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Archive for December, 2023

What Do You See?

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 22, 2023

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What Do You See?

The world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.

– W.B. Yeats –

What Do You See?

A multitude of silent realities linger just under the surface of what we perceive as ‘normal’ human experiences. The intriguing phenomenon of seeing colors differently, brought into pop culture consciousness by “The Dress” internet debate in 2015, underpins how each person’s individual perceptions differ dramatically. This mind-boggling reality has far-reaching implications that stretch beyond viral internet debates, as demonstrated in an engrossing article by psychology professor Gary Lupyan. Lupyan explores unknown realms of experience such as “aphantasia” – the inability to visualize images in one’s mind, and “anendophasia” – where individuals lack an inner voice. “Imagine your phone buzzes with breaking news: WASHINGTON SCIENTISTS DISCOVER TAIL-LESS MAN. Well, then, what are you?” Blake Ross, the co-creator of the Firefox web browser, exclaims after discovering he had aphantasia. These uncharted differences in human experiences expose a rich and diverse tapestry of cognitive processes that are challenging assumptions about ‘normal’ human phenomena. { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you encounter a person whose behavior you find difficult to understand, lean into a space of curiosity for how their senses take in the world.

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Homebird

This week’s inspiring video: Homebird
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Video of the Week

Dec 21, 2023
Homebird

Homebird

Remember the day you struck out on your own to find your place in the world? Remember longing to go back home during that awkward time of being not entirely here and not entirely back there? Homebird, a National Film and Television School graduation film created entirely in paint-on-cel technique, reminds us we can take home with us.
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The Bridge We Were Meant To Cross

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 21, 2023

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The Bridge We Were Meant To Cross

We will only understand the miracle of life fully when we allow the unexpected to happen.

– Paulo Coelho –

The Bridge We Were Meant To Cross

“My brother and I were driving home together and became engrossed in a conversation. Because of this distraction, my brother took a wrong turn. Unfortunately, the wrong turn took us towards a bridge and we had no way to turn back. Grudgingly, my brother paid the bridge toll and drove on. He was clearly frustrated by the mistake and the needless waste of $4. We eventually reached an exit slip-way and, as we took it, my brother noticed a beat-up black Mustang pulled over to the side of the road. A young guy was standing nearby trying to phone someone. I was busy trying to figure out which way we went next but my brother pulled over and asked the guy if he needed any help. And he did. He had a flat tire and needed a wrench to get it off. My brother gave him a wrench, then proceed to help him change the flat. We started getting to know the young man …” { read more }

Be The Change

Look for unexpected possibilities in the next setback or ‘wrong turn’ that you encounter.

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Hundreds of Strangers Send Gifts to Make Teens’ Wishes Come True

A Father, a Son, a Run, and Little Friend.

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A Father, a Son, a Run, and Little Friend.

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 20, 2023

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A Father, a Son, a Run, and Little Friend.

My favorite things in life don’t cost any money. It’s really clear that the most precious resource we all have is time.

– Steve Jobs –

A Father, a Son, a Run, and Little Friend.

It was a bright Sunday morning in late September. Thomas Lake was waiting for his 11-year-old son at the finish line of a 5K race they both were running. Panic began to set in, as Lake knew his son could run the 5K in 30 minutes, and the clock was ticking towards 40 minutes. An hour earlier, father-and-son were driving when the 11-year-old noticed a fingernail-long neon green tree cricket on the hood of the car. It was a friendly little guy who crawled across Lake’s shirt, and then sat on his son’s finger for a long, long time. They gave it the name, Little Friend. As the race began, Little Friend was still perched on his son’s wrist. “You’ll lose him,” Lake had warned. The boy had nodded solemnly in understanding. Back at the finish line, Lake frantically asked people if they’d seen his son. No one had. Finally, around the 45-minute mark, the child was in sight of the finish line. And Little Friend’s neon green sheen was hard to miss, riding on the young runner’s thumb. “There is more than one way to win a race,” Lake begins to conclude, pointing at the fleeting, infinite treasures that can be stumbled upon in unassuming moments. { read more }

Be The Change

Look for value in something ordinary today.

