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Archive for May, 2023

Shape Of Silence

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 15, 2023

Shape Of Silence

–Kent Nerburn

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2640.jpgThe silence is profound this morning. It is not portentous; there seems to be nothing in the waiting. It is a gentle silence, liquid and pastel, a shimmer on still waters.

It is good to listen to the silence that surrounds each day. In the same way that music is made alive by the silence that surrounds the notes, a day comes alive by the silence that surrounds our actions. And the dawn is the time when silence reveals herself most clearly.

I once met a man who was raised on the Canadian prairies. We got to talking about the open space, and how it had shaped his spirit. "When the wind stops," he said, "it is so loud that everyone pauses to listen."

The thought intrigued me. How could the end of a sound be loud?

But when I traveled to those prairies, I began to understand. For the people in the great prairies, the sound they hear, the music that underlies their lives, is the constant and ever-present howl of the wind. To them it is no sound at all. When it is removed, the silence takes a different shape, and all are aware of it; all pause to hear.

We need to pay heed to the many silences in our lives. An empty room is alive with a different silence than a room where someone is hiding. The silence of a happy house echoes less darkly than the silence of a house of brooding anger. The silence of a winter morning is sharper than the silence of a summer dawn. The silence of a mountain pass is larger than the silence of a forest glen.

These are not fantasies, they are subtle discriminations of the senses. Though all are the absence of sound, each silence has a character of its own.

No meditation better clears the mind than to listen to the shape of the silence that surrounds us. It focuses us on the thin line between what is there and what is not there. It opens our heart to the unseen, and reminds us that the world is larger than the events that fill our days.

Into this morning’s silence comes the first call of a bird. I listen carefully. It cuts through the silence like a rainbow through the dawn.

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What does listening to the shape of silence open up for you? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of different silences? What helps you listen deeply to the different shapes of silence?

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Transforming Food

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 15, 2023

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Transforming Food

You pray for the hungry. Then you feed them. This is how prayer works.

– Pope Francis –

Transforming Food

“Weaving webs around the highways of northeast England, the REfUSE van was collectively funded by 315 people. They gave amounts ranging from fifty-pence pieces to four-digit sums until the great day when we could finally drive it off the lot and park it next to its newly installed electric charger. Each month it intercepts around thirteen tons of in-date food, otherwise destined for the dumpster, from retailers and food manufacturers. Then the food can make its way toward dinner tables through our caf, restaurant, school projects, pay what you can shelves, and delivery boxes. When we first started gathering food and people, those road webs were spun by our feet and a sagging green 2004 Golf. Before we had a five-thousand-square-foot, temperature-controlled warehouse, we had a lounge crammed with boxes and piled high with pumpkins. Before we had partnership agreements with large retail firms, we walked to and from any produce sellers we could find, and hoisted one another into supermarket dumpsters after dark.” Read on to learn more about how a small band of dumpster divers has become a driving force for food rescue and redistribution. { read more }

Submitted by: Jane Jackson

Be The Change

Learn more about RefUSE’s work here. { more }

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Mother

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May 14, 2023

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Mother

Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others.

– Cicero –

Mother

“One day her teacher lost her voice and asked mother to help teach the class. Standing in front of the class, she knew what she wanted to do when she grew up to be a teacher. Later when her father asked her, his eldest daughter, to quit school to carry some family responsibilities at age 11, she begged, but he wouldn’t change his mind. Her pillow was wet with her tears. She never returned to school again.” Xiaojuan Shu pays tribute to her mother in this moving piece. Don’t miss the link to her powerful one-person performance at the end. { read more }

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Take a moment to give gratitude for all the mother figures in your life today. If inspired check out this piece by Christine Carter, “20 Questions to Ask Your Mother.” { more }

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Leah Penniman: Farming While Black

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May 13, 2023

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Leah Penniman: Farming While Black

To free ourselves, we must feed ourselves.

