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Archive for August, 2022

Once I Took a Weeklong Walk in the Sahara

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 23, 2022

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Once I Took a Weeklong Walk in the Sahara

The desert perpetually erases and rewrites itself, erases and rewrites.

– Anna Badkhen –

Once I Took a Weeklong Walk in the Sahara

“Tracing an ancient route across the Sahara Desert once caravanned by pilgrims on their journey to Mecca, Anna Badkhen contemplates human movement across shifting landscapes, the impermanence of memory, and what remains eternal in the face of erasure.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Badhken’s essay, “An Anatomy of Lostness,” here. { more }

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Lessons On My 70th Birthday

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Aug 22, 2022

Lessons On My 70th Birthday

–Kevin Kelly

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2577.jpgToday is my birthday. I turn 70. I’ve learned a few things so far that might be helpful to others. For the past few years, I’ve jotted down bits of unsolicited advice each year and much to my surprise I have more to add this year. So here is my birthday gift to you all: bits of wisdom I wish I had known when I was young.

• About 99% of the time, the right time is right now.

• No one is as impressed with your possessions as you are.

• Dont ever work for someone you dont want to become.

• Cultivate 12 people who love you, because they are worth more than 12 million people who like you.

• Dont keep making the same mistakes; try to make new mistakes.

• Anything you say before the word “but” does not count.

• When you forgive others, they may not notice, but you will heal. Forgiveness is not something we do for others; it is a gift to ourselves.

• Whenever there is an argument between two sides, find the third side.

• The best work ethic requires a good rest ethic.

• When you lead, your real job is to create more leaders, not more followers.

• Criticize in private, praise in public.

• Productivity is often a distraction. Don’t aim for better ways to get through your tasks as quickly as possible, rather aim for better tasks that you never want to stop doing.

• Your growth as a conscious being is measured by the number of uncomfortable conversations you are willing to have.

• Speak confidently as if you are right, but listen carefully as if you are wrong.

• Three things you need: The ability to not give up something till it works, the ability to give up something that does not work, and the trust in other people to help you distinguish between the two.

• You’ll get 10x better results by elevating good behavior rather than punishing bad behavior, especially in children and animals.

• Ask anyone you admire: Their lucky breaks happened on a detour from their main goal. So embrace detours. Life is not a straight line for anyone.

• Don’t wait for the storm to pass; dance in the rain.

• A great way to understand yourself is to seriously reflect on everything you find irritating in others.

• What you do on your bad days matters more than what you do on your good days.

• You will be judged on how well you treat those who can do nothing for you.

• We tend to overestimate what we can do in a day, and underestimate what we can achieve in a decade. Miraculous things can be accomplished if you give it ten years. A long game will compound small gains to overcome even big mistakes.

• It’s thrilling to be extremely polite to rude strangers.

• Copying others is a good way to start. Copying yourself is a disappointing way to end.

• If your opinions on one subject can be predicted from your opinions on another, you may be in the grip of an ideology. When you truly think for yourself your conclusions will not be predictable.

• The chief prevention against getting old is to remain astonished.

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Which lesson stood out for you and why? How do you relate to the notion that ‘your growth as a conscious being is measured by the number of uncomfortable conversations you are willing to have’. Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to remain astonished? What helps you dance in the rain instead of waiting for the storm to pass?

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Haenyeo: The Sea Women of South Korea

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 22, 2022

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Haenyeo: The Sea Women of South Korea

The sea, it is said, is like a mother. The salt water, the pulse and surges of the current, the magnified beat of your heart, and the muffled sounds reverberating through the water together recall the womb.

