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Archive for May, 2024

When the Lights Went Out

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 14, 2024

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When the Lights Went Out

It was the most beautiful scene — a feeling that we’re all in this together.

– Theresa Pathak –

When the Lights Went Out

Never underestimate the power of caring, creativity and collaboration. During a presentation in India, one woman finds herself in total power shutdown. Complete darkness! But then, a spark of light from an audience member’s phone glimmers. That spark ignited a chain reaction of lights from the crowd, illuminating the whole venue — a reminder that even in the darkest moment, we’re not alone. { read more }

Be The Change

Today, reflect upon a moment when you felt totally one within the universe.

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A Jeweler’s Eye

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 13, 2024

A Jeweler’s Eye

–Suleika Jaouad

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2695.jpgOf my diagnosis, he had asked, “If you could take it all back, would you?”

The answer I arrived at was this: “The tangling of so much cruelty and beauty has made of my life a strange, discordant landscape. It has left me with an awareness that haunts the edges of my vision—it can all be lost in a moment—but it’s also given me a jeweler’s eye. If I’m thinking about my illness—abstracted from its impact on the people around me—then the answer is: No, I would not reverse my diagnosis, if I could. I would not take back what I suffered to gain this.”

My friend paused after she finished reading, then said, “Do you still mean that? Would you not take it back?”

I understand the skepticism. A month into my diagnosis, or even a year in, I wouldn’t have believed it. In fact, if you’d told me that one day I’d say, “I would not reverse my diagnosis,” I would’ve probably wanted to punch you in the face. When you’re in the trenches of something brutal, reversing course is all you want, and back then, all I wanted was to be a normal, healthy 22-year-old. But there’s a tremendous amount of power in accepting reality. Rather than fighting your circumstance, rather than wallowing in sorrow and anger, you can begin to see it as an invitation. You can begin to interrogate it, to watch new and unexpected things emerge.

And honestly, the unexpected things that emerged for me were countless and invaluable—from the learning and growth I experienced to the love that came from that hardest of passages. Before my diagnosis, I was always thinking of the future and making a plan for how I’d get to where I wanted to go. There is value in having a plan, and gunning toward it as bravely and brazenly as you can. But it’s also important to acknowledge that life often does not go according to plan. My diagnosis forced me to pause, to be present, to meet myself in the now, rather than some aspirational version I was constantly chasing after. It forced me to figure out what truly nourished me, which of course was not a reinvention of the wheel, but a return to the things that had always nourished me—like time with loved ones, like writing.

If it weren’t for my illness, I wouldn’t have had the deep conversations that can only take place when all the artifice is stripped away, when you are your most laid-bare, vulnerable self. I would have been charging forward, chasing some elusive, epic, mountain-top experiences, rather than relishing the small joys that surround us every day. Illness humbled and grounded me. It taught me all my most important lessons—about acceptance, about presence, about love—that I would never wish to unknow.

And yet, that process can be messy, and it’s ongoing — the way a situation disorients you, how it forces you into different, sometimes uncomfortable perspectives — but also how it allows you to see the world in a way as never before.

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How do you relate to the notion of developing a jeweler’s eye? Can you share a personal story of a time you could see the jewel in the rock of mundane experience? What helps you accept your circumstance instead of wallowing in sorrow and anger?

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Becoming a Possibilist

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May 13, 2024

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Becoming a Possibilist

When you become comfortable with uncertainty, infinite possibilities open up in your life.

