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Archive for February, 2023

David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 21, 2023

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David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

Life is far more interesting than it needs to be, because the forces that guide it are not merely practical.

– David Rothenberg –

David Rothenberg: The Joy & Mystery of Interspecies Music Making

David Rothenberg is a writer, philosopher, ecologist, and musician, speaking out for nature in all aspects of his diverse work. He investigates the musicality of animals and the role of nature in philosophy, with a particular interest in understanding other species by making music with them. His book ‘Why Birds Sing: A Journey into the Mystery of Bird Song,’ was inspired by an impromptu duet in March 2000 with a laughingthrush.His next book, ‘Thousand Mile Song’, reflects similar curiosity about whale sounds considered as music, from which both scientific and artistic insights emerge. A reviewer in The London Telegraph said of the book, “while Rothenberg’s madcap mission to play jazz to the whales seems as crazy as Captain Ahab’s demented hunt for the great White Whale, it is sometimes such obsessions that reveal inner truths…” In the following excerpt, Rothenberg describes the nightingale colonies of Berlin, and the unique experience of improvising with a feathered collaborator. { read more }

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For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call this Saturday with David Rothenberg. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Presence Of Things Beyond Flesh

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Feb 20, 2023

Presence Of Things Beyond Flesh

–Drew Lanham

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2597.jpgLecturing has always come easily to me. Backed by the technical, the theoretical, a few supporting slides, and a captive audience of college students or peers, I’ve given hundreds of presentations in classrooms and professional meetings. But after many years of stale introductions, methods, results, and conclusions, I began to wonder if anyone was listening — and if there was real reason for them to.

In lecture after lecture I regurgitated factoids and data that were readily available in the readings. And between the slides of animals on the verge of extinction and of tropical rainforests being slashed, burned, and mowed down by cattle, I sounded to my own ears like the apocalyptic preachers. I looked into my audience and saw drawn expressions of boredom and dread. Day after day, semester after semester, year after year, I droned on. Yes, I was presenting the facts. Yes, I was publishing the facts. But it seemed to me that the facts never created motivation to make things better. […]

A few years later, I spent several springs in northern Vermont, writing and thinking about nature in a different way. In that strange place my right brain flickered back on. The need to impress other professors, pile up peer-reviewed publications, and cache grant dollars began to give way to a desire for consciousness. Vermont was the greenest place I’d ever been. It was also a place where no one knew me. In that freedom my stress-tightened shoulders dropped and the tension in my jaw lessened. I slowed down and walked dirt roads — sometimes barefoot and empty minded, with not much more in my head than the present moment. Warbling vireos and least flycatchers were the only audiences I entertained.

Within the past couple of years I’ve given fewer and fewer (statistics-driven) presentations. More and more I find myself taking the hard data and wrapping it in genuine caring. The words are flocks of inspiration that I want to migrate from my mouth into the heads and hearts of others. I shake hands less now and give hugs more. I exchange more heartbeats than business cards. The energy is palpable.

In my moments of confession in front of strangers, talking about my love of something much greater than any one of us, I become a freer me. Each time I am reborn. For all those years of running from anything resembling religion and all the scientific training that tells me to doubt anything outside of the prescribed (statistical) limits, I find myself defined these days more by what I cannot see than by what I can. As I wander into the predawn dark of an autumn wood, I feel the presence of things beyond flesh, bone, and blood. My being expands to fit the limitlessness of the wild world. My senses flush to full and my heartbeat quickens with the knowledge that I am not alone.

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How do you relate to the notion of finding one’s voice in a space where no one knows you? Can you share a personal story of a time you shifted from intellectual knowing to genuine caring? What helps you expand to fit the limitlessness of the wild world?

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Jane Wodening: The Lady Orangutan

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 20, 2023

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Jane Wodening: The Lady Orangutan

The least I can do is speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves.

– Jane Goodall –

Jane Wodening: The Lady Orangutan

What connects our human experience to the experiences of other species? There are many ways to respond to that question, and while each of them might hold some merit, all of them would be incomplete. Some questions cannot be answered, they can only be leaned into. And sometimes, a single meeting can communicate a world of both mystery, and meaning. In this riveting, real-life story from Jane Wodening, a young family has an unexpected encounter with a female orangutan. An encounter that somehow blurs boundaries, and offers an electrifying glimpse of the powerful, primal energy of maternal longing. { read more }

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Learn more about Jane Wodening’s unique life journey in this in-depth interview. { more }

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The Light That Bridges the Dark Expanse Between Lonelinesses

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 19, 2023

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The Light That Bridges the Dark Expanse Between Lonelinesses

One discovers the light in darkness, that is what darkness is for; but everything in our lives depends on how we bear the light.

– James Baldwin –

The Light That Bridges the Dark Expanse Between Lonelinesses

“The longer I live, the more deeply I learn that love — whether we call it friendship or family or romance — is the work of mirroring and magnifying each others light. Gentle work. Steadfast work. Life-saving work in those moments when life and shame and sorrow occlude our own light from our view, but there is still a clear-eyed loving person to beam it back. In our best moments, we are that person for another. In learning this afresh — as we must learn all the great and obvious truths, over and over — I was reminded of a passage by James Baldwin…” Maria Popova shares more in this post. { read more }

Be The Change

More from Popova and Baldwin in this post on, “Love, the Illusion of Choice and the Paradox of Freedom.” { more }

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An Ethics of Wild Mind

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February 18, 2023

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An Ethics of Wild Mind

And our inexplicable love for this world, our delight and grief — what is that but the Cosmos loving itself, delighting in itself, grieving for itself?

