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Archive for March, 2023

Translation Lessons from Superlichen

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 8, 2023

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Translation Lessons from Superlichen

Every act of communication is a miracle of translation.

– Ken Liu –

Translation Lessons from Superlichen

“Until the late nineteenth century, lichens were understood as individual organisms. It was then suggested, controversially, that a lichen was, in fact, a partnership. The division between the partners might have been invisible at first, but underneath a microscope, it was plain as day: a lichen was a pact between a fungus and an alga. Scientists began to speak of symbiosis: not survival of the fittest, but cooperation, reciprocity, partnership.” In this lovely piece Jennifer Croft derives lessons in translation from a microscopic natural partnership. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this beguiling piece by Ella Frances Sanders, “Eleven Untranslatable Words from Other Cultures.” { more }

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When I Touched the Ground

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 7, 2023

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When I Touched the Ground

Let no one say the past is dead, the past is all about us and within.

– Oodgeroo Noonuccal –

When I Touched the Ground

“Nyurpaya Kaika Burton is a respected and revered senior artist, educator, storyteller and cultural leader. She is also one of the few remaining poetic speakers of Pitjantjatjara, a traditional Indigenous language of Central Australia’s remote Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) Lands. There were once more than 400 traditional languages spoken across the Australian continent, but only around 13 are still spoken by children– all threatened by policies restricting Aboriginal people from speaking their languages and the ongoing forces of colonisation. At the age of 70, she decided to share this deeply personal story of her birth, revealing, for the first time, the traditional birthing methods that have helped define her cultural life. Telling this story is part of her continuous work to protect her ancient culture, and to ensure that future generations can speak the language it lives in.The soundscape is binaural, specifically recorded on the country of Nyurpaya’s birth, in one of the most remote parts of Australia. Therefore the piece is best experienced through headphones.” Radio Atlas shares this hauntingly beautiful piece. { read more }

Be The Change

“From the perspective of understanding the world we inhabit, I think it’s never good if your idea of a place you don’t live is informed by reports that come from a touristic perspective, or ones that privilege the voices of people who just happen to speak your language,” says Radio Atlas founder Eleanor McDowall. Learn more about her compelling journey and work here. { more }

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Integrity Is A Quality Of Being

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Mar 6, 2023

Integrity Is A Quality Of Being

–Pierre Pradervand

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2601.jpgIntegrity is a quality of being. It means holding on at all times to your highest sense of truth and your own vision, whatever the cost may be. It consists in resonating with the most intimate fiber of your being and enjoins us not to withdraw one inch, whatever the prestige or authority of the person or institution opposing us—not out of obstinacy but because of the quiet courage of an inner voice that says: “This above all: to thine own self be true.”

Integrity means following at all times one’s highest sense of what is right, whatever the consequences may be, however solitary your path, and however loud the taunts and the mockeries of the crowd and the Pharisees.

Following your integrity means “speaking truth to power,” as the Quaker wisdom goes, even when silence would better serve your interests. It means hanging on to truth when all those surrounding accept compromises or pretend that it’s not really important. It means being unflinching and firm when others disappear in the underground shelters of their fears and timidity.

Integrity means refusing to dilute one’s inner sense of truthfulness, be it to satisfy, appease, or gain the approval of one’s beloved.

Above all, integrity means refusing to cheat yourself, lie to yourself, or abide in the shade of half truths. You can lie to others—even deceive them—and be forgiven. But when you lie to yourself, who is there to forgive you? After a defeat of this sort, who will help you get up again? Even if you are sufficiently ignorant to let yourself indulge in the supreme absurdity of deceiving yourself, will not your inner strength abandon the ship of he who voluntarily scuttles it in that manner? In such moments, grace alone can save you.

To deceive oneself kills the discernment that is the basis of honest judgments and meaningful choices. To consciously avoid what one knows to be true or to lie to oneself is the sin against the spirit, which resides deep down in each one of us.

Integrity, as the most intimate substance of our being, constitutes the marrow of our identity and the foundation of all our qualities, starting with love. It is the woof on which we weave the exquisite textures of our existence, creating a tapestry. No woof, no tapestry. When integrity is married to love in a joyful dance, it forms the perfect couple, and our existence becomes a celebration of life.