– Eckhart Tolle –

Becoming a Possibilist

“I don’t have a crystal ball to know what’s going to happen in the future, but I know that in the present moment, there are possibilities for us as human beings to transform our conflicts.” Author and negotiation expert William Ury’s opens his discussion on Sounds True’s Insights at the Edge podcast with this explanation of what it means to be a possibilist. The respective endgames of climate change, political unrest, state conflicts and other headline-grabbing events are not as predetermined as we sometimes believe. And while world events are big, the solutions as a possibilist, start small, with the relationships and conversations available every day. “Be curious, and out of that curiosity, out of those open-ended conversations, out of that listening, people naturally start to feel heard. They start to feel respected, they start to feel seen, and then new possibilities emerge from that conversation.” It can be easy to discard this wisdom as too hard, or too idealistic; however, Ury shares story after story about some of the most embedded, intransigent conflicts where setting aside defense mechanisms, weapons, and retaliation and picking up possibility, has led to surprising, unexpected outcomes. { read more }

Be The Change

Pay attention to immediate reactions today. Instead of moving from reaction directly to action, take a breath… count to five… then, thank the reaction for presenting the opportunity for curiosity. Ask an open, honest question you could not possibly know the answer to in place of your normal reaction. { more }

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Momentary Eternal: Conversation with Derek Weisberg

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May 12, 2024

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Momentary Eternal: Conversation with Derek Weisberg

In my opinion all important things in art have always originated from the deepest feeling about the mystery of Being.

– Max Beckman –

Momentary Eternal: Conversation with Derek Weisberg

Without quite knowing why, I’d kept an eye on this young artist for years. Then, on a visit to the Bay Area, I felt the time had come to ask him for an interview. His response to my inquiry about what drew him so deeply into art making is telling: “Art evokes life’s great pursuits – religion and the human experience, right? To be completely present in this longer, energetic lineage of what’s channeled through us, and which goes on beyond us as we leave this world. We’re connected to the present moment, and to the ripples of the larger world beyond us that are eternal.” It’s a rare conversation. { read more }

Be The Change

Working with one’s hands is a good way to come back home. Using our hands is a return to ancient times. Like with washing the dishes. Working in the garden. There’s an endless list. Next time you’re working with your hands, check in with yourself. Doesn’t it feel quietly nourishing in a way I keep forgetting about?

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From Snow to Water

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May 11, 2024

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From Snow to Water

We bring [people] into our home. We cook them warm meals with vegetables that we’ve grown on sacred land… And we love them. And we share vulnerably about what we care about together.

– Xue Devand –

From Snow to Water

Ready to meet a compassion and business hero? Xue, an immigrant from Inner Mongolia, made her way to MIT, Wall Street and as a successful entrepreneur until a life altering experience got her to question everything in her life. She co-founded ‘The Space Between’, an investment fund redirecting hundreds of millions not just to grow wealth, but to ignite change and foster compassion. Its founding principles: holding space, listening and heart. Xue has remarkably transitioned from following traditional career paths to empowering businesses operating on the principles of love and human relationships. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider your feelings and values when making decisions, especially those that may impact others. Instead of focusing solely on self-interest, think about how your choices can serve the wider community. Begin by asking deeper questions about the decisions you are making in your everyday life.

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Jane Goodall on What It Takes to Save the Earth

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May 10, 2024

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Jane Goodall on What It Takes to Save the Earth

We have become, by the power of a glorious evolutionary accident called intelligence, the stewards of life’s continuity on earth. We did not ask for this role, but we cannot abjure it. We may not be suited to it, but here we are.

– Stephen Jay Gould –

Jane Goodall on What It Takes to Save the Earth

Jane Goodall’s address at Davos 2024 emphasized that climate change is not slowing down: yet there is reason to hope. Goodall’s Roots & Shoots program is an example of what can be done to protect the future if all of us recognize our interconnectedness with nature and each other. The energy of youth, nature’s resilience, the human intellect, and human’s indomitable spirit can be combined to tackle the impossible task of saving the world. The invitation Goodall offers is to join her in saying “Together we can, together we will, together we must save the world. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a walk in nature. Pay attention to all the other animals and creatures sharing the space. Pick up three pieces of garbage and dispose of properly.