– David Hinton –

An Ethics of Wild Mind

“Winter is a kind of pregnant emptiness. Spring emerges out of that–it flourishes. And life flourishes in summer and then dies back into that emptiness of winter. And you realize, oh, my thoughts are doing the same thing that the ten thousand things do–they’re part of the same tissue…And so that’s another radical reweaving of consciousness and wildness–what I mean by “wild mind.” In this conversation, the poet David Hinton traces the shifts in human consciousness that distanced us from nature, he draws on Tao and Ch’an Buddhist philosophy in an effort to help us navigate the sixth extinction with an ethics tempered by love. { read more }

Be The Change

Read a stirring excerpt from Hinton’s book, “Wild Mind, Wild Earth,” here. { more }

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Finding Wonderland

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 17, 2023

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Finding Wonderland

Sometimes we need to be taught how and where to seek wonder, but it’s always there, waiting, full of mystery and magic.

– Diane Ackerman –

Finding Wonderland

The secret is to surround yourself with people who make your heart smile. Its then, only then, that youll find Wonderland. Lize Venter speaks of her lost innocence through abuse that cast a dark line through her childhood, causing fear and nightmares. She shares her current life filled with love of her family and the many animals who are part of that family, as she urges viewers to surround themselves with those who bring out the best in them, the ones who help them to bloom. “It’s like a mental shift to look for treasures and to look for Wonderland.” { read more }

Be The Change

What mental shift can you make today so that you can look for treasures to help you find Wonderland in your daily life?

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Secret to a Happy Heart – Finding Wonderland

This week’s inspiring video: Secret to a Happy Heart – Finding Wonderland
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Video of the Week

Feb 16, 2023
Secret to a Happy Heart - Finding Wonderland

Secret to a Happy Heart – Finding Wonderland

“The secret is to surround yourself with people who make your heart smile. It’s then, only then, that you’ll find Wonderland.” Lize Venter speaks of her lost innocence through abuse that cast a dark line through her childhood, causing fear and nightmares. She shares her current life filled with love of her family and the many animals who are part of that family, as she urges viewers to surround themselves with those who bring out the best in them, the ones who help them to bloom. "It’s like a mental shift to look for treasures and to look for Wonderland." Trigger warning: this film contains reference to sexual abuse which may be triggering to some viewers. If you have been affected by a similar issue and you need someone to talk to, please reach out to an organization or individual near you for help.
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World Peace & Other 4th Grade Achievements

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February 16, 2023

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World Peace & Other 4th Grade Achievements

To fully understand who I am and what I am capable of, I need to always see myself in terms of a community.

– John Hunter –

World Peace & Other 4th Grade Achievements

The World Peace Game, a brainchild of public school teacher John Hunter, pits teams of students against each other as leaders of countries in crises and conflict. The students scheme and negotiate, compete and cooperate, wage war and make peace. But the game is not won until all countries enjoy security and prosperity. Says one fourth grader, “One of the things I learned is that other people matter. In this game one person can’t win, everyone has to win. That taught me a lot about cooperating with other people, being generous, and having an attitude that, if you work together, you can achieve anything.” { read more }

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In this engaging talk, Hunter explains how his World Peace Game engages schoolkids, and why the complex lessons it teaches — spontaneous, and always surprising — go further than classroom lectures can. { more }

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Matt Walker: Sleep Is Your Superpower

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February 15, 2023

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Matt Walker: Sleep Is Your Superpower

Sleep is the single most effective thing we can do to reset our brain and body health each day — Mother Nature’s best effort yet at contra-death.

– Matt Walker –

Matt Walker: Sleep Is Your Superpower

Sleep is your life-support system and Mother Nature’s best effort yet at immortality, says sleep scientist Matt Walker. In this deep dive into the science of slumber, Walker shares the wonderfully good things that happen when you get sleep — and the alarmingly bad things that happen when you don’t, for both your brain and body. Learn more about sleep’s impact on your learning, memory, immune system and even your genetic code — as well as some helpful tips for getting some shut-eye. { read more }

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For more inspiration, check out Matt Walker’s podcast, all about sleep, the brain and the body. { more }

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June Jordan’s Legacy of Solidarity & Love

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February 14, 2023

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June Jordan's Legacy of Solidarity & Love

Maybe the purpose of being here, wherever we are, is to increase the durability and occasions of love among and between peoples.

– June Jordan –

June Jordan’s Legacy of Solidarity & Love

To fulfill a humanities requirement at UC Berkeley, Sriram Shamasunder wandered into, “Poetry for the People,” a course conceived and taught by the late poet-activist June Jordan. He had no way of knowing then, what a profound impact Jordan would have on the trajectory of his life. Shamasunder writes,” June was both tender and fierce. At first, she was mostly someone I admired at a distance in the classroom. This changed during my last few weeks at UC Berkeley, when we studied Arab and Arab American poetry. A disagreement between Jewish students defending Zionism and those supporting Palestinian liberation grew from a murmur to a rumble over the course of the semester. In one of our last classes, a teaching assistant publicly accused Junein front of a class of 250 to 300of failing to stand up on behalf of Palestinian people. She didnt show up for class the following week. The weekend after, I went over to her house in North Berkeley. She was surprised to see me, but she let me in…” This moving tribute opens a window on June Jordan’s remarkable legacy, and the friendship she forged towards the end of her life, with a young doctor just beginning his own journey. { read more }

Be The Change

Do something to increase the love where you are today. For more inspiration, read June Jordan’s poem, dedicated to Sriram Shamasunder here, “It’s Hard to Keep a Clean Shirt Clean.” { more }

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