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Archive for May, 2023

Frida Kahlo: The Woman Behind the Legend

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 8, 2023

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Frida Kahlo: The Woman Behind the Legend

Feet, what do I need you for when I have wings to fly?

– Frida Kahlo –

Frida Kahlo: The Woman Behind the Legend

“In 1925, Frida Kahlo was on her way home from school in Mexico City when the bus she was riding collided with a streetcar. She suffered near-fatal injuries and her disability became a major theme in her paintings. Over the course of her life, she would establish herself as the creator and muse behind extraordinary pieces of art. Iseult Gillespie dives into the life and work of Frida Kahlo in this riveting TED talk. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration take a peek at the images and writing in the journals Kahlo kept over the last 10 years of her life. { more }

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Visions of Indigenous Futures

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May 7, 2023

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Visions of Indigenous Futures

May your children
hear and breathe
the words of
our Indigenous ancestors.
May we all be so lucky to
know an Indigenous future.

– Matika Wilbur –

Visions of Indigenous Futures

“The project began with a number: 562. It was the number of federally recognized tribes in the United States when photographer Matika Wilbur (Swinomish and Tulalip) quit her job, packed her camera, and hit the road in 2012 to try to photograph a member of every tribe. A decade later, Wilburs efforts are bearing fruit in the form of a new book, Project 562: Changing the Way We See Native America (Ten Speed Press). Over the course of her time meeting, talking with, and photographing Indigenous people around the continent, Wilburs goal changed…” More in this article from YES magazine about an indigenous photographer who set out to change the way we see Native America. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this piece by Native journalist Angela Sterritt, who highlights the strength and brilliance of Indigenous women as she investigates cases of those who have gone missing or been murdered, “Indigenous Women Remain Unbroken.” { more }

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Our Job Is To Sing: An Interview with David Baker

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May 6, 2023

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Our Job Is To Sing: An Interview with David Baker

If it’s only about the safe and beautiful thing, then that song is trivial. Our job is to figure out how to sing, how to find shape and artfulness and formal rigor, about things that are sometimes really not artful, like a dead whale, like chemicals, like disease.

– David Baker –

Our Job Is To Sing: An Interview with David Baker

“I have hundreds of pages of notes about whales and plastiglomerates and the whale fall and what happens in the oceans and fishing, and I just wasn’t happy with the poem that I was writing. At the same time, I was trying to think about writing a poem about my illness. We didn’t even know what it was 25 years ago when I first got sick–something called M.E. I began to take notes for that, too. I’ve never written about it very much in poetry. It dawned on me at some point that this had to be one poem and that it had to move from a hummingbird in my backyard, which is one of the totem animals in this poem, to this one whale dying in the deep part of the ocean where it can actually go through those three stages of whale fall before it reaches the bottom. I was thinking about that very hard. Grief, yes, it’s in the writing about my own illness. The purpose was to try to write about grief without writing about pity. Thats a difficult thing.” David Baker is the author of 13 books of poetry, including his most recent publication, “Whale Fall.” Alison Deming interviews him here about his work that honors both nature and its woundedness. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Sarah Gilman’s poem Terra Affirma here. { more }

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Son of a Sweeper

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May 5, 2023

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Son of a Sweeper

True peace is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice.

– Martin Luther King Jr. –

Son of a Sweeper

In India where caste discrimination is still rampant in many parts of the country, Vimal Kumar, the self-described “son of a sweeper,” and member of the Dalit community, is committed to creating new futures for those from backgrounds like his, who are often seen as invisible or less than. A documentary profiling his life’s work, tells the inspiring story of how Kumar formed the Movement for Scavenging Community as a gateway to help other Dalits rise above the discrimination against their caste, through the gateway of higher education. { read more }

Be The Change

As you consider jobs in society that are looked down upon, what can you do today to extend equality and justice to those who work in the service industries?

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Son of a Sweeper

This week’s inspiring video: Son of a Sweeper
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Video of the Week

May 04, 2023
Son of a Sweeper

Son of a Sweeper

In India, being the son of a sweeper (the lowest caste in Indian society) is an almost certain sentence to a life of manual street labor, such as cleaning up the human waste left on the train tracks and sewers. To many of the upper castes, the people doing this work are invisible and the problem of discrimination is unrecognized by those who are privileged and have never faced prejudice themselves. Vimal Kimar decided to solve the problems of his sweeper community by founding the Movement for Scavenger Community. Together, they are using their own inspiration, ideas and funds to work on solutions for the problems caused by being an outcaste. As Vimar Kamal continues his work for a just society in India, he takes inspiration from Martin Luther King Jr.’s quote " True peace is not merely the absence of tension: it is the presence of justice."
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Thirsty for Wonder

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May 4, 2023

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Thirsty for Wonder

Close your eyes and follow your breath to the still place that leads to the invisible path that leads you home.