– Lisa See –

Haenyeo: The Sea Women of South Korea

“My first encounter with the Haenyeo was through their song. I was hiking in the Seongsan crater on Jeju, an island off the southern coast of South Korea, when I wandered down a winding cliff path to the waterfront. On the rocky beach, an empty seaside restaurant offered seafood to absent crowds. It was obvious that Covid had taken a toll on the local tourism industry. Then the sound of singing came from a shack next to the restaurant, and filled the bay. A few minutes later five women emerged, probably in their late 50s and 60s, wearing brightly-coloured woolen underwear, wetsuit pants, and rubber moccasins. They continued to sing, dance, and laugh while simultaneously helping each other into their remaining diving gear. I later learned that the Haenyeo pray to Jamsugut, the goddess of the sea, before each dive. Through the shamanistic ritual of song and dance they ask for safety while diving and a plentiful catch.” Read more about the Haenyeo– a remarkable community of female free-divers living and working on Jeju island in South Korea. { read more }

Be The Change

“Seven months pregnant and apprehensive of the effect motherhood would have on her career as a professional freediver, Kimi Werner took a trip to the island of Jeju in South Korea to meet her heroes, the Haenyeo.” Watch this inspiring short film on her experience, “Lessons from Jeju: Freediving and Motherhood with Kimi Werner.” { more }

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Mary Ruefle’s Stunning Color Spectrum of Sadnesses

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August 21, 2022

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Mary Ruefle's Stunning Color Spectrum of Sadnesses

We are all one question and the best answer seems to be love–a connection between things.

– Mary Ruefle –

Mary Ruefle’s Stunning Color Spectrum of Sadnesses

“Nearly two centuries after Goethe contemplated the psychology of color and emotion, Mary Ruefle’s chromatic taxonomy of sadness cracks open the eggshell of our fragility to reveal within it a kaleidoscope coruscating with irrepressible aliveness. What emerges is the feeling — something beyond the reasoned understanding — that sadness is not the tip of the Atlantis-sized iceberg of our hard-wired grief for life, but the blazing fire of life itself, of the love of life, burning with the elemental fact that there is no disappointment without hope, no heartbreak without love; in the shadows that sadness casts on the cave walls of our being is the delicious delirium of the life-dream itself.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out this post on Ruefle’s essay, “Someone Reading a Book is a Sign of Order in the World.” { more }

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When I Die Recompose Me

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 20, 2022

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When I Die Recompose Me

I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love,
If you want me again look for me under your bootsoles.

– Walt Whitman –

When I Die Recompose Me

What if our bodies could help grow new life after we die, instead of being embalmed and buried or turned to ash? Join Katrina Spade as she discusses “recomposition” — a system that uses the natural decomposition process to turn our deceased into life-giving soil, honoring both the earth and the departed. { read more }

Be The Change

You don’t have to wait to die to participate in Nature’s natural “recomposition” magic. Take one thing usually tossed into the trash and discover a way to allow the natural process of decomposition to unfold.

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The Abundance of Less

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 19, 2022

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The Abundance of Less

Surrounded on all sides by the inconvenience of countryside living, you get a rich enjoyment of the flavor of your own humanness.

– Koichi Yamashita –

The Abundance of Less

“Nakamura and I were sitting there drinking tea on a winter’s day at his fire pit in the middle of the floor, and the shoji screens were open. We were looking across the valley; the snow was clinging to the cedar boughs, and the wind would come up throwing these sheets of powdered snow into the air. Mist was hiding the branches of the trees, and then revealing them. It felt like a Chinese ink painting from the T’ang Dynasty. You’d get a powerful feeling of this, and of the poetry of rural life. So, even though that’s not the goal, and there’s going out to gather firewood every day, there’s a sense of the good parts of living a life. I mean, what is romance? It’s love, right? It’s a sense of love for the Earth, of love for nature, and it comes not as the purpose, but maybe as a natural result of living closer to materials such as wood and stone, clay and pottery, and fire and water, as opposed to plastic and electronics, phone wires and all the commercials. I mean, there’s the feel of a plastic chair versus the feel of a wooden chair, or the feeling of a straw mat versus the feeling of a concrete floor.” Andy Couturier is a writing instructor, and author of, “The Abundance of Less: Lessons in Simple Living from Rural Japan.” He shares more from his unusual life journey in this in-depth interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Read a beautiful excerpt from “The Abundance of Less,” here. { more }

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When I Die, Recompose Me

This week’s inspiring video: When I Die, Recompose Me
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Video of the Week

Aug 18, 2022
When I Die, Recompose Me

When I Die, Recompose Me

What if our bodies could help grow new life after we die, instead of being embalmed and buried or turned to ash? Join Katrina Spade as she discusses "recomposition" — a system that uses the natural decomposition process to turn our deceased into life-giving soil, honoring both the earth and the departed.
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Earth’s Wild Music: Celebrating & Defending Nature’s Songs

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 18, 2022

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Earth's Wild Music: Celebrating & Defending Nature's Songs

I don’t know any other way to move through darkness, but to put one foot ahead of the other and listen for the exact sound of our footsteps. If we have to drop to our knees sometimes and press the palms of our hands against the duff and damp of the earth, then that is what we will do.

