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Archive for July, 2023

Seth Godin: The Song of Significance

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July 31, 2023

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Seth Godin: The Song of Significance

It’s creating a difference, being part of something, and doing work we’re proud of. This is the song of significance. This is what motivates people to do the work that can’t be automated, mechanized or outsourced. And this is the song that humans yearn to sing together.

– Seth Godin –

Seth Godin: The Song of Significance

When Seth Godin made an exception to his no-flying for work rule to help run a conference for entrepreneurs working on climate, issues, it was at the request of a man named Dan in Australia whose 10-year-old daughter was born with health issues. The day before the conference the man let him know his daughter wasn’t feeling well, so he wouldn’t be there in person. Seth ended up running the conference with an Australian beekeeper.”And he started talking to me about the bees, and he told me the story of Jacqueline Freeman’s Song of Increase. And The Song of Increase is just such a great Tim Ferriss story. So heres what happens.” This brief excerpt from Ferriss’ interview with Godin shares the fascinating backstory behind Godin’s latest book, “The Song of Significance: A New Manifesto for Teams.” { read more }

Be The Change

“So, the question is, why can’t we create the conditions for people to have the best job they ever had? Because it’s not that you didn’t have to work that hard. It’s not that you got paid a fortune. In fact, it’s probably the opposite. It’s probably that people treated you with respect, that you achieved more than you thought you could, that you made a difference, that you did work that matters with people you care about. Well, if we’re going to spend 100,000 hours at work in our lifetime, don’t we deserve that? Why don’t we build that? That’s why I wrote the book.” Godin shares more in this interview with Tyler Cohen. { more }

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When Elves Took Over an Abandoned Gas Station

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July 30, 2023

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When Elves Took Over an Abandoned Gas Station

It is quite possible to leave your home for a walk in the early morning air and return a different person – beguiled, enchanted.

– Mary Ellen Chase –

When Elves Took Over an Abandoned Gas Station

“I’m a sucker for enchantment, , especially when it arises from unlikely places. By a year and a half into the pandemic in the fall of 2021, I had become increasingly frustrated by the incursion of scientific measurement into daily life, from never-ending COVID testing to forehead thermometer readings. As valuable as such tools can be, I longed for my daily life to be filled with more of the unquantifiable mystery that fills our world, even if we only notice it in exceptional moments. Following the alchemical experience of losing my father early in the pandemic, I was inspired to learn more about my ancestors. Seated at my home computer, I began a genealogical investigation that eventually took me to three continents. I relished my meandering online journey, pausing to appreciate the storied lands of the Celts, the fantastical creatures that populate their folklore, and the enduring belief in them among modern people. I did not expect to encounter these legendary creatures on my city block in Somerville, Massachusetts…” Kaitlin Smith shares more about sowing enchantment in a Boston suburb. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Maria Popova’s post on Katherine May’s book, “Enchantment: Awakening Wonder in an Anxious Age.” { more }

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A Cloud Never Dies

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July 29, 2023

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A Cloud Never Dies

A cloud has a good time traveling. When it falls down it does not die, it just becomes the rain. A cloud can never die.

– Thich Nhat Hanh –

A Cloud Never Dies

A Cloud Never Dies is a biographical documentary of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh. Narrated by actor Peter Coyote, “it weaves together original film and photographic archives, telling the story of a humble young Vietnamese monk and poet whose wisdom and compassion were forged in the suffering of war. In the face of violence, fear, and discrimination, Thich Nhat Hanh’s courageous path of engaged action reveals how insight, community, and a deep aspiration to serve the world can offer hope, peace, and a way forward for millions.” Watch it here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this passage from Thay, “Clouds in Each Paper.” { more }

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The Constant Gardener

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 28, 2023

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The Constant Gardener

If you look the right way, you can see that the whole world is a garden.

