quality health care to some of the most devastated regions of the world. This trailer for the 2017 film, “Bending the Arc,” gives a glimpse of the the work of Farmer and a fledgling group of unstoppable health advocates taking on a seemingly impossible mission: global health equity, and the birth of a revolutionary organization, Partners In Health. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this powerful essay,”My first and last memories of Dr. Paul Farmer,” by Dr. Sriram Shamasunder. { more }

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Ukraine’s Kseniya Simonova: Weaving Stories with Light & Sand

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February 25, 2022

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Ukraine's Kseniya Simonova: Weaving Stories with Light & Sand

May peace prevail on Earth.

– Masahisa Goi –

Ukraine’s Kseniya Simonova: Weaving Stories with Light & Sand

In 2009, 24-year-old Kseniya Simonova stunned judges and audience alike on “Ukraine’s Got Talent”, by creating mesmerizing pictures on an illuminated sand table. The series of haunting images that bloomed beneath her swift-moving fingers depicted Germany’s invasion of Ukraine during World War II, and its impact on the lives of ordinary citizens. Today, as the world prays for the safety and well-being of the many millions of lives in that region, Kseniya’s performance art is a profound reminder of the long and terrible shadow of war. Watch her demonstration here. { read more }

Be The Change

May peace prevail on Earth. Learn more about the background behind Masahisa Goi’s prayer. { more }

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Remembering Paul Farmer: Bending the Arc – Trailer

This week’s inspiring video: Remembering Paul Farmer: Bending the Arc – Trailer
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Video of the Week

Feb 24, 2022
Remembering Paul Farmer: Bending the Arc - Trailer

Remembering Paul Farmer: Bending the Arc – Trailer

"The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world." Paul Farmer, the renowned Harvard physician and medical anthropologist, died this week at age 62. While the world mourns the loss of this towering figure in global health, it recollects his incandescent legacy of profound solidarity, fierce commitment and catalytic friendships across borders in delivering high-quality health care to some of the most devastated regions of the world. This trailer for the 2017 film, "Bending the Arc," gives a glimpse of the the work of Farmer and a fledgling group of unstoppable health advocates taking on a seemingly impossible mission: global health equity, and the birth of a revolutionary organization, Partners In Health.
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An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather

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February 24, 2022

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An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather

We are the accumulation of the dreams of generations

– Stephen Robert Kuta –

An Unusual Gift From My Grandfather

“Often, when he came to visit, my grandfather would bring me a present. These were never the sorts of things that other people brought, dolls and books and stuffed animals… Once he brought me a little paper cup. I looked inside it expecting something special. It was full of dirt. I was not allowed to play with dirt. Disappointed, I told him this. He smiled at me fondly. Turning, he picked up the little teapot from my dolls’ tea set and took me to the kitchen where he filled it with water.” Rachel Naomi Remen shares more in this tender real-life teaching from her grandfather. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the gifts, lessons, and stories that you have received from your own ancestors. For more inspiration, join a virtual circle this Sunday with genealogy researcher, Natalie Zett, whose new book traces a powerful story from her own family history. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Designing & Supporting Peer-Driven Change

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February 23, 2022

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Designing & Supporting Peer-Driven Change

We need to stop our myopic focus on where people are struggling and instead invest in the initiatives people are taking to get ahead.

– Mauricio Lim Miller –

Designing & Supporting Peer-Driven Change

“In a novel approach to addressing poverty, Mauricio Lim Miller shifts ownership and priority-setting to low-income working families through an approach that enables families to self-organize, support each other as they gain fiscal independence and confidence, and move into roles as active consumers of social services who deliver feedback, not passive beneficiaries.” More in this profile piece. { read more }

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For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call this Saturday with Mauricio Lim Miller. Details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Paul Farmer: A Life Dedicated to Healing the World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 22, 2022

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Paul Farmer: A Life Dedicated to Healing the World

As long as poverty and inequality persist, as long as people are wounded and imprisoned and despised, we humans will need accompaniment–practical, spiritual, intellectual.

– Paul Farmer –

Paul Farmer: A Life Dedicated to Healing the World

Paul Farmer the renowned Harvard physician, and medical anthropologist who famously said, “The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world,” and who dedicated his career to righting that wrong by delivering high-quality health care to some of the most devastated regions of the world, died this week at age 62. While the world mourns the loss of this towering figure in global health, it recollects his incandescent legacy, a legacy of profound solidarity, fierce commitment and catalytic friendships across borders. More in this piece. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the work of Partners in Health, the organization that Paul Farmer co-founded here. { more }

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Cognitive Bypassing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Cognitive Bypassing
by Russell Wilson

[Listen to Audio!]

2528.jpgI am a physician, neuroscientist, and anxiety expert. Many people I speak with have anxiety because they are trapped in their heads. I’d like to introduce a term here that I have not heard before (at least not in my field of medicine and psychology).

I call it the “Cognitive Bypass.”

I see a lot of [people] instruct others to restructure their thoughts. It’s seen as a way to avoid painful emotions and even heal old traumas and anxieties. We live in a neck-up society; we avoid being in our bodies unless our bodies feel good. Uncomfortable emotions are compulsively explained away or distracted from our minds.

There is no shortage of self-help gurus and coaches out there to help you “process” your traumas by creating new thought processes around them (the positive psychology movement is a good example). “Just think better, and you’ll feel better,” they say. While this may help in the short-term, it may well be counterproductive in the long-term.

