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Archive for April, 2022

The Possibility Alliance of Missouri: Sharing the Joy of Simple Living

This week’s inspiring video: The Possibility Alliance of Missouri: Sharing the Joy of Simple Living
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Video of the Week

Apr 14, 2022
The Possibility Alliance of Missouri: Sharing the Joy of Simple Living

The Possibility Alliance of Missouri: Sharing the Joy of Simple Living

Ever dream of living a simpler, more community-rooted lifestyle? Ever wondered if you & your friends really could grow your own food? Or build your own house? What would it look like to dedicate your pursuits and personal interests to match up with an intention of peace, respect for nature, long-term sustainability…and JOY? Meet several young people who made this dream their reality with a project called "The Possibility Alliance" – an amazing intentional farming community on a lush piece of land in northeastern Missouri.
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Four Poems Born from Stillness

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 14, 2022

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Four Poems Born from Stillness

In the stillness of the quiet, if we listen, we can hear the whisper of the heart giving strength to weakness, courage to fear, hope to despair.

– Howard Thurman –

Four Poems Born from Stillness

“When I was a child and my mother needed me to entertain myself, she would give me a poem
to memorize. So began a lifelong love affair with poetry. There are so many poets I love; and
new ones I discover each day. I’ve written poems for most of my adult life. They emerge
through deep stillness. Through paying attention to what is stirring in my heart, and what is
happening in the world around me. Most of what I write begins and ends in my journals. The
poems that have a life beyond my journals are mostly the ones that have shown up nearly fully
formed, as if a voice from beyond the veil is asking me to take dictation and then do whatever
tidying up I feel is invited. These poems have all been gifts for me, helping me to see something
new or in a new way. I pray they are gifts for you.” Episcopal priest, poet and peace-builder Rev. Charles Gibbs shares four of his poems here. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider spending some time in stillness today, and pay attention to what might want to emerge from that quiet space.

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When Love Breaks Your Heart

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April 13, 2022

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When Love Breaks Your Heart

Home is about finding my gravity.

– Florence Williams –

When Love Breaks Your Heart

When science journalist Florence William’s husband of 25 years unexpectedly asked for a divorce, William found herself feeling dazed and ill. “”Physically, I felt like my body had been plugged into a faulty electrical socket,” she writes. “In addition to weight loss, I’d stopped sleeping. I was getting sick: My pancreas wasn’t working right. It was hard to think straight.”To help understand what was happening to her, she turned away from self-help book advice–like “learn to love yourself first” or “beware of rebound relationships” — and looked to science instead. The result is her book, ‘Heartbreak’– part memoir, part exploration into the science and practice of healing from heartbreak–which offers hope and guidance to anyone who’s experienced heartbreak themselves. { read more }

Be The Change

What does home mean to you? For more inspiration, read an excerpt from “Heartbreak” here. { more }

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To Spring from the Hand

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April 12, 2022

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To Spring from the Hand

We know now, for certain, that we do not live in an inert universe. How to work with clay knowing this? How do we embody information so that a living material becomes a threshold for healing our deracination from our true, our wild natures?

– Paulus Berensohn –

To Spring from the Hand

At age 4 Paulus Berensohn asked his parents for dance lessons. “Boys in our family don’t dance,” was their response. That didn’t deter him. When his mother complained to a friend about his persistence, her friend exclaimed, “But Edith, to dance is to spring from the hand of God!” Berensohn would go on to study dance at Juilliard, but his life took another unexpected turn when he witnessed Karen Karnes, a famous potter of the time, at work. The play of breath, energy and movement in her practice of the craft led him to a deep revelation of his own aspiration. “What happened was a desire to de-professionalize my interest in art,” says Berensohn, “I was suddenly overwhelmed with a longing to learn that dance. The bridge for me at first wasn’t so much the clay itself and what one made of it, or so I thought, but the dance one dances with it.” Paulus pivoted his life towards pottery and a profound inner exploration. In his words, “I am very interested in the behavior of art rather than the achievement of art. I see all the arts as apprenticeships for the big art of our lives.” A new documentary, “To Spring From the Hand” pays tribute to this extraordinary potter and his enduring legacy. You can watch a few excerpts here. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the film and Paulus’ journey and work here. { more }

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You Can’t Get There From Here

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
You Can’t Get There From Here
by Pema Chodron

[Listen to Audio!]