– Frances Hodgson Burnett –

The Constant Gardener

The garden is a space defined not by its physicality but by the emotions it evokes and the connections it provokes. And the act of gardening can change the way we relate to the world around us for the better, giving us perspective and teaching us lessons about life. Our souls are gardens. Our hearts are flowers. They need to be watered, tended, fertilized and loved. Happy gardening! { read more }

Be The Change

Choose to plant seeds of love. Fertilize harmony. Water the connections, the underground network where our hearts speak to one another.

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The Constant Gardener

This week’s inspiring video: The Constant Gardener
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Video of the Week

Jul 27, 2023
The Constant Gardener

The Constant Gardener

The garden is a space defined not by it’s physicality but by the emotions it evokes and the connections it provokes. And the act of gardening can change the way we relate to the world around us for the better, giving us perspective and teaching us lessons about life. Our souls are gardens. Our hearts are flowers. They need to be watered, tended, fertilized and loved. Happy gardening!
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Adrian Arleo: Metaphors for Interdependence

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July 27, 2023

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Adrian Arleo: Metaphors for Interdependence

Both dreams and myths are important communications from ourselves to ourselves.

– Erich Fromm –

Adrian Arleo: Metaphors for Interdependence

Writes Adrian Arleo, “For 40 years, my sculpture has combined human, animal and natural imagery to create a kind of emotional and poetic power. Often there’s a suggestion of a vital interconnection between the human and non-human realms; the imagery arises from associations, concerns and obsessions that are at once intimate and universal. The work frequently references mythology and archetypes in addressing our vulnerability amid changing personal, environmental and political realities. By focussing on older, more mysterious ways of seeing the world, edges of consciousness and deeper levels of awareness suggest themselves.” Explore some of her work in this post from Orion Magazine. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this interview with the artist. { more }

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The Sound of the Genuine

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July 26, 2023

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The Sound of the Genuine

In the stillness of quiet, if we listen, we can hear the whisper of the heart giving strength to weakness, courage to fear, hope to despair.

– Howard Thurman –

The Sound of the Genuine

“There is in every person something that waits and listens for the sound of the genuine … There is in you something that waits and listens for the sound of the genuine in yourself. Nobody like you has ever been born and no one like you will ever be born again — you are the only one.

If you cannot hear it, you will never find whatever it is for which you are searching and if you hear it and then do not follow it, it was better that you had never been born. You are the only you that has ever lived; your idiom is the only idiom of its kind in all the existences, and if you cannot hear the sound of the genuine in you, you will all of your life spend your days on the ends of strings that somebody else pulls.” More from Howard Thurman in this short and potent passage. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out, “Backs Against the Wall: The Howard Thurman Story.” { more }

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The Donkey & the Meaning of Eternity: A Love Letter to Life

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July 25, 2023

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The Donkey & the Meaning of Eternity: A Love Letter to Life

All over, the countryside opens up into crackings and creakings, into a boiling of healthy new life.
It’s as if we were inside a huge honeycomb of light which was also the interior of an immense, flaming-hot rose.

– Juan Ramón Jiménez –

The Donkey & the Meaning of Eternity: A Love Letter to Life

“Beneath our anxious quickenings, beneath our fanged fears, beneath the rusted armors of conviction, tenderness is what we long for — tenderness to salve our bruising contact with reality, to warm us awake from the frozen stupor of near-living. Tenderness is what permeates Platero and I (public library) by the Nobel-winning Spanish poet Juan Ramon Jimenez (December 23, 1881-May 29, 1958) — part love letter to his beloved donkey, part journal of ecstatic delight in nature and humanity, part fairy tale for the lonely.” Maria Popova shares more from the Nobel-winning Spanish poet… { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to register the “crackings and creakings” of your immediate environment. What does it evoke for you?