– Mirabai Starr –

Thirsty for Wonder

“Contemplative life flows in a circular pattern: awe provokes introspection, which invokes awe. Maybe you’re making dinner and you step outside to snip chives from the kitchen garden just as the harvest moon is rising over the easterslopes. She is full and golden, like one of those pregnant women who radiate from within. Suddenly you cannot bear the beauty. Scissors suspended in your hand, tears pooling at the corners of your eyes, you nearly quit breathing. Your gaze softens, and the edges of your individual identity fade. You are absorbed into the heart of the moon. It feels natural, and there is no other place youd rather be. But the onions are burning, and so you turn away and cut your herbs and go back inside. You resume stirring the sauce and setting the table.
This is not the first time you have disappeared into something beautiful.” Mirabai Starr shares more in this excerpt from her book, “Wild Mercy.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Tami Simon’s interview with Starr here. { more }

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Letting Flowers Lead: The Way of Ikebana

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May 3, 2023

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Letting Flowers Lead: The Way of Ikebana

It’s not like you have to empty your mind and then you can listen to the flowers. If you try to listen to the voice of flowers, you naturally start emptying your mind. For me, ikebana is a practice of the mind.

– Mayuka Yamazaki –

Letting Flowers Lead: The Way of Ikebana

To Mayuka Yamazaki, a high-level business executive, ikebana — the ancient Japanese art of floral creations — is not just about arranging flowers. It is about attuning to the wisdom and beauty of nature and enriching our experience of being human. As a master of the art, she explains that ikebana is a word derived from the verb ikeru (to bring alive) and hana (flowers), or combined, “letting flowers live.” For over 20 years, Mayuka has been letting flowers live, and most recently, she has brought this practice to help restore wholeness to schools, international organizations, communities, and most notably, corporations. More in this interview. { read more }

Be The Change

This weekend join a special ikebana workshop with Mayuka: “Letting Flowers Lead.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Sacred Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 2, 2023

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Sacred Time

Sacred time is devoted to the heart, to the self, to others, to eternity. Sacred time is not measured in minutes, hours or days.

– Gary Eberle –

Sacred Time

“Beneath the thin surface layer of our present consciousness–a world of rushed days and time crushed into ever shorter segmentsis the older world of the collective psyche, the archetypal world that used to be known as the domain of the gods. Here time moves more slowly, according to ancient rhythms. This is the home of Kronos, the primordial god of time, whose rhythm is like the movement of the stars across the heavens, a primal rhythm of the universe which contains the birth and the death of galaxies. And in the presence of this god is all of creation, each with its own time and yet part of a living whole–from the mayfly that lives for a day, to stars birthing and collapsing. Here the sunflower follows the sun each day, and here our ancestors worshipped, noting each solstice.” Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee shares more in this beautiful piece from Parabola magazine. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out, “What is Your Philosophy of Time?” by Robert Levine.

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Our Practice Is To Close The Gap

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 1, 2023

Our Practice Is To Close The Gap

–Charlotte Joko Beck

Listen to Audio Translations RSVP for Awakin Circle
2630.jpgOur whole life consists of this little subject looking outside itself for an object. But if you take something that is limited, like body and mind, and look for something outside it, that something becomes an object and must be limited too. So you have something limited looking for something limited and you just end up with more of the same folly that has made you miserable.

We have all spent many years building up a conditioned view of life. There is "me" and there is this "thing" out there that is either hurting me or pleasing me. We tend to run our whole life trying to avoid all that hurts or displeases us, noticing the objects, people, or situations that we think will give us pain or pleasure, avoiding one and pursuing the other. Without exception, we all do this. We remain separate from our life, looking at it, analyzing it, judging it, seeking to answer the questions, ‘What am I going to get out of it? Is it going to give me pleasure or comfort or should I run away from it?" We do this from morning until night.

Underneath our nice, friendly facades there is great unease. If I were to scratch below the surface of anyone I would find fear, pain, and anxiety running amok. We all have ways to cover them up. We overeat, over-drink, overwork; we watch too much television. We are always doing something to cover up our basic existential anxiety. Some people live that way until the day they die.

As the years go by, it gets worse and worse. What might not look so bad when you are twenty-five looks awful by the time you are fifty. We all know people who might as well be dead; they have so contracted into their limited viewpoints that it is as painful for those around them as it is for themselves. The flexibility and joy and flow of life are gone. And that rather grim possibility faces all of us, unless we wake up to the fact that we need to work with our life, we need to practice.

We have to see through the mirage that there is an "I" separate from "that." Our practice is to close the gap. Only in that instant when we and the object become one can we see what our life is.

Enlightenment is not something you achieve. It is the absence of something. All your life you have been going forward after something, pursuing some goal. Enlightenment is dropping all that. But to talk about it is of little use.

The practice has to be done by each individual. There is no substitute. We can read about it until we are a thousand years old and it won’t do a thing for us. We all have to practice, and we have to practice with all of our might for the rest of our lives.

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How do you relate to the notion that enlightenment is the absence of pursuing any goal? Can you share a personal story of a time you saw through the mirage of the subject being separate from the object? What helps you close the gap?

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The Future of Intelligence

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May 1, 2023

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The Future of Intelligence

No amount of quantity adds up to quality.

– Charles Eisenstein –

The Future of Intelligence

“Tech and thought leaders en masse signed an open letter in March, authored by the Future of Life Institute, calling for a six-month pause or a moratorium, if required, on developing large language models past GPT-4.0. The letter describes how this tech is simply too dangerous to proceed headfirst without first thinking through, collectively, what it is we are doing. What follows is a trialogue looking at some of the issues, opportunities and implications of AI now and in the future. Who better to discuss these issues with than two of the smartest people I know: Freely and Charles Eisenstein.” Tam Hunt joins Freely and Eisenstein for the following trialogue. { read more }

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For more inspiration, check out this interview of Eisenstein, “How to Create a More Beautiful World.” { more }

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