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10 Insights of 2023 from the Science of a Meaningful Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 19, 2023

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10 Insights of 2023 from the Science of a Meaningful Life

The part can never be well unless the whole is well.

– Plato –

10 Insights of 2023 from the Science of a Meaningful Life

Step into 2024 with fresh scientific insights on cultivating a meaningful life. The past year has brought forth intriguing studies on the power of compassion, kindness, gratitude, awe and intellectual humility. Merging cultural sensitivity into happiness measurement, academics have opened our perspective, challenging us to rethink our understanding of global happiness. Did you know your acts of kindness could soothe your mental health, or that gratitude could shape your children’s welfare? And here’s to debunking the illusion of moral decline – humanity, it turns out, isn’t falling apart. Dive into UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center’s compilation of the top 10 insights of 2023 on the science of a meaningful life. Here’s to a year of nurturing small steps of service, compassion, wellbeing and humanity! { read more }

Be The Change

Inspired by the studies referenced in today’s article, practice an act of random kindness, awe, or gratitude today.

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The Process Of Understanding

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Dec 18, 2023

The Process Of Understanding

–Michael Lipson

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2643.jpgWe’ll focus on the union of two apparently contradictory gestures: simultaneous holding and releasing.

Holding. I have a project, like writing a letter, or choreographing a musical, or solving a math problem, or holding (as we say) a meeting. Or leading a life. Or concentrating on the breath, or on a meditative theme.

Releasing. Within this held space, this held environment or process, I must effect a kind of release, or nothing further happens.

So I give myself the form of a sonnet or a haiku, and that invites the free creativity to fill out the form. I hold the meditation theme, in the sense that I return to it from obvious distractions, but within the theme I allow any thought, any depth, to arise for me. If I am a good leader, I can delegate rather than micromanage.

We seek to have strong concentration, and at the same time, within it, a maximum of letting go. This has something of the structure of the invitation from the good host, who invites someone, welcomes them, and then allows the guest a great deal of freedom within their role as guest. We welcome so many kinds of guests: babies into the world, and ideas that are new to us, and, as Thoreau put it, "an infinite expectation of the dawn." […]

The process of understanding anything requires a directedness on our part (that’s the holding) and also a receptivity on our part (that’s the releasing). So, for instance, if we want to understand a cup, we aim our attention cup-wards, and within that intentionality is also a subtle waiting, or receptivity, for news about the cup to arrive. I begin, perhaps picturing a cup, perhaps abstractly considering its functions, and something is given into my awareness — for example, "You can put a cup down and it will still hold its contents, unlike a spoon that has to be held or it will spill." Where did that particular thought come from? Not historically, I mean, but right now: from where did the new understanding emerge into my awareness? Somehow we aim and then somehow we receive.

A concentrated yet effortless involvement of this kind can lead us into the very process of understanding, into that "where the thought came from" and therefore — most surprisingly — into increasingly intimate contact with the very life of the world. We become less alienated from the earth, less "objective" and separate. A self-development like this, a change in the process by which we use our minds and hearts to participate in the world, will be increasingly important as we face the disasters of human-wrought climate change and all its attendant troubles. Our hearts and minds can become collaborative aspects of the flow of relationship that is the earth. […]

With how much of the totality can we let ourselves be aligned and allied to hold each other? How freely, to what reaches of being, can we then release each other? Let’s find out.

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How do you relate to the notion that the process of understanding anything requires both holding and releasing? Can you share a personal story of a time you emerged with deep understanding through concentration and release? What helps you simultaneously hold and release?

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Life as a Cup of Tea

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 18, 2023

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Life as a Cup of Tea

Everything in nature contains all the power of nature. Everything is made of one hidden stuff.

