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Archive for October 31, 2023

Kintsugi: The Golden Joinery of Love

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October 31, 2023

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Kintsugi: The Golden Joinery of Love

The true life of the bowl began the moment it was dropped.

– Ancient Kintsugi quote –

Kintsugi: The Golden Joinery of Love

Sue Cochrane was a family court judge who sought to bring more love into the practice of law. The forces she battled were not confined to the court room — among them, poverty, violence, addiction, abuse, a terminal diagnosis and more. In this powerful piece, she explores kintsugi — a stunning Japanese art form in which broken pottery is repaired by filling the cracks with gold. Kingtsugi, poems, quotes, and books inspire this remarkable individual, “to find healing in a life that for a long time, was not only cracked, but broken apart — and, in a few places completely shattered.” Sue (who passed away in 2021,) tells her story here as a reminder of our shared humanity, our vulnerability, and the capacity we have to heal our brokenness in beautiful ways. { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special conversation this Saturday with Mick Cochrane, Sue’s younger brother who helped bring her remarkable posthumous memoir, “The Crystal Gavel,” into print this fall. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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When Winnie The Pooh Was Scared

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Oct 30, 2023

When Winnie The Pooh Was Scared

–A. A. Milne

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2675.jpg“Piglet” said Pooh. “Yes,” said Piglet. “I’m scared,” said Pooh.

For a moment there was silence. “Would you like to talk about it,” asked Piglet, when Pooh didn’t appear to be saying anything further.

“I’m just so scared,” blurted out Pooh, “so anxious, because I don’t feel like things are getting any better. If anything, I feel like they might be getting worse. People are angry because they are so scared and they’re turning on one another and there seems to be no clear plan out of here and I worry about my friends and the people I love and I wish so much that I could give them all a hug. And, oh, Piglet, I am so scared and I cannot tell you how much I wish it wasn’t.”

So Piglet was thoughtful as he looked out at the blue of the skies, peeping between the branches of the trees in the hundred acre wood and listened to his friend.

“I’m here.” He said simply. “I hear you, Pooh, and I’m here.”

For a moment Pooh was perplexed. “But aren’t you going to tell me not to be so silly that I should stop getting myself into a state and pull myself together that it’s hard for everyone right now?” “No,” said Piglet quite decisively. “No, I am very much not going to do any of those things.”

“But,” said Pooh,

“I can’t change the world right now,” continued Piglet. “And I’m not going to patronize you with platitudes about how everything will be okay, because I don’t know that. What I can do, though, Pooh, is, I can make sure that you know that I am here and that I will always be here to listen and to support you and for you to know that you are heard. I can’t make those anxious feelings go away, not really, but I can promise you that all the time I have breath left in my body, you won’t ever need to feel those anxious feelings alone.”

And it was a strange thing because, even as Piglet said that Pooh could feel some of those anxious feelings start to loosen their grip on him, could feel one or two of them start to slither away into the forest, cowed by his friend who sat there solidly next to him.

Pooh thought he had never been more grateful to have Piglet in his life.

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How do you relate to the notion of holding space as an authentic response to a difficult problem? Can you share a personal story of a time you held space for someone? What helps you commit to being there for someone as a witness without judgment?

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