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Archive for June, 2022

How Animals See Themselves

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June 23, 2022

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How Animals See Themselves

Every animal has its own intelligence and sensitivities. They’re all lovely, worthwhile, and deserving of our respect.

– Portia de Rossi –

How Animals See Themselves

“In 1909, the biologist Jakob von Uexkll noted that every animal exists in its own unique perceptual world a smorgasbord of sights, smells, sounds and textures that it can sense but that other species might not. These stimuli defined what von Uexkll called the Umwelt an animals bespoke sliver of reality. A ticks Umwelt is limited to the touch of hair, the odor that emanates from skin and the heat of warm blood. A humans Umwelt is far wider but doesnt include the electric fields that sharks and platypuses are privy to, the infrared radiation that rattlesnakes and vampire bats track or the ultraviolet light that most sighted animals can see. The Umwelt concept is one of the most profound and beautiful in biology. It tells us that the all-encompassing nature of our subjective experience is an illusion, and that we sense just a fraction of what there is to sense.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out, “The Intelligence in All Kinds of Life,” an interview with Robin Wall Kimmerer. { more }

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Grieving Beneath the Stars: Mourners as Spiritual Teachers

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 22, 2022

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Grieving Beneath the Stars: Mourners as Spiritual Teachers

She was no longer wrestling with the grief, but could sit down with It as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her thoughts.

– George Eliot –

Grieving Beneath the Stars: Mourners as Spiritual Teachers

“When I heard my dad was dead, there was a breaking–a shattering inside of me that felt so violent I could almost hear it. I woke up to a knock on my front door in the middle of the night, and sat up in bed, sure something was wrong. It was my older brother. He said he had bad news. “Really bad.” And then the words left his mouth: “Dad had a heart attack, and unfortunately, he passed away.” Like a bone breaking: Sharp pain, dizziness, disbelief. I couldn’t catch my breath for hours.” Chloe Zelkha is a leader in the COVID Grief Network, an initiative offering free grief support and community connection to young adults grieving the illness or death of someone with COVID-19. She shares more from her personal experience in this moving piece. { read more }

Be The Change

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

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Stonehenge: A Summer Solstice Experience

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June 21, 2022

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Stonehenge: A Summer Solstice Experience

(…)I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.

– F. Scott Fitzgerald –

Stonehenge: A Summer Solstice Experience

“I wanted to watch the sunrise on the summer solstice from Stonehenge, ancient druid temple, aligned to the solstice, keeper of mysterious magic yet unknown to us. A picture of Stonehenge had been my desktop screensaver more than 15 years ago, and walking amongst these stones had been a long cherished dream of mine. So when I realized that I could be there on this special day when they allow people to enter the circle and hold and touch the stones, I was overjoyed. But it doesn’t help when ten thousand other people have the same idea.” Shagun Rastogi shares more in this lovely piece. { read more }

Be The Change

As you step into summer, take a moment to reflect on the intentions you are holding for the second half of this year.

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Pay Attention To A Sense Of Space

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Pay Attention To A Sense Of Space
by Rob Burbea

[Listen to Audio!]

2469.jpgWhenever there is any grasping or aversion towards something, indeed whenever any hindrances are present, the mind is, to some degree or other, in a contracted state. It has, so to speak, been sucked in to some perception, some object of consciousness, has shrunk and tightened around it. Generally we experience this contraction in the mind as an unpleasant state of suffering. We can notice this contraction, this constriction of the mental space, in relation to both internal and external phenomena. It will be evident, for instance, with regard to some unpleasant sensation in the body, like tiredness, or a difficult emotion, such as fear. And we may also detect it sometimes in social situations, if a certain relationship is charged.

The clinging mind contracts around some experience, and then, because the mind space is shrunken, the object of that grasping or aversion takes up proportionately more of the space in the mind. It thus seems somehow larger, and also more solid – its size and seeming solidity both corresponding to the degree of contraction in the mind. With the object appearing then bigger and more solid, and the experience of contraction being painful to some degree, the mind without insight in that moment will usually react unskilfully. It will unconsciously try to escape the situation by increasing the grasping or aversion, in a way that only keeps it stuck or even makes things worse. For unfortunately this further grasping keeps the mind space contracted, or contracts it even more. This makes the issue, the perception, still larger and more solid, setting up a vicious circle in which the mind is trapped.

5veLOCrYepbaGFUHLtgDer-XY8WwZIT30zQQ2UcgSySS43ogVt3SY_tveFV9gJEIx9pFful9suiJ8NSNmFGFCZrFvQ8PN-st4rIfvT-LGwnpia90Hc0s98rVxNyBjDl2IIxpdhXs It can be very helpful, when the awareness is unwisely sucked in in this way, to pay attention deliberately to a sense of space. This can be done in a number of ways: by opening the awareness to the totality of sounds that are coming and going; by opening up the field of vision; by intentionally noticing the space around and between objects, and the space in any room or situation. Noticing space opens up the perception, and can begin to dissolve the vicious circle. Even attention to external physical space can help to open and ease the constriction of the mind, and can create a sense of space around an internal experience such as bodily discomfort or a difficult emotion.

Space is not emptiness, and emptiness is not a space of any kind. Rather, our investigation here is simply into how the mind gives solidity to experience and fabricates sufferings through the very ways we relate to, see, and conceive of things. We gradually learn to untangle the tangle of suffering. And again, like all deliberate shifts in the way of looking, the more we do it, the more accessible it becomes. The more we practice inclining the mind to notice space, the easier it becomes to actually open up some space in the perception and experience some relief.