2446.jpgWhen you sit down to meditate, you can bring to your practice the notion of the threefold purity: not being caught up with ideas about yourself, not being caught up with ideas about the practice, and not being caught up with ideas about the result. […]

To begin with, just give up any expectations of yourself. That’s a simple good instruction for how to meditate. Liberate yourself from any sort of idea of how you’re supposed to be, and just sit. Then remember this instruction occasionally during the meditation period, because you’re going to do a lot of talking to yourself about how right or how wrong you are. You’re going to spend a lot of time on center stage as the star of your own movie. You can spend a lot of time planning, worrying, and trying to get it all right.

Instead of holding on to a limited identity of yourself, do your best to observe yourself minute after minute. Observe what’s happening. You’ll keep freezing it by fixating on it, because you do have an idea of who you are; we all have an idea of who we are. But if you’ll just observe instead of fixating, the meditation itself will begin to shake that identity up a lot. You’ll begin to have doubt about being just one way; you’ll see that who you are and how you are keep changing. The first five minutes of the meditation period you’re depressed; the gong rings and you feel happy. In walking meditation you’re bored; you sit down on your cushion again and your back hurts. The gong rings and you realize you’ve been on a shopping spree in New York City. The changes go on and on. Observe them with no expectation of how you’re supposed to be, or who you are. Just sit there and see what happens. […]

The second guideline of the threefold purity is “No meditation.” Don’t make your meditation a project or a special event; don’t bring into it an attitude of great seriousness and solemnity. For that matter, have no concept of your meditation at all, no religiosity. Don’t hold any notions about it, not even, “Oh, meditation is meant to be completely natural; you just sit down, relax the mind, and be cool.”

We have a lot of ideas about what’s good meditation, what’s bad meditation. The notion here is that we sit down with no expectations of ourselves and no expectations of what the practice is. We simply follow the instructions, without imagining that meditation is supposed to be this way or that way. We can continuously let go of any solid views on the meditator or the meditation, any caught-upness. That’s the whole training—to let go and observe without judgment, without bias. We can just let go. […]

The third quality of threefold purity is “No result.” Give up all hope of fruition. Practice without hope of anything beyond right now. That’s all there is; there’s no later. Being on the spot is the only way any transformation of your being occurs. If you practice with hope and fear, if you practice in order to become what you think you should be—even a calmer, more loving, more compassionate person—you’re just setting yourself up for disappointment. You can’t get there from here. Being fully here for each moment—that’s the point, from now until you die.

About the Author: Pema Chodron is a popular American-born teacher of Buddhism. She serves as resident teacher at Gampo Abbey Monastery in Nova Scotia. For more, visit pemachodronfoundation.org. Above is excerpted from this article.

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You Can’t Get There From Here
What do you understand by “you can’t get there from here?” Can you share a personal story of a time you let go of all expectations of yourself, your meditation, and results from your meditation? What helps you be fully there in each moment?
Naren Kini wrote: “Yoga Chitta Vritti Nirodha” is the sutra of sage Pathanjali – Essentially introducing the concept of becoming a witness, arriving at a state of choicelessness and overcoming the fluctuations in the m…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: As I am reading this artcle written by Pema Chodran I remember the words of wisdom by J Krishnamurti ” choiceless awareness” and “Be Here Now” by Ramdass. Our mind has a tendency of wandering from pas…
David Doane wrote: You can’t get there from here means to me that you can’t get there because there is no there. There exists only in imagination so you can only get to there in your imagination. There is here once yo…
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Kindness Stories

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Ukrainian Teens’ Voices from the Middle of War

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April 11, 2022

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Ukrainian Teens' Voices from the Middle of War

All over the world, young men and young women will always dream dreams.