– Kathleen Dean Moore –

Earth’s Wild Music: Celebrating & Defending Nature’s Songs

“I started thinking about how I could open people’s hearts without breaking them. How I could point to the onrushing extinctions and not force people to turn away in absolute grief. I decided that I was going to have to write in a way that was like a wave — I would lift people and smash them at the same time. What is it that reaches people without breaking them? What is it that goes straight into people’s hearts? What do they love about the world and will call them to action? I decided that of all the things I loved about the world, what I loved the most was the music. What I loved the most was the sound. I’ve been writing about this for quite some time, so I had a couple of essays already under my belt, and I couldn’t think of a more wonderful writing assignment for myself then to go outside and listen.” Acclaimed environmental philosopher and nature writer Kathleen Dean Moore shares more about her book of essays, “Earth’s Wild Music: Celebrating and Defending the Songs of the Natural World.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this interview with Kathleen Dean Moore, “Why I Write.” { more }

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robert wolff: Original Wisdom

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August 17, 2022

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robert wolff: Original Wisdom

My reality is made in my head; I create roles for myself, I create a structure that requires certain activities and prohibits others. I live in time; I have an agenda. Their [The Sng’oi’s] existence had no reality until they lived it.

– robert wolff –

robert wolff: Original Wisdom

“I have known truly free humans… As all First People they lived far away from roads, it required walking through jungle to reach them. I did not know a word of their language, but there was usually at least one person in the small groups of nomads who understood some words of the language of the country. But our communication was as much through touch, smiles, laughter, and something inside that I have no word for. They were the most joyful people I have known. They sang little songs all day long, smiled easily — not by showing teeth (a sign of aggression) but with their eyes, eyebrows, faces. They were generous. I suspect they could not lie.” Psychologist Robert Wolff, author of ‘Original Wisdom: Stories of an Ancient Way of Knowing,” spent time living with the Sng’oi, and aboriginal tribe in the mountains of Malaysia. He shares more in this beautiful essay. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this short exchange with Moussa Assarid, the eldest of thirteen children in a nomadic Touareg family from Mali, “No Better Place to Meet Yourself.” { more }

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Living/Dying Man

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 16, 2022

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Living/Dying Man

Reality is clarifying,
Death becomes less terrifying,
When you look it straight in the eye.

– Barbara McAfee –

Living/Dying Man

“After he was diagnosed, we had a lot of conversation about how we were going to face the harsh reality that ALS is always fatal. We didn’t want to waste our precious time trying to chase down miracle cures or doing things that might extend his life for a few days or weeks. What was the point of a few more days if he was suffering? We decided to live ‘hope-free,’ which isn’t the same thing as hopeless. It’s about embracing the reality of what is. Jamie was very clear that he didn’t want to focus on the fact that he was dying. He was alive, and he intended to keep living fully, every single moment, until death took him. For both of us, that meant that we couldn’t squander time. It also felt essential not to squander the lessons that living/dying had to teach us. Jamie was all about learning, right up until the end.” In this moving conversation, Jamie’s wife Maren Showkeir, and singer/songwriter Barbara McAfee, discuss the profound lessons gleaned from Jamie’s way. A dear friend of the Showkeirs, Barbara was inspired to write and share “Living/Dying Man,” a stunning musical tribute to Jamie. Listen to the song, and read the conversation here. { read more }

Be The Change

Today marks the seventh anniversary of Jamie’s passing, and the 70th anniversary of his birth. If inspired to, you can send a note of appreciation to Maren here. { more }

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