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Archive for February, 2024

Conscious Complaining

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Feb 19, 2024

Conscious Complaining

–Karla McLaren

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2683.jpgNot to start on a down note, but repressing your emotions can destabilize your psyche and do a number on your overall health. When emotions fester and stagnate, your body reacts to that lack of flow with fatigue and distress, and you often dissociate or run toward distractions or addictions just to take a vacation from it all.

If this is your current situation, here’s an easy way to restore flow to a clogged-up psyche: I call it Conscious Complaining.

I first learned of the importance of complaining in the late, great career counselor Barbara Sher. She suggests making regular time to complain, both to “de-steam” and to get a clearer understanding of whatever it is that’s holding you back.

Sher writes about finding a complaining partner, but I’ve modified the practice because there are very few people in this world who can deal with the amount of complaining I can produce. Most people want to stop me, fix me, or help me see the world in a peppier light (which is just another form of repression if I’m in a foul mood). I’ve gone a different way and turned my complaining practice into a solitary one, which has been a real lifesaver.

Now, every time I lose all faith or come up against impossible obstacles, I can whine, moan, kvetch, and reinvigorate myself with the grim truth of what I’m experiencing. When I’m done, I’m not depressed or enraged; instead, I’m often able to get right back to work because I know exactly what the problems are and just how hard life can be. This practice doesn’t bring me down; it lifts me up because it clears all the complaints out of my system and restores my flow.

Here’s how to complain consciously. The only requirements are that you’re in a bad mood and you have some privacy. You start with a declaration like, “I’m complaining now!” If you’re inside, you can complain to the walls or furniture or to a mirror. If you’re outside, you can complain to plants and trees, animals, nature, the sky, the ground, or your god. If you’re a strong complainer like I am, you might want to create a complaining shrine for yourself, with supportive pictures of grumpy cats, bratty kids, barking dogs, political cartoons, and whatever else calls to your complaining nature.

When you’ve found your perfect complaining site, let yourself go and give a voice to your dejected, hopeless, sarcastic, nasty, bratty self. Bring sarcastic humor out of the shadows and really whine about the frustrations, impossibilities, and absurdities of your situation. Complain for as long as you like (you’ll be surprised at how quickly this works), and when you run out of things to say, thank whatever you’ve been whining or yelling at: the furniture, the walls, the ground, the trees, your complaining shrine, or your god for listening, and end your Conscious Complaining session by bowing, shaking off, and then doing something really fun. That’s it!

People who try this practice are astonished to find that complaining doesn’t pull them further down into the doldrums. It has precisely the opposite effect because it breaks through stagnation and repression and lets you tell it like it is, with zero repercussions. Unlike positive affirmations, which tell you how to feel, you’re feeling the way you feel. The truth is told, the decks are cleared, and you get an important time-out. And because this is a solitary practice, there is no danger of losing face or hurting someone else’s feelings. Afterward, you’ll find that you can revisit your struggles with renewed vigor and vision.

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When you find yourself in a bad mood, as a victim of external circumstances, how do you regain your center? In a moment of complaining, what practices help you reduce the time you spend in anguish? In your experience, how do positive affirmations differ from conscious complaining?

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Zero Problem Philanthropy

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February 18, 2024

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Zero Problem Philanthropy

Prevention is better than cure.

– Desiderius Erasmus –

Zero Problem Philanthropy

Christian Seelos reframes our concept of philanthropy with the idea of Zero-Problem Philanthropy, a shift from focusing on finding solutions for problems to creating healthy social contexts that inherently reduce the creation of problems to begin with. Our current “solution-focused” philanthropic methods often result in a never-ending cycle of problems and solutions. “What would it take to shift from a reactive, past-oriented solution perspective to a proactive philanthropy oriented towards a healthy future that does not create so many problems?” he proposes. Akin to “Zero Disease” visions of medicine that focuses on sustaining good health through preventative practices upstream (as opposed to treating diseases downstream), Zero-Problem Philanthropy could similarly engage transformation at the contextual or systemic level. With existing case studies ranging from the transportation sector to homelessness initiatives, potential implementations of this proactive philanthropy show promise. “All organizations are perfectly designed to get the results they get,” Seelos notes; thus, to change the results, we must change the design. { read more }

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Think of something that’s going well in your life or work. Reflect on what conditions make this possible, and express gratitude for that today.