– Philip Seymour Hoffman –

Ukrainian Teens’ Voices from the Middle of War

“A colleague from Kyiv, Ukraine, whom Ill call N.M., sent me brief essays her students wrote on what they would do when the war ends. As both a scholar and a novelist, I knew that these voices, which expressed a beautifully straightforward and pure yearning for the simplest things that are lost in war, needed to be heard by the world.” { read more }

Be The Change

Today, ask a young person in your life what their dream is.

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Centering: In Pottery, Poetry, and the Person

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April 10, 2022

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Centering: In Pottery, Poetry, and the Person

I have found that Centering, like clay,…bears the future within it.

– M.C. Richards –

Centering: In Pottery, Poetry, and the Person

“Governed by her conviction that “poets are not the only poets” and that artists don’t leave their art at the studio, M.C. Richards explores the poetry of personhood through the metaphor of centering, drawn from the craftsmanship of pottery –a potter brings the clay to the center of the wheel, then begins the process of giving the amorphous spinning mass the desired shape.” Maria Popova shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this 1983 essay by M.C. Richards on Centering. { more }

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Being Simply Beautiful

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April 9, 2022

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Being Simply Beautiful

Living simply is not about living in poverty or self-inflicted deprivation. It’s about living an examined life where one has determined what is truly important and enough… and then just let go of all the rest.

– Duane Elgin –

Being Simply Beautiful

We are surrounded by the stuff that we think is so valuable and important, but take it all away and what is left? The real you is left. Or at least the journey to the real you without all the stuff that you think defines you. In this video, Theo Du Plessis of South Africa, had a “Damascus moment” that opened him up to the only question he asks himself now before acquiring possessions or pursuing experiences: is it REAL? If it is real then it is worth having in his life. Theo’s life is one of connection with himself and nature, and a force he calls Goodness which gives him hope and community in the spirit of Ubuntu – I am me because of others. { read more }

Be The Change

Have you had a Damascus moment? A moment when you saw the light and knew you needed to let go of possessions or change something for a new life to begin? Pause and reflect on such a moment and consider how simplifying could allow growth.

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Giving Your Heart Over to Real Change

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April 8, 2022

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Giving Your Heart Over to Real Change

For us there is only the trying. The rest is not our business.

– T.S. Eliot –

Giving Your Heart Over to Real Change

“In this podcast, Sharon Salzberg joins Sounds Trues founder, Tami Simon, to discuss her recent book, Real Change: Mindfulness to Heal Ourselves and the World–and how you can begin to bring the core of your being into your work, your community, and your life. Sharon and Tami also discuss how contemplative practices can open the heart, agency and reclaiming your power to effect change, the empowering symbol of the Statue of Liberty, transforming anger into courage, determining the next step you can take when you’re uncertain, patience, faith as the act of giving over your heart, generosity and how you end up with more through giving, moving from grief to resilience, suffering and the First Noble Truth, the role of joy on the path, living by the truth of interconnection, caring to know as the first step in making a difference, and a sneak preview of Sharons forthcoming book, Real Life.” { read more }

Be The Change

Check out the Real Change podcast series hosted by Sharon Salzburg, and featuring conversations with artists, activists and others on the themes of her latest book.

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The Anatomy of Anxiety

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April 7, 2022

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The Anatomy of Anxiety

Anxiety is the verb, the vibe, the texture, the pH of our age.

– Ellen Vora –

The Anatomy of Anxiety

“Anxiety is “that hypervigilant feeling that escalates swiftly to a sense of catastrophe and doom,” writes Ellen Vora, M.D., in her new book, The Anatomy of Anxiety: Understanding and Overcoming the Bodys Fear Response. Anxiety is “as grounded in the body as it is in the mind.” Too often, she argues, we turn to only mental solutions for what is in part a physical problem.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this article by Karla McLaren on, “Welcoming the Gifts of Anxiety.” { more }

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