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Archive for April, 2022

Experiments with Wild Grace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 6, 2022

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Experiments with Wild Grace

A poem is where the flint of soul
strikes the stone of trauma
and makes a spark.

– Chelan Harkin –

Experiments with Wild Grace

“I had been in a place of acute hopelessness and inner anguish in which I felt so profoundly alone in the world and disconnected from even the possibility of authentic connection. Somehow amidst all that I found the wherewithal to listen to an inner prompting that urged me to try an experiment. This experiment was to allow myself to write a ‘bad poem’ every day for a month. Writing poetry had been an important practice of mine for several years. I felt its potential to unlock something essential in myself but without knowing how to use this powerful, mysterious key my process had felt strained and tense. I felt very insecure about sharing my work and would typically take about a month to stitch a poem together and longer to patch together the confidence to share it with others. The terms of the experiment were to give myself an hour to write this bad poem, and at the end of that hour, whatever I’d come up with I would share. My desperate hope was that somehow this permission to essentially mess it all up would nudge me out of the paralysis of perfectionism I’d been stuck in for so long. Perhaps some genuine expression in my soul could loosen itself from the foot trap of right and wrong to gain more expressive mobility.” Chelan Harkin’s poetry invites, “the fumbling, suffering parts of our nature and our divinity to meet for tea in the heart, to have a great laugh, and share a big hug.” In this essay she shares her experiments with ‘wild grace.’ { read more }

Be The Change

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

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The Two-Spirit Diplomat Who Mediated Two Worlds

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April 5, 2022

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The Two-Spirit Diplomat Who Mediated Two Worlds

Affirm everyone and everything.
Freely extend your goodwill and virtue in every direction, regardless of circumstances.
Embrace all things as part of the Harmonious Oneness, and then you will begin to perceive it.

– Lao Tzu –

The Two-Spirit Diplomat Who Mediated Two Worlds

“In Washington, D.C., a visiting celebrity of 1885 was from the Zuni tribe of the southwestern United States. Described as a priestess and a princess, the young woman named WeWha was 6 feet tall, with a self-possessed and dignified demeanor. WeWha had come to Washington on a diplomatic mission to represent the Zuni people, and her activities were reported in the newspapers. She demonstrated traditional weaving techniques, attended high society gatherings, and met the president. What was not described in the reports was that WeWha was a gender-fluid person, a lhamana, respected and acknowledged as such by her tribe.” What follows is an edited excerpt from Gregory D. Smithers the book, Reclaiming Two-Spirits: Sexuality, Spiritual Renewal & Sovereignty in Native America. { read more }

Be The Change

If inspired to, practice freely extending your goodwill and virtue in every direction this week.

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Say Wow

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Say Wow
by Chelan Harkin

[Listen to Audio!]

2549.jpgEach day before our surroundings
become flat with familiarity
and the shapes of our lives click into place,
dimensionless and average as Tetris cubes,

before hunger knocks from our bellies
like a cantankerous old man
and the duties of the day stack up like dishes
and the architecture of our basic needs
commissions all thought
to construct the 4-door sedan of safety,

before gravity clings to our skin
like a cumbersome parasite
and the colored dust of dreams
sweeps itself obscure in the vacuum of reason,

each morning before we wrestle the world
and our hearts into the shape of our brains,
look around and say, “Wow!”
Feed yourself fire.
Scoop up the day entire
like a planet-sized bouquet of marvel
sent by the Universe directly into your arms
and say, “Wow!”

Break yourself down
into the basic components of primitive awe
and let the crescendo of each moment
carbonate every capillary
and say, “Wow!”

Yes, before our poems become calloused
with revision
let them shriek off the page of spontaneity

and before our metaphors get too regular,
let the sun stay
a conflagration of homing pigeons
that fights through fire
each day to find us.

