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Archive for November, 2022

Two Stonemasons

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 7, 2022

Two Stonemasons

–Simon Senek

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2571.jpgConsider the story of two stonemasons. you walk up to the first stonemason and ask, ‘Do you like your job?’ He looks up at you and replies, ‘I’ve been building this wall for as long as I can remember. The work is monotonous. I work in the scorching hot sun all day. The stones are heavy and lifting them day after day can be backbreaking. I’m not even sure if this project will be completed in my lifetime. But it’s a job. It pays the bills.’ You thank him for his time and walk on.

About thirty feet away, you walk up to a second stonemason. you ask him the same question, ‘Do you like your job?’ He looks up and replies, ‘I love my job. I’m building a cathedral. Sure, I’ve been working on this wall for as long as I can remember, and yes the work is sometimes monotonous. I work in the scorching hot sun all day. The stones are heavy and lifting them day after day can be backbreaking. I’m not even sure if this project will be completed in my lifetime. But I’m building a cathedral.’

What these two stonemasons are doing is exactly the same; the difference is, one has a sense of purpose. He feels like he belongs. He comes to work to be a part of something bigger than the job he’s doing. Simply having a sense of ‘WHY?’ changes his entire view of the job.

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Everything Happens for A Reason & Other Lies I’ve Loved

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November 7, 2022

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Everything Happens for A Reason & Other Lies I've Loved

Our lives are not problems to be solved. We can have meaning and beauty and love, but nothing even close to resolution.

– Kate Bowler –

Everything Happens for A Reason & Other Lies I’ve Loved

“In life’s toughest moments, how do you go on living? Kate Bowler has been exploring this question ever since she was diagnosed with stage IV cancer at age 35. In a profound, heartbreaking and unexpectedly funny talk, she offers some answers — challenging the idea that “everything happens for a reason” and sharing hard-won wisdom about how to make sense of the world after your life is suddenly, completely changed. “I believe that in the darkness, even there, there will be beauty and there will be love,” she says.” { read more }

Submitted by: Jane Jackson

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The Link Between Landscape and Diaspora

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November 6, 2022

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The Link Between Landscape and Diaspora

When we express what we see in language that resonates, we can begin to make change.

– Teow Lim Goh –

The Link Between Landscape and Diaspora

“My observations of nature sparked adventures into landscape and history, and it was in bearing witness to these injustices that I found language. And observation and description are at the root of bearing witness: it is about saying, in the face of the machinations of power to twist and deny its brutality, this is what I see. It is a simple act, but also a powerful one, for it cuts through facades and illusions to assert what we can plainly see for ourselves. It affirms the truths of our lives.” More in this stunning essay, titled, “How Bearing Witness to Nature Helped Me Delve Into History,” by writer Teow Lim Goh. { read more }

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Wendell Berry and Helena Norberg-Hodge on Caretaking

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November 5, 2022

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Wendell Berry and Helena Norberg-Hodge on Caretaking

If our starting point is a respect for nature and people, diversity is an inevitable consequence.

– Helena Norberg-Hodge –

Wendell Berry and Helena Norberg-Hodge on Caretaking

“In 2018, Helena Norberg-Hodge sat down with Wendell Berry for a far-reaching discussion. The two are giants of the local economy movement. Berry is a poet and activist, an author of over forty books–including The Unsettling of America and Home Economics–and a lifelong advocate for ecological health, the beauty of rural life, and small-scale farming. He is a recipient of the National Humanities Medal. Norberg-Hodge founded Local Futures, which works to renew ecological, social, and spiritual well-being by promoting a systemic shift toward economic localization. She also produced the film The Economics of Happiness and wrote the book Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh. She was honored with the Right Livelihood Award for her groundbreaking work in Ladakh.” Read their conversation here. { read more }

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Truth and Reconciliation

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November 4, 2022

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Truth and Reconciliation

We cannot always build the future for our youth, but we can build our youth for the future.

