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Archive for June, 2024

Bringing France’s Waste Prevention Plan to Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 29, 2024

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Bringing France’s Waste Prevention Plan to Life

Life comes from the earth and life returns to the earth.

– Zhuangzi –

Bringing France’s Waste Prevention Plan to Life

Andrée Nieuwjaer’s fridge is brimming with produce that she got for free. Last summer, she ate peaches, plums, carrots, zucchinis, turnips, and endives that local grocers couldn’t sell due to aesthetic imperfections or being slightly overripe. Nieuwjaer, a resident of Roubaix, France, transforms discarded bread into pudding and breadcrumbs that layer a casserole; diced beets into long-lasting pickles, figs into marmalade, and apricots into jams. Her enthused efforts are part of a broader governmental initiative on waste management aimed at a zero-waste, or zéro déchet, lifestyle. France, the first nation to ban supermarkets from throwing away unsold food, is setting the stage for a zero-waste future with groundbreaking policies that emphasize community-driven change. The country passed a landmark anti-waste law in 2020 outlining dozens of objectives for waste prevention, recycling, and repairability, and its waste-prevention action plan for 2021-2027 forges ahead further. Localized efforts, like those in Roubaix, highlight the effectiveness of community-driven behavioral changes. The national strategy involves multiple levels of governance and participation from citizens, businesses, and local authorities to meet ambitious waste-reduction goals. { read more }

Be The Change

Reduce your waste this week. Eat everything on your plate, plan ahead with reusable bags, containers and cutlery, and opt for items that come in less packaging.

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The Whisper of Reverence

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June 28, 2024

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The Whisper of Reverence

If not for reverence, if not for wonder, if not for love, why have we come here?

– Raffi –

The Whisper of Reverence

“Here, we rest in reverence,” writes Greta Matos, co-founder of CuraKuda. But where is here? Greta reflects about what it means to move with a herd of horses in Chile, and how different, yet similar that is to the life she once led. Greta now advocates for communing with nature where awe and reverence show up not through visits to the mountaintops, but in the long rides she takes, collaborative journeys alongside four-legged teachers. Movement is a part of the job, yet “yet there is always ritualistic space and time for rest and reverence” she writes. And while it is easy to lose site of ourselves in our structured worlds of interstates and byways, glass, concrete, and stone, focusing on the end goal “The intention […], must not be the destination, but instead, the relationality of the process.” { read more }

Be The Change

Pay attention to the herd of two-legged creatures you walk alongside today. What about their activities reflects them? Take a moment to notice someone and their story unfolding in front of you. How does it fit into the broader herd as a reflection of their own creative contribution? Note what you revere about their actions.

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Plastic Man

This week’s inspiring video: Plastic Man
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Jun 27, 2024
Plastic Man

Plastic Man

Amidst the vast landscapes and bustling communities of Niger, Karim Elajadon witnesses firsthand the pervasiveness of plastic waste. He embarks on a grass-roots storytelling journey to young people, Niger’s most vibrant demographic, in a movement for sustainable living. With 58% of its people under the age of 18, educating and empowering the youth is paramount to cultivating a generation of changemakers committed to sustainable habits.
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The Solutionary Way

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June 27, 2024

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The Solutionary Way

Reality leaves a lot to the imagination.

– John Lennon –

The Solutionary Way

Zoe Weil had forty-five youngsters identify the world’s biggest problems, and was surprised when only five of them thought we could solve them. If children can’t imagine solving problems, “what will motivate them to try to make a difference?” Then, with their eyes closed, she helped them imagine a day in the future where all the problems had been solved, and questioned, “What role did you play in helping to bring about this better world?” Afterwards, when she asked again if they thought we could solve the problems, forty hands went up. Zoe expanded this thinking to help people learn to be solutionaries. Solutionaries start by imagining that a better world is possible. Through a four-step process, they “learn how to identify unjust, unsustainable, and inhumane systems and transform them so that they do the most good and least harm to people, animals, and the ecosystems that sustain life.” { read more }

Be The Change

Imagine a future where a problem in your community has been solved. Imagine the scene in detail. Now imagine what role you played in realizing the solution. Take a single first step. Be a solutionary!

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Four Steps to Help People Feel Listened To

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June 26, 2024

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Four Steps to Help People Feel Listened To

I remind myself every morning: Nothing I say this day will teach me anything. So if I’m going to learn, I must do it by listening.