– Ralph Waldo Emerson –

Life as a Cup of Tea

“‘The key to tasting tea,’ she said, ‘is to never judge it. Some teas open in the beginning and fade quickly, some teas take 6 cups to open and last longer,'” writes Mina Lee, as she steeps in her first experience with a tea ceremony and the words of Chan teacher, Mudeng. Lee observes, “The way the leaves are picked, the water used, the ceramic used, the tea pourer, how they hold the lid to steam the tea, the minutes and seconds they change the steep time by — that all affects the taste of the tea. And the most important besides all of that is You, who is tasting the tea — your own capacity to sense vibrational energies, subtleties in flavor, and allowance of the tea to take you on a journey from where it came — this is different for each person.” { read more }

Be The Change

In your next cup of tea, sip the subtle stories and journeys across the earth that went into its creation. For more inspiration, join a special virtual tea ceremony for the new year with Mina Lee on January 6, 2024: Details/RSVP here.

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Jacques Lusseryn: I Loved in a Stream of Light

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Jacques Lusseryn: I Loved in a Stream of Light

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 17, 2023

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Jacques Lusseryn: I Loved in a Stream of Light

“Light is within us, even if we have no eyes. Without my eyes, light was much more stable than it had been with them.”

– Jacques Lusseyran –

Jacques Lusseryn: I Loved in a Stream of Light

French author and political activist Jacques Lusseyran (1924-1971) was blinded at the age of 7. In 1941, at the age of 17, he became a leader in the French resistance against Nazi Germany’s occupation of France. Eventually, he was sent to Buchenwald concentration camp because of his involvement in the resistance. He was one of 30 out of 2000 inmates in his group to survive. Later, he wrote about his life experiences, including his time during the war. This stirring 16-minute audio selection is taken from both his autobiography, And There Was Light, and his book, Against the Pollution of the I. { read more }

Be The Change

Take 15 minutes today to listen within. Journal, sit in silence, take a mindful walk. See what inner light you discern.

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Jessica Gigot: Moon

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 15, 2023

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Jessica Gigot: Moon

Ways of life change only in living.

– Wendell Berry –

Jessica Gigot: Moon

“The full moon rises over the blackberry bramble along the ditch. It has been shining so bright these past few nights, aiming light into all the dark spaces, memories, regrets. … I am inside with our two girls. We can’t afford a full-time babysitter, so in the afternoons, my husband and I alternate, fusing into one person running the farm. During this particular day I have milked the sheep and made a batch of cheese. Now I am coloring and eating carrot sticks and apple wedges while he does the tractor work. He will feed all the animals and come in to make dinner. While he makes dinner, I will go out to finish chores. An agrarian merry-go-round. … It is me and the moon again, outside. The cool calm on the deck offers solace. The farm is a destination I’ve reached and, still, a blank slate in many ways. I am writing this story anew each day.” Poet and farmer Jessica Gigot unveils the tapestry of a day on her farm under the full moon. Her lyrical words breathe life into the smallest, often unnoticed, moments — inviting a lens into how our lives are inextricably woven into the earth. { read more }

Be The Change

Look up at the moon, stars, or sky today, and take a moment to pause and reflect on the rhythms of nature of which we are a part.

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Indlela Yokuphila: The Soul’s Journey (in Zulu)

This week’s inspiring video: Indlela Yokuphila: The Soul’s Journey (in Zulu)
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Video of the Week

Dec 14, 2023
Indlela Yokuphila: The Soul's Journey (in Zulu)

Indlela Yokuphila: The Soul’s Journey (in Zulu)

The short film "Indlela Yokuphila" meaning "the Soul’s Journey" in Zulu was researched and narrated by Mpume Mthombeni (Empatheatre) and directed by Marc Moynihan (Shells & Spells) and Dr. Dylan McGarry (Empatheatre/Rhodes University). The film aims to make intangible ocean heritages more tangible in decision making for environmental governance and education through animation and public dialogue. The film strives to return the sacred to our conversations around human and ocean well-being. The film acts as a love letter to Kwa-Zulu Natal, a region that has faced its share of tragedies in recent years. It not only delves into Zulu traditions but also acknowledges other sacred rituals and practices intertwined in the region’s history. "Indlela Yokuphila" is a testament to the power of storytelling and collaboration in shedding light on the relationship between humans and marine ecosystems.
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