– Franklin D. Roosevelt –

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Lis Cox, videographer and activist, is on a one woman mission to try to ensure that there is a future for young people. Drawing on successes of protests in the 1960’s and 1970’s, this video inspires young people and people of all ages to unite in protest against climate problems, police brutality and racism. She quotes from the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, saying, “You’re either on the bus, or you’re not.” Her hope is that young people are the ones driving the bus. { read more }

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Truth and Reconciliation

This week’s inspiring video: Truth and Reconciliation
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Video of the Week

Nov 03, 2022
Truth and Reconciliation

Truth and Reconciliation

Lis Cox, videographer and activist, is on a one woman mission to try to ensure that there is a future for young people. Drawing on successes of protests in the 1960’s and 1970’s, this video inspires young people and people of all ages to unite in protest against climate problems, police brutality and racism. She quotes from the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, saying, "You’re either on the bus, or you’re not." Her hope is that young people are the ones driving the bus.
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Merlin Sheldrake: Entangled Life

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Merlin Sheldrake: Entangled Life

All life-forms are in fact processes not things.

– Merlin Sheldrake –

Merlin Sheldrake: Entangled Life

“Merlin Sheldrakes book Entangled Life [1] has rather taken the world by storm since it was published in 2020, appearing on the best-seller lists in both the UK and USA. Subtitled How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds and Shape Our Futures, it constitutes a comprehensive overview of our current scientific understanding of fungi, from the extraordinary hidden networks of the wood wide web to their potential to solve our problems of waste disposal. Merlin describes himself as a biologist (he has a PhD from Cambridge University), a musician and keen fermenter. He spoke to Carolyn Markson and John Brown about why this hitherto invisible world of interconnected life is revealing itself to us fascinating world of fungi and its myriad implications. { read more }

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Love Song

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Love Song

Like a child, moving water is a treatise on impermanence, a constant reminder of the ungraspable.

– Chris Dombrowski –

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“Whether we accept it or not, the land itself is our earliest predecessor, the main character of all our stories, and listening to it, after all, is not a onetime undertaking but a practice.” Chris Dombrowski’s book, “The River You Touch,” begins with a profound and timely question, “What does a meaningful, mindful, sustainable inhabitance on this small planet look like in the anthropocene? What follows is an excerpt from the book. { read more }

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George Saunders on Writing

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George Saunders on Writing

Do those things that incline you toward the big questions, and avoid the things that would reduce you and make you trivial.

– George Saunders –

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“As a writer, the work is always particularization to move from mere concept (tree, forest) into specific descriptions that sort of take that thing apart and then cause a new and more intense perception of it to occur within a particular mindstate (usually that of a character). So, what really happens is that you start to dissolve the traditional distinction between the natural and man-made worlds its all natural, in the sense that it all has come to be. And this process of particularization is somehow related to increased tenderness for. Which, in turn, I guess, is the ultimate environmentalism like, a fondness for everything that is, and an enhanced recognition that its actually all one thing, all interconnected, and if we like any of it, wed better feel tenderness for all of it.” Writer George Saunders shares more in this interview. { read more }

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Hopium

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Oct 31, 2022

Hopium

–Margaret Wheatley

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2592.jpgThe problem with hope is that it’s bipolar. Every time we rely on hope, we always bring in fear. Wisdom teaches that hope and fear are two sides of the same dynamic. You already know this from your own experience. Think of when you put great hope and effort in a project, cause, or person. You worked very hard for its success, but then it failed from causes beyond your control. How did you feel then?

Too many of us good people dedicated to creating change have become addicted to hope. We feel despair for the destruction of planet, peoples, species, and the future. Yet we still need to make a difference, so we grasp for hope to motivate and energize us.

As Holocaust survivor, Hannah Arendt, said, "Hope is a dangerous barrier to acting courageously in dark times. In hope, the soul overleaps reality, as in fear it shrinks back from it.”

It’s time to be aware of this cycle and liberate ourselves from the drug of Hopium. Hopium never gives us the energy and motivation we need to contribute and persevere. As we free ourselves from the cycle of hope and fear, we don’t become useless, hopeless people. Instead, we become people who can see clearly how to contribute in meaningful ways. We discover work that makes a different difference. We contribute meaningfully within our sphere of influence to a person, a community, a local cause.

Those who deeply care about a friend or family member who’s addicted will sometimes create an intervention for the person to see their addiction and discover a better way. It’s my heartfelt aspiration that we liberate ourselves from Hopium so that we can discover meaningful work to serve the human spirit and the spirit of life.

Hope blinds us to our path of contribution. With insight and compassion, we discover abundant ways to contribute to this time of great suffering for peoples and planet.

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How do you relate to the notion that hope and fear are two sides of the same dynamic? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to move beyond hope and fear and see clearly how you could contribute in meaningful ways? What helps you stay rooted in your contribution?

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