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Shadow Cannot Drive Out Shame

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jul 24, 2023

Shadow Cannot Drive Out Shame

–Bonnie Rose

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2653.jpgI was taught to affirm, “I am whole, perfect, and complete.” I didn’t have good definitions of those words at the time. So my ego said, “Really? I am? Well thank you for noticing!” Then I strove to uphold my ego’s definition of “whole, perfect, and complete,” again trying to achieve myself into acceptability.

In metaphysical teachings, sometimes the ego takes hold, and we develop a second shadow that covers shame with a ghostly illusion of spirituality. Our fellow travelers on a spiritual path become new targets for comparison. We try to be as spiritual as others to prove our acceptability. But the shadow of trying to “be more spiritual” wrestles with the shadow of shame—and the wrestling match drags us into a deeper pit.

Dr. Martin Luther King said, “Hate cannot drive out hate,” and “Darkness cannot drive out darkness.” The same is true for the shadow and shame. Shadow cannot drive out shame. Shame cannot drive out shadow. When we attempt to fix a shadow with a shadow, we either fail outright; or we fail by false success—in other words, we think we conquer the shadow, but really we just temporarily contain it. We cram a roiling stew of shadow into a tight Tupperware. We seal the lid and stick it in storage. Suppression invites the shadow to ferment and eventually explode into a pseudo-poltergeist that interferes with the fullness of life.

I know for me, when my ego was in charge—if I ever had moments of brokenness, imperfection, or incompletion—I pressed myself into the metaphorical Tupperware with gusto. I would not allow the power of a negative thought. I prayed my tank-like prayers to invoke outer symbols of success. I believed if I could just apply enough evidentiary band-aids to fasten my life together, then people would think I was okay. They would think I was “doing it right,” that I was truly as “whole, perfect, and complete” as all the really gifted spiritual people were. If I could just get other people to accept me, then maybe I could accept myself. I worked hard at acceptability and was fairly successful — that is until the shame-filled Tupperware exploded again, and I found myself wiping up a mess of pain with a self-rejecting ego.

Eventually I entered into a mystical, non-dual path and learned new definitions of "whole, perfect, and complete." Wholeness includes brokenness; perfect literally means inclusive of everything; complete means evolving. I incorporated this paradoxical wisdom into my life and became gentler with myself and others.

Richard Rohr says, "What you do not transform, you will transmit." I looked at my life and compassionately observed my transmittal of suppressed shame. My transmittal took many forms — hypersensitivity, eye-rolling, defensiveness, and criticism of self and others. My heightened awareness of transmitted shame brought me to a new place of paradox and willingness.

I was willing to see how the shame-inducing ego is part of love’s plan, but not in the way I thought it was. Shame doesn’t exist to make us smaller; it exists to call us to inner greatness through humility. We acknowledge shame. We befriend our humanity and offer it compassion. Our compassion inspires us to regard ourselves unconditionally. Then we transcend our imagined limits of acceptability through the powers of grace, forgiveness, and love. In other words, we love ourselves beyond our capacity to love ourselves. We learn to let God love through us. This lovingness extends to our love for others as well.

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How do you relate to the notion that shame calls us to inner greatness through humility? Can you share a personal story of a time you accepted yourself fully, shadow and all? What helps you avoid the trap of comparing yourself with others on the spiritual path?

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A Broad Margin

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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 24, 2023

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A Broad Margin

I love a broad margin to my life.

– Henry David Thoreau –

A Broad Margin

“To meander is a natural form of movement, uncontrived, unhurried. Rivers and roving butterflies are adept at meandering. And we were too, once upon a time before we developed a preference for traveling in straight lines, perhaps because of Euclid, who told us a straight line is the shortest distance between two points (for the record he was not entirely right about this.) Regardless of length, a bend in the road will always be revelatory. A straight path seldom holds any surprises. In other words efficiency and epiphany do not typically travel together…” More in this short post that explores broad margins and the bend in the road. { read more }

Be The Change

Make time for meandering today. For more inspiration, check out Rebecca Solnit on, “A Childhood of Reading and Wandering.” { more }

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