Have you ever tried to think differently than how your body feels? You can do it for a while, but in general, it’s like Sisyphus endlessly pushing a rock up an incline.

There is nothing wrong with using cognitive strategies as part of your emotional well-being. However, when I see [people feeling] that every negative emotion must be restructured or explained cognitively, I cringe. Compulsively adding cognition to emotion ensures your traumas can never fully heal. The uncomfortable truth is that there is a component of painful emotions that simply must be felt, as hard as that may be to hear.

I know this will sound odd from a medical doctor, but healing trauma has more to do with embracing the feeling in the body than holding on to the thoughts of the mind. Human beings are being driven into their heads as a way of avoiding emotion, especially grief.

Grief is constantly pushed aside in our society. So much of our psychopathology is due to unresolved grief over the losses we’ve sustained, especially in childhood. It is not so much grief over deaths of loved ones (although that is certainly a significant cause) as grief over a parental divorce, childhood abuse, neglect, or other great losses.

There are plenty of therapists who will help you with those losses, but how many let you sit in it without the need to compulsively add an explanation? What if not compulsively explaining painful emotions is a critical component in allowing the space to metabolize that emotion? Maybe then the trauma underneath it can resolve and ultimately heal.

“Spiritual Bypassing” was a term coined in the 1980s by Buddhist teacher and psychotherapist John Welwood. He explains it as a “Tendency to use spiritual ideas and practices to sidestep or avoid facing unresolved emotional issues, psychological wounds, and unfinished developmental tasks.”

Cognitive Bypassing is the practice of avoiding feelings by detouring into cognitive ideas or beliefs. Cognitive bypassing operates under the assumption that every trauma and emotion can be fixed cognitively or restructuring the way you think. Again, I have no issue with cognitive restructuring, but I most certainly have an issue if every single time an emotion is felt, it must be “worked” or cognitively manipulated.

There are many people (not trained in trauma) who believe they can help others heal by changing cognition. And I believe this is happening more and more with the sheer number of life coaches being turned out each year. Coaches (especially those who are not familiar with emotional trauma) can do more harm than good. “Coaching” people out of their trauma and uncomfortable emotions is a dangerous game.

Some emotions need to be left alone and felt.

Sure, understanding the source of your grief and trauma is important, but there must be some time to simply sit with it and feel it without automatically and compulsively adding thought to it.

About the Author: Excerpt from here.

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Cognitive Bypassing
How do you relate to the notion of cognitive bypassing? Can you share a personal story of a time you sat with grief and metabolized it? What helps you avoid the temptation of cognitively manipulating emotion?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: As humans we all go through painful emotions like fear, worry, anxietty, grief, anger, and sadness. Sometimes we divert our mind, avoid facing and going through painful emotins. We use a variety of …
David Doane wrote: I agree with Russell Wilson that helpers (and all of us) do way too much cognitive bypassing. We do too much living in and trying to heal from our head. We need less cognition to bypass feelings, an…
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Three Serendipities …

Incubator of compassionate action.

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Serendipity.
Dear ServiceSpace Friends,

We wanted to inform you of three inspiring events this week. And like most things ServiceSpace, each of them landed on our calendars by the sheer virtue of serendipity.

Thursday: Heart-Talk with Lynne Twist
Lynne-Twist-headshot-cropped-239x300.png During a Pod call last month, Nina opened a routine breakout session with a story about encountering Lynne Twist; in that same breakout, Jen mentioned how she encountered ServiceSpace 20 years ago at Lynne’s home. We sent that video clip to Lynne with the subject, “Serendipity calling.” And here we are, a conversation with Lynne about her remarkable life that took her from Mother Teresa to Bucky Fuller to shamans of Ecuador, while raising hundreds of millions for many service projects. Details/RSVP here.
Thursday: Evening with Carrie Newcomer
ssp_6213ddd7df0d9.gif In the recent 21-day New Story Pod, many referenced Carrie Newcomer’s songs as their inspiration for reaching a new plateau of consciousness. “What if she joined our closing call as a small act of kindness?” Given her 19 albums, along with an Emmy and Grammy, we figured it was unlikely. Except she came. And wowed us — and herself — by a collective sense of kinship. “What if she hosted a Mystical Music Pod one day?” In just two weeks, that day arrived, with 400 other podmates. And now, the Pod has invited Carrie to do an informal evening of sharing — and we’re opening it up to all of you too. Details/RSVP here.
Saturday: On Death and Dying with Ven. Lekshe
624.jpg Chirag and Puni lost their 8-year-old daughter in a tragic accident. To commemorate her life, they invited Nipun to speak. It was unclear how many would be interested in the topic, but we were overwhelmed by the response. That led our Awakin Talks team to put up a series (and pod) around death and dying, and this week’s speaker is one of the most renowned speakers on this challenging topic. A Buddhist nun for 40+ years, Ven. Karma Lekshe Tsomo is a pioneering presence in many arenas of service and monasticism. She became a nun after walking into a cafe one day and discovering a small group of Tibetan monks talking about death. “I never left,” she jokes. Details/RSVP here.
Our hearts fill with awe when we experience emergence that can’t neatly tuck itself into an algorithm of causation. With so many people in various concurrent pods, an inexplicable collective field continues to build on itself. It’s hard to draw a throughline between Claudia’s story and 11-year-old Reva’s stunning volunteer application, but that doesn’t prevent us from gratitude. Or just yesterday, Dr. Michael Penn floored us with his uncommon insights on power while being moved to tears remembering a few of his stories.
Grateful.
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