About the Author: Chelan Harkin is a mystic poet. 🙂

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Say Wow
How do you relate to the notion of rekindling wonder every day? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to see your familiar world with new eyes of wonder? How have you reconciled wonder with rationality?
Naren Kini wrote: This one has Rumi touch to it. I felt it all thru the read. âIn your light I learn how to love. In your beauty, how to make poems. You dance inside my chest where no-one sees you, but sometimes I do…
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Nature offers many wonderful gifts in our hands everyday and we say”Wow!” I get up early in the morning watching the sun rising and I say “Wow!” I hear the birds chirping and feeding their little babi…
David Doane wrote: Chelan Harkin’s poem is beautiful and wise. I think it’s important and probably essential to allow and rekindle wonder every day to be alive beyond being biological robots programmed and conditioned …
Share/Read Your Reflections
Awakin Circles:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

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Some Good News

• Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention
• Finding Joy in the Unknown
• For the 8-Year-Old In You

Video of the Week

• Writing a Better Story – Carrie Newcomer

Kindness Stories

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

About
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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On our website, you can view 17+ year archive of these readings. For broader context, visit our umbrella organization: ServiceSpace.org.

The Untold Story (+ 4 Circles, 1 Pod)

Incubator of compassionate action.

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The Untold Story
Join Upcoming Pods arrow_btn_white.png
love_handoff.gif The untold story of 2021: people became kinder. World Happiness Report notes that global rates of helping strangers, volunteering, and donating are nearly 25% above pre-pandemic levels. The dominant response to suffering isn’t selfishness — it’s compassion. The worst of times often brings out the best in us.
During last month’s global gathering, James O’Dea’s compelling reflections on resilience included this story of compassion:

I will leave you with an image a number of us saw live on the news. It was a moment when a Russian soldier in his twenties was captured by the Ukrainians and brought to the town square. The people surrounded him. And then one of the women in the crowd pushed forward and offered him soup. And then another woman stepped forward and offered a cell phone, and said, “Here, why don’t you call home?” And the soldier started to cry. He wept. Every day now, I go to that image of the woman and the soldier — like a sacred icon — to call forth that energy within me.

Building on the prayer, four more circles have emerged from some of the speakers. Moreover, the wide response to our ‘Death and Dying’ series has inspired another pod on Living and Dying. All that and more below.

FOUR CIRCLES
In just a couple days, 26 musicians and speakers came together for a soul-stirring global gathering of sacred songs, stories and prayers for peace in Ukraine. “Will you keep the embers warm, when my fire’s all but gone?” “In resiliency, tears are allowed to flow.” “Walls can’t hold us in, fear can’t keep us down, Love will rise again.” With compelling reflections on resilience, prayers from different faiths and wide-ranging practices from bowing to whirling, indeed, a profound sanctuary of the heart emerged. And it has now rippled into a few more circles:

  • ssp_624b2f9e41970.jpg Apr 8th: Bowing for Peace It is only when we bow that our heart is higher than our hands and head. Join two Buddhist monks, Jin Chuan and Jin Wei, for a guided bowing session dedicated to peace in Ukraine and Russia. Learn more/RSVP
  • ReasonableInconsequentialAcaciarat.webp Apr 9th: Music for Community Guitarist Kim Capps and rapper Nimo Patel are coming together to hold space for singers of all stripes: How might music open our hearts, heal our spirits and transform us in today’s turbulent times? How do we help each other sing our song? Learn more/RSVP
  • 364.jpg Apr 23rd: Power of Place Aboriginal people say that when the land is sick, the people are sick. How, then, might we heal places? Myron Eshowsky, a shamanic healer with paternal roots in Ukraine and maternal roots in Russia, has done extensive study on trans-generational trauma and will invite a collective conversation on place. Learn more/RSVP
  • large.jpg Apr 23rd: Mandalas for Peace: After WW2, Yuka’s grandfather initiated a global “May Peace Prevail on Earth” prayer and a unique art practice, that has been practiced for decades. Join Yuka for a collective prayer for Earth, including an introduction to the practice of mandala art. Learn more/RSVP

rz_ssp_6229aee1724fa.png

LIVING AND DYING POD
death.gif Following our Death and Dying series of talks — across multi-faith perspectives to first-hand encounters of embracing impermanence — a common refrain continued to surface: the symbiotic connection between the art of dying and the art of living.