So, when winds and tempests howl or when a tempter whispers that “a compromise is absolutely essential” and attempts to make us avoid the challenges we need to grow and stay awake, let us at all costs hold on firmly to that inner foundation, our integrity—for in it resides true life.

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How do you relate to integrity as the most intimate substance of our being? Can you share a personal story of a time you refused to dilute your inner sense of truthfulness to satisfy or appease anyone? What helps you avoid the temptation to compromise on your integrity?

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Asymmetry & the Art of Generous Creation

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 6, 2023

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Asymmetry & the Art of Generous Creation

The generous piece of writing, the asymmetrical piece of writing, doesn’t boss you or pull you; it creates many emptinesses, fills them in partly, inconclusively at times, and creates them again.

– Andy Couturier –

Asymmetry & the Art of Generous Creation

“As an artist or writer, how do you compose a work that is generous? How do you place a group of rocks together in a garden, or branches, berries and blossoms together in an ikebana arrangement,– or ideas and language on a page — to invite real participation? The artist is giving a gift, I think, if she leaves some connections unfinished. Implied. The artist is giving a gift, I think, when the composition is multifaceted, offering a multitude of elements that combine in an abundance of ways. There’s “space” for the viewer or reader — to move around inside. While the Western ideal in art and writing has often, but not always, been that of the One Main Point — unambiguous and decisive — much of East Asian art and poetry reaches toward a different ideal. It does not force a particular interpretation, nor does it reveal all its secrets in a single viewing. The mind is refreshed and energized. And we feel invited to play.” Author and writing instructor Andy Couturier shares more in this piece. { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special 2.5 hour workshop this week with Andy on, “Asymmetrical Writing: A More Generous Way to Write.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Mink! Champion of Title IX

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March 5, 2023

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Mink! Champion of Title IX

I dwell in possibility.

– Emily Dickinson –

Mink! Champion of Title IX

If you’re a woman who played sports, or have girls or women in your life who did or do, then you will want to see this remarkable story that explains who made that possible. This short documentary tells the story of Title IX through the eyes of Wendy, daughter of the amazing Patsy Takemoto Mink, a Japanese American from Hawaii who became the first woman of color elected to the U.S. Congress. The film shows her difficult mission to co-author and defend Title IX, the 1972 law that transformed athletics for girls and women for generations in America. Having met obstacles at so many turns for being a woman and for being a woman of color, she turned those rejections into a determination to make a difference in the world by changing laws that prevented women and others from living freely. This film is a reminder to never take for granted that one person can change the world. As she said while speaking to Congress, “No matter how an individual has been excluded in the past, an individual DOES count!” { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about women in sports by viewing this timeline. { more }

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Dakota 38: One Filmmaker’s Ride of a Lifetime

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March 4, 2023

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Dakota 38: One Filmmaker's Ride of a Lifetime

When you have dreams, you know when they come from the creator.

– Jim Miller –

Dakota 38: One Filmmaker’s Ride of a Lifetime

In 2005, Native spiritual leader and Vietnam veteran, Jim Miller had a dream of arriving on horseback at a riverbank in Minnesota and seeing 38 of his Dakota ancestors hanged. At the time, Jim was unaware of the largest mass execution in United States history, ordered by Abraham Lincoln. Richard Whittaker writes, “I remember Silas telling us about meeting a Native American elder [Miller,] who talked about a dream he’d had, an important dream, one that he’d tried to ignore. But finally he understood that the dream had to be re-enacted. There would be a ride of Native Americans on horseback, over 300 miles across the Dakotas in the dead of winter, a healing ride to the place where 38 Native Americans had been hung during the presidency of Abraham Lincoln. This ride would have to be filmed the elder told Silas. “That’s what you’ll do,” he’d said. I remember feeling shocked by the story. I asked Silas, “Are you going to do it?” He was. I didn’t have to ask if there was any money involved. I knew there wasn’t. And I remember being alarmed.”… In this beautifully wrought interview, Silas Hagerty shares the backstory of his extraordinary film Dakota 38 and the profound challenges and insights that accompanied its creation. { read more }

Be The Change

This week Jim Miller completed his Earth-walk. In honor of his life and legacy, try healing an old wound through an act of reconciliation. For inspiration, watch the moving trailer of Dakota 38 here. { more }

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A Higher Level of Conscious Engagement

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 3, 2023

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A Higher Level of Conscious Engagement

Where there is love, there is revolution, because love is transformation from moment to moment.