– Larry King –

Four Steps to Help People Feel Listened To

Your child announces he’s in love and dropping out of college to travel with his beloved across the globe. Your uncle makes a politically charged comment over a holiday meal. A doctor brushes off your concern, reiterating a line of reasoning you’ve already discussed. It can be a bewildering, enraging, or disempowering experience when something so clearly true from our perspective is so adamantly at odds with another’s point of reference. “At home, at work and in civic spaces, it’s not uncommon to have conversations that make you question the intelligence and benevolence of your fellow human beings,” writes Professor Julia Minson, Ph.D., who has spent years studying ways that parties in conflict can behave to make others feel they are thoughtfully engaging with their perspective. Drawing from computational linguistics to analyze thousands of disagreements, Minson and her team identified ways in which people engage each other with conversational receptiveness. Drawing from those techniques, they outlined a method and training called “HEAR” — Hedge your claims. Emphasize agreement. Acknowledge the opposing perspective. Reframe the positive. { read more }

Be The Change

Approach each conversation today with an intention to truly listen to others. Notice if your openness allows space for deeper topics to surface in the conversation that would otherwise remain dormant. If you’re inspired, practice the H.E.A.R. conversation style outlined by the article.

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Painting in the Dharma

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June 25, 2024

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Painting in the Dharma

“The allotted function of art is not, as is often assumed, to put across ideas, to propagate thoughts, to serve as an example – the aim of art is to prepare a person for death, to plough and harrow his soul, rendering it capable of turning to good.”

– Andrei Tarkovsky –

Painting in the Dharma

In 1969, Rosalyn White moved from Washington D.C. to attend the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, California. “I was like a kid in a candy store!” she says. The hippie revolution was still in bloom and she discovered a place in Berkeley, Calif. called the Nyingma Meditation Center. That’s where she met Tarthang Tulku. Little did she know how her art journey was to change. For over forty years, Rosalyn White has followed a road less taken, especially in the Western art world. Instead of the dream of exhibits in the best galleries, sales and praise, White has a deeper and more lasting goal, the entry into what, in Buddhism, is sometimes called “Pure Land.” A life transformed in ways beyond words. { read more }

Be The Change

Approach you daily work with intentionality, recognizing it as an opportunity to search for your inner, spiritual world. Whether you paint, write or work with a craft, can you let it be a search for inner peace and external connection?

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The False Self From Childhood

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jun 24, 2024

The False Self From Childhood

–Eric Jones

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2702.jpgI ran across a developmental psychology theory not long ago that I’ve had bouncing around in the back of my head ever since. It comes from the pediatrician and psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, who coined the term “good-enough mother” to describe the everyday kind of parent who does their best to meet their child’s needs and only fails at doing so in ordinary and understandable, even inevitable ways. His theory is about the origins and development of two distinct selves in each of us, a “true self” and a “false self.”

As babies and very young children, Winnicott says, each of us instinctively expresses our true selves: we cry when we’re hungry or tired or in distress; as toddlers, we act with creativity and spontaneity without much (if any) thought about what’s correct or proper, and we can have the most dramatic emotional outbursts when we don’t get what we want. We can’t help but express our true selves when we’re very young, because we can’t do otherwise; we need what we need and we want what we want, and we do our best to get it.

And here’s the crux of the whole thing: If our caregivers are attuned and capable, if they’re able to read our true expressions of need and want and (mostly) gratify them most of the time, it strengthens a belief in us that our most honest needs are okay, and that we ourselves are relatable and worthy. If we receive this “true self” recognition and reassurance as children, then we’re much more likely to move into adulthood connected to our true self, willing to live openly, alive and present to our most deeply felt longings.

But some of us don’t get that much-needed reassurance. As very young children we express our truest needs and our caregivers can’t respond adequately or consistently, due to things like depression or addiction, and we come to learn that our most basic needs aren’t acceptable or relatable. Winnicott says that in cases like this a child becomes “compliant,” meaning they don’t just stop expressing their truest needs to caregivers unable or unwilling to meet them, they lose touch with those deepest needs by convincing themselves they weren’t the very things they needed in the first place. This adaptive story is, according to Winnicott, the birth of the “false self,” which is also the compliant self.