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Mycelial Landscapes

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February 16, 2024

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Mycelial Landscapes

When you start to step out of the human-flavored reality and explore these other spectrums, you realize that everything is kind of existing in relationship to everything else in its own sensory kind of dialogue.

– Barney Steel –

Mycelial Landscapes

Mycologist Merlin Sheldrake, creative director Barney Steel and filmmaker Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee embark on a compelling conversation on the role of mycelial webs in holding our landscapes together, and how our human systems can learn from that. The nature of fungi may just force us to rethink our traditional conceptions of individuality, intelligence, and life itself. “One of the things we might learn from fungi,” notes Sheldrake, “…is that to adapt and to move through this mess, we will need to form new types of relationship with non-human, more-than-human organisms, but also with humans, and across human ages, cultures, different points of view, disciplines.” { read more }

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Reflect on the greater systems of which you are a part. Do an act of care today with the ripple-effect in mind.

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The Art of Paying Attention

This week’s inspiring video: The Art of Paying Attention
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Video of the Week

Feb 15, 2024
The Art of Paying Attention

The Art of Paying Attention

This short TED talk is an invitation to slow down and look at the world around you. Graphic journalist Wendy MacNaughton illustrates how drawing can spark deeply human, authentic connections. This is not about doing a good drawing but more about looking and allowing yourself to really see what is before you and experiencing it fully. Ready to try? Grab a pencil and join MacNaughton for this delightful talk. "Drawing is looking, and looking is loving," she says.
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The New Old Age

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February 15, 2024

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The New Old Age

It’s not what you do, but who you become by what you do.

– Anonymous –

The New Old Age

Still wondering what you want to be when you grow up? Turns out, you’re not alone. A fascinating phenomenon is burgeoning among retiring adults as they step out of their primary careers and into “the Encore Years”. Programs at institutions like Stanford and Harvard have cropped up to support such transitions, particularly for high-powered leaders. Such a process unearths raw questions on the nature of who they are, and what really matters. “When we’re young,” author David Brooks writes, “we tend to want what other people want: the things that will bring affirmation, status, and financial gain. But in the Encore phase, students are compelled to move from pursuing the extrinsic desires the world rewards to going after their intrinsic desires.” Conventional success hinges on productivity and its optimization of effort and deliverables. But what’s the relevance of productivity once you get to the stage beyond work life? Former advertising firm CEO Susan Gianinno notes, “The key shift is to go from mastery to servant.” Brooks describes her sentiment, “When you’re in a high-powered work environment, you think of yourself as a master of performance. But to succeed in this new phase of life, ‘you have to serve.'” The question is; does one wait until 65+ to find our deeper purpose or can we learn from these trailblazers and start now? { read more }

Be The Change

Who are you beyond what you do? Today, cultivate a quality or value you’d like to grow in.

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Why 1,200 Widows Will Be Surprised With Flowers Today

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February 14, 2024

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Why 1,200 Widows Will Be Surprised With Flowers Today

I have found that among its other benefits, giving liberates the soul of the giver.