– Jiddu Krishnamurti –

A Higher Level of Conscious Engagement

“The challenge for both moral and social activists is to avoid getting spun out by the need to change dysfunctional human behaviors and unjust systems. They should seek to avoid corrosive judgmentalism: When exuberance for justice leads to the demonization of others, more injustice is being perpetrated. Constant unresolved anxiety, frustration, anger, and even outrage can lead not only to burnout, but to a fixation on the externals of the problem. The attention of the activist can get trapped in the field of action and disconnected from the nurturance of being itself.”James O’Dea, author and a former director of Amnesty International shares more in this passage. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, consider applying for an upcoming Laddership Pod, a three-week global peer-learning lab for values-driven changemakers. More details here. { more }

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Mink! Champion of Title IX

This week’s inspiring video: Mink! Champion of Title IX
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 02, 2023
Mink! Champion of Title IX

Mink! Champion of Title IX

If you’re a woman who played sports, or have girls or women in your life who did or do, then you will want to see this remarkable story that explains who made that possible. This short documentary tells the story of Title IX through the eyes of Wendy, daughter of the amazing Patsy Takemoto Mink, a Japanese American from Hawaii who became the first woman of color elected to the U.S. Congress. The film shows her difficult mission to co-author and defend Title IX, the 1972 law that transformed athletics for girls and women for generations in America. Having met obstacles at so many turns for being a woman and for being a woman of color, she turned those rejections into a determination to make a difference in the world by changing laws that prevented women and others from living freely. This film is a reminder to never take for granted that one person can change the world. As she said while speaking to Congress, "No matter how an individual has been excluded in the past, an individual DOES count!"
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Young Forever: Why Balance Matters

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March 2, 2023

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Young Forever: Why Balance Matters

My goal in medicine is to help provide a way to navigate and sort through health information based on an entirely new way of thinking about health and disease.

– Mark Hyman –

Young Forever: Why Balance Matters

“The hallmarks of aging are how our biology becomes out of balance. Conventional medicine describes the what: what disease, what pathway is dysfunctional, what drug to take. The model of functional medicine guides us to the why, to the root causes of diseases and aging. Many longevity research efforts focus on just treating the hallmarks of aging, without treating their underlying causes. That’s where functional medicine comes in. What causes the hallmarks in the first place? Imbalance — too much bad stuff, not enough good stuff. The beauty of the human organism is that we don’t have to know its every gene, protein, metabolite, or microbe. We simply need to know what creates imbalance or balance, and thankfully it is not millions of things. It is a few simple things.” Renowned author and functional medicine pioneer, Dr. Mark Hyman shares more in this excerpt from his new book, ‘Young Forever: The Secrets to Living Your Longest, Healthiest Life.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join a special Awakin Call early next week with Mark Hyman: ‘Reimagining Our Biology, Health and the Process of Aging.’ More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Strange Bedfellows

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 1, 2023

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Strange Bedfellows

The moment of change is the only poem.

– Adrienne Rich –

Strange Bedfellows

“I never thought about the daily schedule of wild turkeys. They seemed, in my imagination, to be mythical creatures who lived mostly in paintings of rural 1800s England. I did not know they were to become part of my life. Take yesterday at dusk, for example, when the local gang, maybe fifteen or so, came rolling up over our wooden bridge and hopped, one by one, onto the roof of the other house on the property. The same way they do every night. They mill around for a bit and then disappear into the lower branches of trees to go to bed.” In this short piece, poet Danusha Lameris reflects on the observed virtues and eccentricities of her feathered neighbors– and on a chance meeting with an unexpected member of their flock. { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special virtual candlelight vigil today, “honoring loved ones, holding space for grief and reflecting on the possibilities of transformation,” with Danusha Lameris and Rumi translator Haleh Liza Gafori. More details here. { more }

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