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Archive for February, 2022

The Really Terrible Orchestra

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 13, 2022

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The Really Terrible Orchestra

In life and art it’s better to be an enthusiastic amateur than a jaded professional.

– Robert Genn –

The Really Terrible Orchestra

“Some years ago, a group of frustrated people in Scotland decided that the pleasure of playing in an orchestra should not be limited to those who are good enough to do so, but should be available to the rankest of amateurs. So we founded the Really Terrible Orchestra, an inclusive orchestra for those who really want to play, but who cannot do so very well. Or cannot do so at all, in some cases. My own playing set the standard.” Beloved writer Alexander McCall Smith is a founding member of the ‘Really Terrible Orchestra.” He shares more about this delightful initiative and its unexpected success here. { read more }

Be The Change

Do something in the spirit of an enthusiastic amateur today – and every day.

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The Power of Placebos

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February 12, 2022

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The Power of Placebos

To call what happens ‘the placebo effect’ is just to give a name to something we don’t understand

– Jon Kabat-Zinn –

The Power of Placebos

“Since the 1800s, the word placebo has been used to refer to a fake treatment, meaning one that does not contain any active, physical substance. Today, placebos play a crucial role in medical studies in which some participants are given the treatment containing the active ingredients of the medicine, and others are given a placebo. These types of studies help tell researchers which medicines are effective, and how effective they are. Surprisingly, however, in some areas of medicine, placebos themselves provide patients with clinical improvement.” { read more }

Be The Change

If the placebo effect has you intrigued, check out this list of 10 other phenomena that science can’t quite explain. { more }

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Hargila: A Story of Love & Conservation

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February 11, 2022

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Hargila: A Story of Love & Conservation

One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.

– William Shakespeare –

Hargila: A Story of Love & Conservation

In an age of massive global extinctions, a remarkable wildlife biologist in Indias Northeast shows the life-saving impact of simple, direct local action. When Dr. Purnima Devi Barman decided to dedicate herself to the survival of the Hargila, Assam’s resident greater adjutant crane, the local population in Guwahati was a mere 20 nests. The scruffy, prehistoric bird was detested and routinely killed in Assam, which is home to most of the world’s endangered Hargila population. Her women’s conservation movement, called the Hargila Army, has grown that population to more than 200 nests. Dr. Barman’s work is beautifully captured by photographer Gerrit Vyn and videographer Andy Johnson of the Cornell University Ornithology Lab. The film reveals the awkward beauty of these birds, which may have evolved as far back as 15 million years ago, as well as their present peril. { read more }

Be The Change

What conservation need pulls at your heart that you can devote yourself to in your neighborhood or in the world? Begin now!

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Hargila

This week’s inspiring video: Hargila
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Feb 10, 2022
Hargila

Hargila

In an age of massive global extinctions, a remarkable wildlife biologist in India’s Northeast shows the life-saving impact of simple, direct local action. When Dr. Purnima Devi Barman decided to dedicate herself to the survival of the Hargila, Assam’s resident greater adjutant crane, the local population in Guwahati was a mere 20 nests. The scruffy, prehistoric bird was detested and routinely killed in Assam, which is home to most of the world’s endangered Hargila population. Her women’s conversation movement, called the Hargila Army, has grown that population to more than 200 nests. Dr. Barman’s work is beautifully captured by photographer Gerrit Vyn and videographer Andy Johnson of the Cornell University Ornithology Lab. The film reveals the awkward beauty of these birds, which may have evolved as far back as 15 million years ago, as well as their present peril.
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Trauma, the Body and 2021

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February 10, 2022

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Trauma, the Body and 2021

Sometimes carrying on, just carrying on, is the superhuman achievement.

– Albert Camus –

Trauma, the Body and 2021

“When Krista Tippett interviewed the psychiatrist and trauma specialist Bessel van der Kolk for the first time, his book The Body Keeps the Score was about to be published. She described him then as “an innovator in treating the effects of overwhelming experiences on people and society.” She catches up with him in 2021 — as we are living through one vast overwhelming experience after the other. And The Body Keeps the Score is now one of the most widely read books in the pandemic world. His perspective is utterly unique and very practically helpful — on what’s been happening in our bodies and our brains, and how that relationship can become severed and restored.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this article on ‘How to Hardwire Resilience into the Brain.’ { more }

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The Gurukul System of Training: An Indigenous Pedagogy

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February 9, 2022

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The Gurukul System of Training: An Indigenous Pedagogy

Change is the end result of all true learning.

– Leo Buscaglia –

The Gurukul System of Training: An Indigenous Pedagogy

“It all began with a simple yet deep dissatisfaction when I was 20. On the first day of my first job, I spurned the possibility of how my time would be spent. With a clear intuition that I did not want to engage in commercial work whose end was just financial transactions; an inward journey had unknowingly begun. The discomfort, which was actually a yearning for something more than the perceivable life around me, continued. This search led me to a Place and a Person which turned and churned my life around. I was all of 23 years of age, with barely any life experiences, but with a gut feeling of what I did not want from my life; when I serendipitously landed at a Gurukul (home of the master) in the midst of a jungle, in a beautiful valley in Maharashtra, India. I went there with an intention to train in classical Indian dance. Little did I know that the intent to train in an art form would churn a whirlwind of changes to my life.” Dancer Miti Desai shares more about her experiences in the Gurukul system of training. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Miti’s journey and work in this interview. { more }

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Alicia Doyle: Fighting Chance

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February 8, 2022

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Alicia Doyle: Fighting Chance

The man who views the world at 50 the same as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life.

