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Archive for February 28, 2023

March 5: Dancing With Emergence!

Incubator of compassionate action.

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Dancing with Emergence
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Gandhi’s successor in India, Vinoba, shared something stunning – “I’ve never started a project.” History books inform us that his many projects transformed the lives of millions. Yet Vinoba implies that he simply caught a strand of emergence, held it responsibly, and passed it along to its next keeper. It mirrors C.S. Lewis’s wisdom: “Humility is not thinking less of yourself, but thinking of yourself less.”
giphy.gif Who do we have to be to lead with life’s emergence? For the next three weeks, starting March 5th, we are hosting a unique Pod to explore the subtleties of those principles. Learn more/join Laddership Pod >>

Relationships between pieces lead to a whole with new properties that the individual parts didn’t have. Such emergence is easy to spot these days — the telephone took 75 years to reach a million users, mobiles 13 years, Netflix 3.5 years, and ChatGPT 5 days! However, the forces of attraction that bring together such relationships is what determines the strength of its bonds, and subsequently the quality and durability of its emergence. If our outer innovation outpaces our inner transformation and we optimize for money, power and fame, the resulting frenzy simply disconnects us. Instead, if our personal, inter-personal and systemic designs start to harmonize, the Laddership hypothesis is that the collective emergence of such an ecosystem will bends its arc towards greater compassion.

ssp_63fdb0f05990a.gif The Laddership Pod will feature change-makers and everyday heroes from around the world, in a peer-learning held by open-hearted flow of volunteers. To add to the mix, we’re excited to have various guests speakers. Victor Koo, a Chinese billionaire who went from search engines to inner search; Sister Marilyn Lacey, who has spent 56 years as a nun serving refugee communities worldwide; Sander Tiderman, who spent 20 years dialoguing with Dalai Lama and converting that into a framework for entrepreneurs; and Hang Mai, a farmer from Vietnam who is busy translating nature’s wisdom to social permaculture.
For 21 days, participants in the Pod traverse the “head, hands and heart” throughline from “me” (aligning with your values), “we” (designing for synergy), and “us” (igniting a collective flow). We hope you can join us!
Thank you, all, dancing with love.
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P.S. RECENT TIDBITS …
Earlier this month, we invited all of you to a Kindness Challenge — and more than 800 of you from 46 countries joined us! So much transpired — here’s a peek into acts that flowed and Brian’s epic story, based on a podmate’s real experience!

A young woman wanted to ask questions around ServiceSpace values; quickly, it turned into a spontaneous conversation with Nipun, under a tree, across 3 generations! Many to Many.

On the coattails of last month’s retreat, ripples abound — as does media! Like Amit’s Wizards of Inner Transformation and Preeta’s thoughts on Heartivism and Larry’s stunning rendition of gratitude!

Did you know about Kindful Kids newsletter? From a reader last week: "What an incredible poem: We Must Wobble Before We Stand!"

Plus, note from a teen in Sacramento this week: "I read about you in my school textbook and began to cry. I was so proud of a community whose primary goal is to make a change in people’s life without strings attached, simply because of the power of generosity. I was ready to receive as much info as possible after that, and hope to design my senior project through this amazing resource of connection."

ServiceSpace is a unique incubator of volunteer-run projects that nurture a culture of generosity. We believe that small acts of service can nurture a profound inner transformation that sustains external impact. To get involved, you can subscribe to our newsletters or create an account and complete our 3-step process to volunteer.
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A Little Girl Tugs at the Tablecloth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 28, 2023

a project of ServiceSpace

A Little Girl Tugs at the Tablecloth

Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood.

– Fred Rogers –

A Little Girl Tugs at the Tablecloth

“Wisawa Szymborska’s poems are not the poetry of big ideas. It is the poetry of minor events, ordinary objects… but also a bit different. Because under this ordinary everyday life veneer, there’s always an extra layer, a deeper level, lurking in the work of the Nobel Prize winner from Krakow. This time it’s an experience that’s the basis for entering adulthood, because adulthood can be entered at any age, even when as a one-year-old.” Watch this beguiling animated version of one of Szymborska’s beloved poems. { read more }

Be The Change

Read Szymborska’s Nobel Prize acceptance speech, “The Poet and the World,” here. { more }

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I Have What You Need

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Feb 27, 2023

I Have What You Need

–Sharon Salzberg

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2611.jpgIn the old city section of Jerusalem, there is a wonderful open-stall marketplace. It is a place teeming with life—a deluge of sights and sounds and goods for sale. When I was teaching in Israel once, some friends and I went there. As we were walking down an alleyway, one of the merchants called out to me, "I have what you need!" I felt a thrill go through my entire body. "Wow, he has what I need." I stopped, turned around, and starting walking toward him. Then I thought, "Wait a minute. First of all, I don’t need anything, and second, how would he know he has what I need?"

In many ways the world is calling out to us all of the time: "I have what you need! I have what you need!" In response, we internalize those voices into: "I need. I need something. I’m in a state of deficit, of deprivation." It’s as though we turn into some sort of cartoon figure, with our eyes popping out of our heads like they are on springs. "Where is it? Where is this thing I need?" Our arms extend, reaching out. The fingers flex, trying to grab and hold on to one object or another. Our heads rigidly fix in the direction of the object of desire, so as not to lose sight of it. Our bodies incline forward in anticipation. What an uncomfortable mess!

And yet we reach out time and time again, believing the voices. This movement, this constant reaching out, is felt as stress in the body and in the mind. "I have what you need," the voice tells us. "You don’t have what you need. I have what you need." But what is it that we really need?

It is true that all beings want to be happy. We want to feel at home in our own lives. We want to feel a part of something greater than our limited sense of who we are. We need an internal feeling of abundance, to be able to give to others. We need the fulfilling knowledge of our connection to all that lives, in order to love others. But in our habit of reaching out to satisfy our needs, we miss where our deepest satisfaction lies. A Tibetan text puts it like this: "Beneath the pauper’s house there are inexhaustible treasures, but the pauper never realizes this, and the treasures never say, ‘I am here.’ Likewise, the treasure of our original nature, which is naturally pure, is trapped in ordinary mind, and beings suffer in poverty."

All of those voices lead us away from knowing that we already have what we need. When we practice meditation, we discover the treasure of our original nature. We learn to let go of that cacophony of voices shouting at us about our seeming poverty. We learn not to get caught in trying to reach out and grasp after things we never really needed to begin with.

When we practice meditation, we see that we can put down the burdens we have carried for so long. The poet Rumi says: "How long will we fill our pockets like children with dirt and stones? Let the world go. Holding it, we never know ourselves, never are airborne." When we practice meditation, we let go. We let go of our addictions to certain objects and experiences, let go of believing in those voices that call to us. We let go of our limited concepts of happiness and of who we are and what we need. Discovering the treasure of our original nature, we can be airborne. We can be free.

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How do you relate to the notion that our original nature is a treasure waiting to be discovered? Can you share a personal story of a time you let the world go and connected with the purity of your original nature? What helps you let go of your addictions to objects and experiences?

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Many moons ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. The ripples of that simple practice have now spread to millions over 20+ years, through local circles, weekly podcasts and more.

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