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Omelette

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

May 09, 2024
Omelette

Omelette

Food is essential to life as well as a means of connecting to each other, our own pasts, our identies, our memories, as well as to the world around us. This delightful animated short film highlights how meaningful it is to prepare food for someone you love and to share it with them, while illustrating how we all need a little help from our friends.
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Mountain Vapors

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May 9, 2024

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Mountain Vapors

There is a kind of insubstantiality to clouds, and a softness, a yielding…. In a way, everything is a cloud.

– Rick Hanson –

Mountain Vapors

While hiking among the seemingly solid majestic peaks of the Canadian Rockies, photo essayist Keith Kozloff found himself more attracted to clouds than the steep, uphill trails of the landscape. Upon returning home, his images inspired him to reflect on impermanence and interdependence – the “cloudiness of everything.” He wondered if he could “perhaps treat challenges more as clouds than as rocks.” { read more }

Be The Change

In what aspect of your life might you benefit from adopting a cloud-like mindset?

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Sri Lanka’s Untold Story of Resilience

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May 7, 2024

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Sri Lanka's Untold Story of Resilience

We build the road, and the road builds us.

– Dr. A. T. Ariyaratne –

Sri Lanka’s Untold Story of Resilience

When the legendary Dr. A. T. Ariyaratne — often called “the Gandhi of Sri Lanka” — passed away last month at the age of 92, his enduring legacy of selfless love expanded in hearts across the globe. For over sixty years, Dr. Ariyaratne’s humility and servant leadership stewarded thousands of self-sufficient villages in Sri Lanka. Working quietly and often behind the scenes, the unique non-government organization behind the movement, Sarvodaya (which can be translated to “the awakening of all through the sharing of energy”), has grown to include more than 15,000 villages and has mobilized community efforts to build preschools, community health centers, libraries, and 100,000 small businesses — all without government support. Their success lies in the networks of local organizations formed through the personal awakening of participants. In that spirit, their motto, “We build the road, and the road builds us,” mirrors Dr. Ari’s practice of seeing and treating all as equals and, to echo Richard Flyer’s words, “characterizes the relationship between spiritual and economic development”. { read more }

Be The Change

This weekend, join an Awakin Call conversation with Richard Flyer, a disciple of Dr. A. T. Ariyaratne who has dedicated his life to integrating embodied spirituality and the building of community-based ecosystems. Details and RSVP: { more }

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Suffering Is Never Alone But Shared

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 6, 2024

Suffering Is Never Alone But Shared

–Richard Flyer

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2694.jpgI feel and see the flow of life and death inside and outside me. Sometimes, I resist in despair, saying — why should this be, all the senseless misery? Tears are unleashed.

Torrents of liquid stream from me, dripping onto the sunlit ground. At first, it was a puddle, then a vast pool of tears — an ocean of sorrow from all the suffering.

Oh, the flesh cries out with confusion. My little ego reels under the awesome sight, ripping and tearing.

Life must be more than the struggle of birth, sickness, pain, old age, and fear of death.

Some drown the pain in distractions: with some, it’s drugs, material possessions, or money; still others, it’s power, fame, sex, or false love, with others, religion, politics, or social movements.

None of these satisfy me now.

Naked, I expose my body and mind. Open, there is no place to hide. Raw, I face the elemental forces of creation. Finally, there is a glorious surrender as I break through the veil of darkness.

The spirit of the Great Mystery works through me with more intensity. I feel connected to all beings.

Suffering is never alone but shared.

It is not aimless. There is purpose and direction. Pushed to let go of our silly games, pretenses, petty lies, and deceits until we contact the Truth and Reality inside and regain memory of our divine nature. To see the beauty that is eternal, continually bringing creation and destruction, life and death, eternally striving for awareness of the Great Mystery.

Suffering and supreme peace fit together like hand and glove.

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How do you relate to the notion that suffering is never alone but shared? Can you share a personal story of a time you moved beyond distractions and faced the elemental forces of creation? What helps you let go of pretenses and deceits and regain memory of your nature?

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About Awakin

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