– Leah Penniman –

Leah Penniman: Farming While Black

“Through Soul Fire, Leah Penniman has become a leader in the movement to reverse the effects of historical, systematic exclusion of black and brown communities from the means of production and consumption of wholesome food, and to reconnect those communities with a long, oft-forgotten history of land stewardship. Her book, Farming While Black, available now from Chelsea Green Publishing, is a how-to for historically disenfranchised communities to establish sustainable, equitable, profitable, and dignified relationships with the food they eat, and the land it comes from.” { read more }

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Learn more about Penniman and the work of Soul Fire Farm here. { more }

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Bokkapuram’s Birdman

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Bokkapuram's Birdman

In order to see birds it is necessary to become a part of the silence.

– Robert Lynd –

Bokkapuram’s Birdman

“He can recognise the gentle hoot of the elusive wood owl and the call of four types of babblers. He also knows exactly what kind of ponds the migratory Woolly-necked storks breed in. B. Siddan had to drop out of school, but his knowledge of avian species in and around his home in the Nilgiris, Tamil Nadu, is the delight of an ornithologist. “There were three boys named Siddan in my village of Bokkapuram. When people wanted to know which Siddan, villagers would say, ‘that kuruvi Siddan — the boy who runs madly after birds all the time’,” he says, laughing with pride. His official name is B. Siddan, but in the forests and villages around Mudumalai, he is better known as kuruvi Siddan. In Tamil, ‘kuruvi’ refers to passerines: birds that are of the order Passeriformes — more than half of all bird species. “Wherever you are in the Western Ghats, you can hear four or five birds sing. All you have to do is listen and learn,” says Vijaya Suresh, a 28-year-old primary school teacher from Anaikatti, a village nestled in the foothills of the Nilgiris. She says she picked up valuable information about birds from Siddan…” { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you are outdoors, experiment with ‘becoming a part of the silence,’ and see what new awarenesses emerge if any.

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Caring for the Vulnerable: A Gateway to Our Deepest Brain States

This week’s inspiring video: Caring for the Vulnerable: A Gateway to Our Deepest Brain States
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Video of the Week

May 11, 2023
Caring for the Vulnerable: A Gateway to Our Deepest Brain States

Caring for the Vulnerable: A Gateway to Our Deepest Brain States

Vulnerability can be frightening, but it is also the place from which we grow when we have a supportive environment. Being a caregiver of babies and little ones is an experience of honoring the value of each human life. Consciousness itself is a kind of miracle when viewed through the eyes of the most vulnerable in our world. Think of the delightful openness of a four year old walking through nature and how they allow us to see with new eyes. Our biology appears to confirm this growth-bias as well since having an "open brain state" maximizes the experience of being alive. The first fifteen years of a human life and the last fifteen are unique to humans and allow for change and growth on deeper levels. The gift in being human seems to be that when we support those who are vulnerable – including ourselves- we will discover deeper levels of experience and meaning. Offering babies, children and young adults support so that they can find the strength to launch into adulthood is the gift we can offer to each other by being supportive of their potential in their vulnerable years.
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Early Music: Three Poems

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May 11, 2023

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Early Music: Three Poems

It is the job of poetry to clean up our word-clogged reality by creating silences around things.

– Stephane Mallarme –

Early Music: Three Poems

“My name is Micheal O’Suilleabhain, I am a poet, singer, teacher and guide from Ireland. These three poems are from my collection Early Music. Each are a reflection on change, presence and inspiration in our lives. May they help you find the still point in your life today as we search for the daily good. Love from Ireland.”
{ read more }

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Take a moment to look around you. Create a little silence around this moment and all that is in it. Perhaps a poem will sing its way forward.

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Radiant Thinking

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Radiant Thinking

In traditional agriculture, the soil is the mother. She’s the mother who gives, to whom you must give back.