– Maya Angelou –

Why 1,200 Widows Will Be Surprised With Flowers Today

After the birth of her fourth child, Ashley Manning started a flower business as a respite from the whirlwind of family life. On Valentine’s Day in 2020, she gifted a bouquet to her son’s preschool teacher, who was widowed. Months later, at the end of the school year, that teacher told her, “I just want you to know how much that meant to me, that you thought of me on that day.” Inspired, for the holiday in 2021, Manning invited her community to nominate widows to receive bouquets — an effort that surprised 119 widows with flowers. It struck universal heartstrings. Donations and volunteers poured in. In 2023, around 500 volunteers prepared and delivered 800 bouquets for widows, literally backing up traffic in Manning’s neighborhood. Manning’s intent to comfort a triggering holiday for the grieving has taken up residence in thousands of hearts. Today, 1,200 bouquets will be delivered in Manning’s city of Charlotte, North Carolina, and communities inspired by her effort are sharing flowers with widows in Tennessee, New York, Washington, Ohio, and Texas. But the ripples extend beyond flowers on Valentine’s Day. Michelle Boudin, who reported on Manning’s story in 2022, returned to volunteer with her Widow Outreach Project flower deliveries in 2023. After losing her mom in 2022, Boudin’s Valentine’s Day experience prompted her to honor her mother, a former schoolteacher, by creating a special day with gifts of books for students in a local classroom. In parallel, a few states away, the mother of one of Manning’s bouquet recipients is plotting a special surprise for a friend who lost her husband. { read more }

Be The Change

Honor a loved one by dedicating an act of kindness to them.

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The Decision to Change

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February 13, 2024

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The Decision to Change

I can’t change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to always reach my destination.

– Jimmy Dean –

The Decision to Change

“He looked me in the eyes and said, ‘I had that kind of clarity once. I chose to listen to others about what I should do and how I should live my life. I didn’t want to go to law school, but I did because of my parents, my scholarship, and a lot of external pressure. It’s been ten years, and I am just figuring that out now. Every day that goes by that you don’t take a step in the direction of your vision, you are adding a black and white pixel onto the screen of your life. Soon, the vision will be gone, the inspiration will fade, and you will have had your life chosen for you instead of choosing your life for yourself. Make a decision and start today.’ After he said those words, I was changed. It was a moment of grace, a moment where I was given another chance and an opportunity to start again and live a life I wanted to live.” Author, speaker, and meditation guide Moshe Gersht recalls a pivotal conversation, not long before he made the decision to leave his rock band. { read more }

Be The Change

As yourself how you’d like the world to be in 5,000 years. Today, take one step to support that 5,000-year vision. For more inspiration, join a live conversation with Moshe Gersht this Sunday, February 18th. Details/RSVP here.

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Equanimity Of Doctor, Hunter, Warrior

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Feb 12, 2024

Equanimity Of Doctor, Hunter, Warrior

–Thanissaro Bhikkhu

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2681.jpgThere are three types of equanimity.

First is the equanimity that realizes how even though you may have goodwill for all beings and compassion and empathetic joy, it’s not the case that everybody’s going to be happy or that they will be as happy as quickly as you might like. And there are times when no matter how much goodwill you have for somebody, there’s still going to be some suffering. That’s when you have to develop equanimity, to realize that certain things simply will not go in line with your wishes. You want things to go well, both for yourself and for others, but you run up against a brick wall. This doesn’t mean that you give up. It means that you look instead for the areas where you can make a difference. So the basic motivation for this kind of equanimity is the desire for happiness coupled with the realization that it’s not going to happen all the time, or as quickly as you like, or in the areas where you might want.

This is like the equanimity of a doctor. A person with an illness comes to the doctor. The doctor wants to help. He does his best. But then he’ll run into areas where he can’t make any difference for the patient. So instead of getting upset about the areas where he can’t make a difference, he focuses on the areas where he can.

Another kind of equanimity occurs in the context of concentration practice. It’s related to the Buddha’s instructions to Rahula when he first started meditating. He said, “Make your mind like earth. Nice things and disgusting things are thrown on the earth, but the earth doesn’t react.” When you’re meditating, you really are trying to get the mind under your control. You are trying to make a difference. Mindfulness is a governing principle that underlies concentration practice, and it has a task that it keeps in mind: to try to give rise to skillful qualities and try to maintain them. In other words, you don’t just watch them coming and going. You try to make them come, and then prevent them from going, but to be a good meditator you have to have a certain evenness of mind so that you don’t force things unskillfully, and so that when things do go well, you don’t just jump at them.

You might say it’s like the equanimity of a hunter. The hunter has to go out and wait for the rabbit. If he gets excited when the rabbit comes, then the rabbit will sense his presence and will run away. Or if he shoots the rabbit and misses and gets upset about that, he’s not going to have a second chance.