– Muhammad Ali –

Alicia Doyle: Fighting Chance

“My boxing career doesn’t have the typical fairy tale ending. I quit after my first and only professional match. I never won a world title or a championship belt in the pros. The crescendo of my story doesn’t end with my arm raised victorious in the ring. My wins came after I left the roped-off square, when I had a chance to contemplate the lessons I learned in the fight game. These lessons, which transcended into epiphanies, are my greatest reward.” Alicia Doyle is an award-winning journalist who discovered boxing at age 28 in the late 1990s when she went on assignment at a boxing gym for at-risk youth called Kid Gloves. During her boxing career, Alicia won two Golden Gloves championship titles and earned three wins by knockout–and her pro debut at age 30 in the year 2000 was named The California Female Fight of the Year. What follows is an excerpt from her award-winning book,”Fighting Chance.” { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Alicia Doyle! More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Seeking To Understand

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Seeking To Understand
by Timber Hawkeye

[Listen to Audio!]

2419.jpgMy friend Julie and her husband argue about the “right” way to do laundry: he loads the washing machine with dirty clothes, adds a cup of detergent on top, turns on the machine, and walks away. Julie, on the other hand, is a firm believer in starting the water flow, pouring-in the soap, and then adding the dirty clothes to the mix. They both want the same end result: clean clothes, but they go about it differently because his priority is minimal effort and to be done as quickly as possible, while Julie’s priority is to make sure the soap fully dissolves in the water before adding the clothes.

It reminds me of working in the kitchen at the monastery, where two members of the kitchen staff were asked to peel and cut ten pounds of carrots into small matchstick-sized strips. It took them about four hours, which drove the efficiency expert in me crazy. “Why not use the food processor?” I asked the head of the kitchen, “They would be done in 10 minutes!” And he told me the goal wasn’t to get the job done as quickly as possible, it was to offer the students four hours of mindfulness practice in the kitchen.

You see, what I failed to do was contemplate the WHY behind his instructions. The food processor would have chopped those carrots in minutes, that’s true, but the kitchen manager prioritized a meditative practice over efficiency and expediency (at a Buddhist monastery no less… Go figure!) Why do we always assume we know what’s best? I took myself to the meditation hall and sat with my ego until it agreed to play nice.

We sure do excel at judging what people do and how they do it, but we fail miserably at trying to understand the WHY behind their actions. When we share a similar goal with someone but their priorities differ from our own, their actions seem backward to us, counter-intuitive, silly, and even “wrong.”

Think about it: if you keep getting irritated by someone who refuses to change, it means you also refuse to change, right? Saint Francis of Assisi knew the importance of seeking to understand rather than to be understood. And since we can’t wrap our heads around other people’s logic by using our own, let’s not criticize what we don’t even try to understand, because once we get it, there would be nothing left to criticize.

Go ahead and contemplate the WHY behind your own actions, and you might find you have that in common with everyone around you.

Inner peace is the first step we can take to live in peace with others, so let’s take that step together.

About the Author: Timber Hawkeye is an author and a mindfulness coach.

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Seeking To Understand
How do you relate to the exhortation of not criticizing what we don’t even try to understand? Can you share a personal story of a time you avoided the temptation to criticize and instead tried to understand? What helps you remain committed to understanding the why behind your own actions and those of others?
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Seeking to understand is how I’ve always tried to enter every encounter and it has opened up so many meaningful learning experiences and broadened my perspective. How? Seek to enter conversation as…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: How to build, sustain, and strengen the bridge of relationships between two people with the same goal but different or opposite approaches? This is a big challenge for sustaining and flourishing inte…
David Doane wrote: I support not criticizing what we don’t understand, which means we would criticize very little. When I pay attention, watch, listen, ask questions, am open, and learn, I gain at least some small amou…
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The Cloud Appreciation Society

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February 7, 2022

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The Cloud Appreciation Society

Dark clouds become heaven’s flowers when kissed by light.

– Rabindranath Tagore –

The Cloud Appreciation Society

“Gavin Pretor-Pinney is the founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society (CAS), which aims to foster understanding and appreciation of clouds, and has over 50,000 members worldwide from 120 different countries. He has also written several books, among them The Cloudspotter’s Guide, The Cloud Collector’s Handbook and, most recently, A Cloud A Day.” In this interview he discusses his fascination with clouds and offers tips for cloud appreciators. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, watch Gavin Pretor-Pinney’s TED talk, “Cloudy with a Chance of Joy.” { more }

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Practicing Rehumanization as We Move Into Uncertainty

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February 6, 2022

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Practicing Rehumanization as We Move Into Uncertainty

The moral imagination believes and acts on the basis that the unexpected is possible. It operates with the view that the creative act is always within human potential, but creativity requires moving beyond the parameters of what is visible, what already exists, or what is taken as given.

– John Paul Lederach –

Practicing Rehumanization as We Move Into Uncertainty

“This is a powerful practice that was shared with me by John Paul Lederach. John Paul is a sociologist and specialist in conflict transformation. He has served as a peacebuilder in Nepal, Somalia, Northern Ireland, Colombia, and Nicaragua around issues related to direct violence and systemic oppression. He has dedicated his life to exploring and implementing alternatives to dehumanization and violence through processes that rekindle empathy, respect, understanding, and mutual identification. He calls this practice rehumanization.” Roshi Joan Halifax shares more in this post. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Lederach’s pioneering work in conflict resolution through this interview, “The Art of Peace.” { more }

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