– Vandana Shiva –

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“This book is structured a little like a garden in which the seeds have been broadcast in wide spirals. There is an insistence on the relationship between all of the subjects within it: motherhood, climate collapse, social justice, botanical history, but also a commitment (at least as I see it) to a kind of disorder, a refusal to manage (or manhandle) the topics in relation to each other, but to let them flower naturally, in each others proximity, and inform each other associatively rather than according to logic or outline–a little like a swath of prairie, all the plants and animals coexisting in an organic design. Can you talk a little about how the book found its form? ” Pat Houston interviews Camille T. Dungy about her new book, “Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden.” { read more }

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The Thread of My Life: Following the Heart’s Wisdom

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The Thread of My Life: Following the Heart's Wisdom

What you think you are is a belief to be undone.

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“One of the great paradoxes of life is that we must go inward in order to find the road out of ourselves. That is what life asked me to do 15 years ago. After a long period of trying to run away from dark thoughts and feelings my body and mind collapsed. And that was the best thing that could ever happen to me! Before this breakdown I never wondered about what living really means. I just followed the rules that systems like school, family, friends and the media where showing. Little by little I woke up to a much more conscious and fulfilling life. I started to wonder again about everything around me. And I also started to question all the beliefs and ideas that blocked me from living my unique potential. Each time I dared to let go of limiting beliefs, relationships, and careers whole new levels of spontaneous living opened up to me…” Sandra Lensink left a corporate career to follow an unscripted path that led her far beyond what she originally envisioned for her life. Today she is a photographer who also facilitates unique writing workshops. Read more about her journey here. { read more }

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End Of The World

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 8, 2023

End Of The World

–Douglad Hine

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2637.jpgEnd of the world as we know it is not the end of the world; it is the end of a way of knowing the world. "When a world ends, its systems and stories come apart, even the largest of them: the stories that promised to explain everything, the systems that organised all that could be said to be real. It’s not that those stories had no truth in them; it’s not that there was no reality in the description of the world those systems offered. It’s that they couldn’t hold. The things they valued betrayed them; the things they left out came back to haunt them."

"In these times, all we can do is be a sign," a father tells his daughter in Ben Okri’s novel The Freedom Artist. "We have to help to bring about the end of the world — to allow a new beginning to initiate. But first there must be an end."

The focus is not on saving modernity, or bringing it down, or rushing to build what comes afterwards, but doing what we can to give it a good ending. To let it hand on its gifts and teach the lessons that may only become apparent as the end approaches. It’s the work of midwifery: assisting with the birth of something new, unfamiliar and possibly (but not necessarily) wiser, and avoiding suffocating this new world with our projections. The philosopher Federico Campagna speaks about living at the end of a world. In such a time, he suggests, the work is no longer to concern ourselves with making sense according to the logic of the world that is ending, but to leave good ruins, clues and starting points for those who come after, that they may use in building a world that is presently unimaginable.

I don’t write to announce the end of the world or to change the minds of those who are convinced that the world as we have known it can be saved or made sustainable. I write for anyone who has found themselves, as I have, needing to make sense of what is ending, how we can talk about it and what tasks are worth taking on in whatever time it turns out that we have.

Something is coming over the horizon: a humbling from which none of us will be spared, that will not be managed or controlled, but will leave us changed.

Before it is over, I suspect, we will need to learn again what it means to take seriously things that are larger or smaller than were allowed to be real or significant, according to the scales and systems of modernity. We will need to dance again with the rhythms of cosmology, to be carried by the kind of stories and images in whose company – as the mythographer Martin Shaw would say – a universe becomes a cosmos. We will need to remember that we are not alone and never were, that we are part of a world of many worlds, only some of which are human. And we will need to rediscover that any world worth living for centers not on the vast systems we built to secure the future, but on those encounters that are proportioned to the kind of creatures we are, the places where we meet, the acts of friendship and the acts of hospitality in which we offer shelter and kindness to the stranger at the door. In this way, even now, there may be time to find our place within the vastly larger and older story of which we always were a part.

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How do you relate to the notion that the end of the world is about the end of a way of knowing the world? Can you share a personal story of a time you rediscovered the importance of encounters that are proportioned to the kind of creatures we are? What helps you remember that you are not alone, but a part of many worlds?

Add A Reflection

Awakin Archives

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About Awakin

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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