More simply put, I think the theory is that when we’re very young, we need to have adults around us who are strong enough and capable enough and loving enough that we can express our wants and desires with as much anti-social self-centeredness as humanly possible, and they will consistently love us unconditionally, accept us, and give us what we need most of the time. By doing so, they teach us that we can truly be our most authentic selves and the world will still hold us, accept us, even love us. And when we don’t get that, we learn the opposite: that the world might not accept us and almost certainly won’t love us if we express our true needs or callings. And even more, we’ll do such a good job convincing ourselves we don’t want what we in fact need, that we’ll live lives divorced from our creativity and passions because we can’t find our way back to them after those first and formative lies. We’ll be lost in our false selves, accommodating others, not trusting the world to be strong or capable enough to hold us dearly.

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How do you relate to young people’s need for safety such that basic wants and desires can be expressed with as much anti-social self-centeredness as humanly possible, and still be loved unconditionally? Can you share a personal story of a time you retained the connection to your authentic self due to unconditional acceptance of your need? What helps you balance the need for authenticity with the harm caused by unskillful expression of our need?

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Sister Marilyn: To Come and See

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June 24, 2024

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Sister Marilyn: To Come and See

It doesn’t matter where I’m from, where our past is, or what our future might be. We are here now. So let’s relate with one another.

– Sister Marilyn Lacey –

Sister Marilyn: To Come and See

At age 18 and new to the convent, Sister Marilyn Lacey turned down an invitation — an opportunity to connect — explaining she didn’t think human relations was her field. Later on, she got an invitation she couldn’t refuse to “come and see” the suffering in South Sudan. She accepted, and that experience and invitation led to many more invitations to invite people into her life, “into that connectedness that I now know is so incredibly central.” In this short video, she gives examples of interactions that were not transactional but relational, especially an unforgettably moving one about the generosity of someone begging for alms. Sister Marilyn focuses on invitations as opposed to information such that when someone asks her where she lives, she says, “Come and see.” She realizes now that human relations might just be her field after all. { read more }

Be The Change

Be open. Take the risk of inviting people into your life. Accept an invitation you might otherwise turn down. Find the connection. Examine how it enriched your life.

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Exploring the Science of Everyday Wonder

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 23, 2024

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Exploring the Science of Everyday Wonder

We can find awe, then, in eight wonders of life: moral beauty, collective effervescence, nature, music, visual design, spirituality and religion, life and death, and epiphany.

– Dacher Keltner –

Exploring the Science of Everyday Wonder

In an insightful discussion, Dacher Keltner, a renowned psychologist and author delves into the science of everyday wonder and its profound impact on our lives. Keltner explores how awe-inspiring experiences, whether found in nature, art, or human connections, can enhance well-being, foster resilience, and even improve physical health. He emphasizes that moments of wonder are accessible to everyone and can be cultivated through mindful practices and openness to new experiences. Keltner also speaks about the biological and neurological underpinnings of awe, explaining how it activates the parasympathetic nervous system, leading to reduced stress and a sense of calm. He shares practical advice on incorporating awe into daily life, such as spending time outdoors, engaging in creative activities, or simply pausing to appreciate small wonders around us. { read more }

Be The Change

In the last couple of days when have you encountered the feeling of awe? How about being present and noticing something extraordinary in the ordinary today and sharing this experience with someone you care about?

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People Dread This Type Of Social Interaction But It Has Benefits

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June 22, 2024

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People Dread This Type Of Social Interaction But It Has Benefits

Communication is merely an exchange of information, but connection is an exchange of our humanity.

– Sean Stephenson –

People Dread This Type Of Social Interaction But It Has Benefits

Researchers find that people who have richness and diversity in relationships experience greater life satisfaction and overall well-being. An important part of that diversity comes from talking to strangers, and they found there was “deep delight and joy that ensued from these unexpected encounters.” Whether in a supermarket, coffee shop, or on a walk, a smile, a nod, a simple hello, or brief conversation can help people feel less lonely. Additionally, “Consequential strangers in the wider reaches of our personal social networks expose us to new ideas and experiences, different perspectives, a greater swath of opportunities.” While people may fear a negative response, research suggests, in most cases, the response will be welcoming, and well worth making a connection. { read more }

Be The Change

Find opportunities to connect, human to human, in your daily life. Ask a stranger how their day is going, give a thumbs up to someone who showed extra care, or simply share a genuine smile. Exchange some humanity!

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