That has inspired fifteen volunteers to put together a unique week-long pod: Living and Dying! For each day of the pod, participants receive a prompt, with ‘head’ readings, a ‘hands’ practice, and ‘heart’ reflections. With podmates from 15+ countries already, everyone’s reflections and comments interspersed with virtual calls, promises to create an uncommon field of group wisdom.

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THANK YOU …
Last month, a corporate CEO in Abu Dhabi completed the 4-week Laddership course. On the closing call he shared:

zencircle.gif From the very first day, a sense of kindness, a kind of serenity was immediately palpable in our shared space. For me, though, what was most interesting was that there were no expectations. Whatsoever. Zero expectation. Now, I understand that the whole premise of the Pod is service, but when volunteers spend so much time, and so much passion, on offering something, there can still be a gentle nudge, or a subtle push to want something from you. But, it was absolutely zero. That emptiness at the center made the whole process about us, the podmates. That alone, and the environment it created, compelled me. It made me surrender to the process in a way that I haven’t actually done before in anything else in my life. I learned things that can only be learned by experience.

Thank you, all, for holding emptiness at the center.
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Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 4, 2022

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Stolen Focus: Why You Can't Pay Attention

We live in a culture that is constantly amping us up with stress and stimulation.

– Johann Hari –

Stolen Focus: Why You Can’t Pay Attention

“I think there’s a more interesting definition of attention that’s been developed really in the last five years in this new attentional environment that comes from a man named James Williams Dr. James Williams who was at the heart of Google for many years, was horrified by what they were doing to our attention, quit, and became, I would argue, the most important philosopher of attention in the world today. And he’s developed this kind of typology of attention. He argues there are three layers of attention — I would actually argue theres a fourth one as well — that I think help us to think about this question in a more interesting way.” Johann Hari, author of “Stolen Focus:Why You Can’t Pay Attention,” shares more in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about the book and listen to some audio clips from it here. { more }

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The Missing Piece

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 3, 2022

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The Missing Piece

There is a great difference between comprehending the knowledge of things and tasting the hidden life of them.

– Isaac Penington –

The Missing Piece

“Unlike most beginning meditation practices, which provide a simple object of focus for the attention (like following the breath or reciting a mantra), Centering Prayer provides no such focal point; it merely teaches the practitioner how to release the attention promptly when it gets tangled up in a thought. Echoing the teaching of The Cloud of Unknowing (which turned out to be Centering Prayer’s principal source), a “thought” is defined as anything that brings attention to a focal point– “as the eye of an archer is upon the target he is shooting at,” the anonymous medieval author illustrates. His instruction is to immediately release the object of attention and return to the “cloud of unknowing,” his metaphor for a more diffuse, objectless awareness which he sees as the foundational prerequisite for what he calls “the work of contemplation.”” Cynthia Bourgealt shares more in this essay. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this piece by Cynthia Bourgealt, “the Way of the Heart.” { more }

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Fighting Fire with Fire

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 2, 2022

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Fighting Fire with Fire

What you lose in the fire, you will find in the ashes.

– Creole Proverb –

Fighting Fire with Fire

“Victor Steffensen talks to Rosemary Rule about his pioneering work reintroducing indigenous cultural burning practices in Australia. ‘Climate change means the land is telling us something. It is not all doom and gloom. If we look at it the right way, it is an opportunity for change.'” { read more }

Be The Change

Read an excerpt from Steffensen’s book, “Fire Country,” here. { more }

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Writing a Better Story

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 1, 2022

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Writing a Better Story

We tell ourselves stories in order to live.

– Joan Didion –

Writing a Better Story

There comes a time when we choose what stories we tell ourselves personally or as a community. “So let us all honor the stories that gave us courage and personal grounding, the stories that brought us here, the finest ones the ancestors carried for us until we could carry them for ourselves. Let us acknowledge the stories that its time to finally release, to name the dragon so that the dragon can fall and transform into winged wisdom and insight. Let us build a new collective story of healing and the rise of a new power on earth, based in love, supported by love and extended in love.” Listen to Carrie Newcomer sing us out of stories that no longer serve us into claiming stories that are truer and more life giving. { read more }

Be The Change

Think of a narrative thread in your own life that could use a better storyline. Take today in your hand, and like a new pen on a clean page, begin writing your way to a happy ending.

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