About the Author: Rob Burbea (1965-2020) was a medication teacher and author. Excerpt above from the book ‘Seeing That Frees‘.

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Pay Attention To A Sense Of Space
How do you relate to the notion that the object of grasping takes up space proportional to the level of grasping? Can you share a personal story of a time your noticing space opened up perception and helped you dissolve the vicious cycle of false solidity? What helps you incline the mind to notice space?
+Jagdish+P+Dave wrote: Freedom from grasping or averting our desire is a challenge for all of us. We all have desires. There is nothing wrong in having desires.How do we relate to our desires determines our well-being. Un…
David Doane wrote: I agree that the object of grasping takes up space in the mind proportional to the level of intensity of the grasping. I learned that the object of grasping is never as important or solid as I think …
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Some Good News

• What Fear Can Teach Us
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• Down By the Riverside – Playing for Change

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Listening and the Crisis of Attention

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June 20, 2022

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Listening and the Crisis of Attention

If we’re not paying attention through our own senses, we have disengaged from the primary mode in which every creature since the origin of life has connected to its environment.

– David George Haskell –

Listening and the Crisis of Attention

Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee talks with biologist and author David G. Haskell about his latest book, Sounds Wild and Broken: a journey through deep time that traces the evolution of sound. Their conversation touches on the legacies of kinship that are present when we listen, and how deep experiences of beauty can serve as a moral guide for the future. { read more }

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Consider spending at least a few minutes each day this week practicing deep listening to the world around and within you.

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The Art of Soil

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June 19, 2022

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The Art of Soil

The soil is the great connector of lives, the source and destination of all.

– Wendell Berry –

The Art of Soil

“Karen Vaughan is a scientist, paint maker, educator, mom, and artist. The soils she studies and learns from and with during her day job as an associate professor of pedology (the study of soil formation) have woven their way into her journey as an artist. Vaughan creates nature-inspired, soil-based watercolor paints that she uses to create art that communicates environmental challenges, conditions, and hopes of today. Using pigments gathered from nature and the laboratory, she creates work that interprets geologic time as expressed in the soil, sediment, coral, ice and other stratigraphic records.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this piece, “The Soil’s Story is the Story of Us.” { more }

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Seeing Truth in van Gogh

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 18, 2022

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Seeing Truth in van Gogh

There may be a great fire in our hearts, yet no one ever comes to warm himself at it, and the passers-by see only a wisp of smoke.

– Vincent van Gogh –

Seeing Truth in van Gogh

“In her book The Pursuit of Spiritual Wisdom: The Thought and Art of Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin, art historian Naomi Margois Maurer discusses the state of mystical consciousness in which an individual sees directly into the essence of reality, senses nature’s unity, and ‘feels himself to be part of the flow of universal life.’ She goes on to describe it as a direct experience of fundamental truths which are inaccessible to our rational state of awareness and ordinary mental processes. It is a state of knowledge and feeling, a wakeful dreaming. Van Gogh himself said it this way in a letter to his brother Theo, ‘I have a terrible lucidity at moments these days, when nature is so beautiful. I am not conscious of myself anymore, and the picture comes to me as in a dream.'” Cynthia Waldman shares more in this personal essay. { read more }

Be The Change

You can enter van Gogh’s universe through this rich repository of his letters here. { more }

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Down By the Riverside

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June 17, 2022

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Down By the Riverside

The greatest danger to our future is apathy.

– Jane Goodall –

Down By the Riverside

What if we as a society could say we were going to live in the Spirit of Love, cooperation and nonviolence and “study war no more”? This song performed by the Playing For Change organization has inspired many people all around the planet to work together for a better world. Playing For Change (PFC) is a movement created to inspire and connect the world through music, born from the shared belief that music has the power to break down boundaries and overcome distances between people. The primary focus of PFC is to record and film musicians performing in their natural environments and combine their talents and cultural power in innovative videos called Songs Around The World. Creating these videos motivated PFC to form the Playing For Change Banda tangible, traveling representation of its mission, featuring musicians met along their journey; and establish the Playing For Change Foundationa separate 501(c)3 nonprofit organization dedicated to building music and art schools for children around the world. Through these efforts, Playing For Change aims to create hope and inspiration for the future of our planet. { read more }

Be The Change

What can you do to work for peace and nonviolence in the world? Try to do one action today to make violence less likely in the world.

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Down By the Riverside – Playing for Change

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Let Us Make Sanctuary

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June 16, 2022

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Let Us Make Sanctuary

I learned, a long time ago, about a particular saying from the continent I grew up on: “the times are urgent; let us slow down.”

– Bayo Akomolafe –

Let Us Make Sanctuary

“In this podcast, Sounds True founder Tami Simon speaks with Dr. Bayo Akomolafe about how sanctuary is where slowing down and healing happens. They discuss: how the function of slowing down in urgent times is not about simply resting so that we can continue forward in the same direction, but about how to engage in deep inquiry about where we are going; pouring drink to earthan African spiritual technology that expresses our indebtedness to our ancestors and all that makes life possible; standing at the crossroadshow the ground underneath us is going through a seismic shift that is allowing the unsaid to now be spoken and intelligible; the invitation of the slave ship as a place of spiritual contemplation and as a site of renewing our connections with grief, loss, trauma, and tragedy; grieving as a form of activism; and more.” { read more }

Be The Change

Read more of Bayo Akomolafe’s writing here. { more }

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