Then there’s equanimity in the context of determination. You’ve made up your mind you’ve got a goal, and you do everything you can to go for that goal, which involves developing all the other perfections. This will entail doing certain things you don’t like doing, and giving up certain things that you’d prefer to hold on to. In addition, there will be long fallow periods when things are not going well, and you have to maintain your good spirits and not get upset by your setbacks. You have to be able to maintain a strong sense of the direction you want to go in without giving up. This is the equanimity of a warrior, who realizes there are going to be some battles you’re going to lose, but you can’t get upset about those. You take them in stride and learn whatever lessons you can from your defeats so that you can win the war.

Ajaan Lee talks a lot about this in the context of what they call the worldly affairs: gain, loss, status, loss of status, praise, criticism, pleasure, pain. As he points out, we’d always like the good side—the gain, the status, the praise, and the pleasure—but the good side is not always good for us. Status can go to our heads. Praise can go to our heads. People tend to forget themselves when the “good side” comes up. At the same time, there are lots of good lessons you can learn when things are not so good. When there’s material loss and loss of status, you learn who your true friends are. When there’s criticism, you have an opportunity to learn. If the criticism is true, it’s helping you because it’s pointing out an area where you may have become complacent. As for praise, you have to watch out for that, because sometimes you have to wonder why are people praising you: What do they want out of you? You have to be a little bit leery of what you think is a good side and not so quick to get upset about the bad side. This is what keeps you going, realizing that not every setback is permanent. There are ways around it. So you keep coming back, coming back.

That’s the equanimity of a warrior.

So equanimity is the opposite of apathy and indifference. It’s equanimity that allows you to attain your goals wisely and to not suffer in the process. It’s the grounding quality that keeps the mind on an even keel, enabling it to see things clearly that it otherwise might miss if it was getting excited or upset about things going or not going the way you wanted them to.

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How do you relate to the notion that equanimity is the opposite of apathy and indifference? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced one of the three types of equanimity? What helps you avoid attachment to the ‘good side’?

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3 Reasons Why You Need Anger

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February 12, 2024

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3 Reasons Why You Need Anger

Most misunderstandings in the world could be avoided if people would simply take the time to ask, “What else could this mean?”

– Shannon L. Alder –

3 Reasons Why You Need Anger

Feeling hot under the collar? This fresh take might cool you down: It turns out anger, often written off as a destructive emotion, could be an unlikely source of motivation. “Anger leads you towards responses that help you overcome obstacles,” points out Heather Lench of Texas A&M University. Three surprising ways anger can actually be beneficial: it can help us reach challenging goals, may boost civic engagement, and can help us recognize our needs in relationships. But remember, it’s important to channel anger wisely. So next time you’re boiling over, consider asking yourself: Could this anger be put to good use? { read more }

Be The Change

Take a closer look at where anger and resentment arise in your life. Then, ask yourself: What need might this anger be speaking for? Or, what circumstance is this anger asking to be adjusted?

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Tsultrim Allione: Turning Towards What’s Difficult

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February 11, 2024

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Tsultrim Allione: Turning Towards What’s Difficult

Change is painful, but nothing is as painful as staying stuck somewhere you don’t belong.

– Mandy Hale –

Tsultrim Allione: Turning Towards What’s Difficult

After losing her infant daughter suddenly in 1980, the search for stories to help process grief led her to write what would go on to become a book that rippled into a burgeoning community of practice. Along the way, Lama Tsultrim found herself delving into research of the sacred feminine, deepening her own inner practices, and a whole lot more. In an intriguing podcast conversation, Tami Simon journeys with Buddhist teacher Lama Tsultrim Allione’s illuminating insight and life experiences in balancing the energies of the masculine and feminine, the courage to stand up to authority, cultivating self-trust, the union of wisdom and skillful means, learning to move toward what we usually avoid, creating wholeness by integrating the shadow, working with grief and loss, and much, much more. { read more }

Be The Change

Turn towards something you usually avoid, and see if there’s one small element of it that you can integrate.

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