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Archive for November, 2024

What Is True Love?

This week’s inspiring video: What Is True Love?
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Video of the Week

Nov 28, 2024
What Is True Love?

What Is True Love?

In December 2022, Green Renaissance (now Reflections of Life) released a film featuring Antony and Margie Osler, who shared some of their views on love and relationships. The team recently visited with them again. During this latest encounter, Antony and Margie chat more about the various stages of married life, and some of their secrets to a successful marriage. Their reflections are sure to resonate deeply with those of you who are seeking guidance on matters of the heart.
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Divisions Bring Some Together in this US County

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November 27, 2024

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Divisions Bring Some Together in this US County

Conflict is the primary engine of creativity and innovation. People don’t learn by staring into a mirror; people learn by encountering difference.

– Ronald A. Heifetz –

Divisions Bring Some Together in this US County

Residents of Port Angeles, Washington gather weekly to exchange ideas and thoughts on current issues. When the primarily Democratic group didn’t reflect the community’s politics, they reached out to welcome Republicans. They sometimes find common ground, but “consensus isn’t really the point,” according to David Fox, a longtime member. “It really is just to be face-to-face with other people’s ideas, and we don’t hold back.” Residents say they like hearing opinions different from their own. As Fox said, “Whatever happens, whatever difficulties confront us, what’s most important to me is that we don’t go further and further away from each other.” { read more }

Be The Change

Start up a conversation with someone who does not hold the same position as you on an issue — not to convince, but to simply connect and learn. Consider forming a group to do the same.

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The Best Day Of My Life

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 25, 2024

The Best Day Of My Life

–Douglas Harding

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2712.jpgThe best day of my life—my rebirthday, so to speak—was when I found I had no head. This is not a literary gambit, a witticism designed to arouse interest at any cost. I mean it in all seriousness: I have no head.

It was eighteen years ago, when I was thirty-three, that I made the discovery. Though it certainly came out of the blue, it did so in response to an urgent enquiry; I had for several months been absorbed in the question: what am I? The fact that I happened to be walking in the Himalayas at the time probably had little to do with it; though in that country unusual states of mind are said to come more easily. However that may be, a very still clear day, and a view from the ridge where I stood, over misty blue valleys to the highest mountain range in the world, with Kangchenjunga and Everest unprominent among its snow-peaks, made a setting worthy of the grandest vision.

What actually happened was something absurdly simple and unspectacular: I stopped thinking. A peculiar quiet, an odd kind of alert limpness or numbness, came over me. Reason and imagination and all mental chatter died down. For once, words really failed me. Past and future dropped away. I forgot who and what I was, my name, manhood, animalhood, all that could be called mine. It was as if I had been born that instant, brand new, mindless, innocent of all memories. There existed only the Now, that present moment and what was clearly given in it. To look was enough. And what I found was khaki trouserlegs terminating downwards in a pair of brown shoes, khaki sleeves terminating sideways in a pair of pink hands, and a khaki shirtfront terminating upwards in—absolutely nothing whatever! Certainly not in a head.

It took me no time at all to notice that this nothing, this hole where a head should have been was no ordinary vacancy, no mere nothing. On the contrary, it was very much occupied. It was a vast emptiness vastly filled, a nothing that found room for everything—room for grass, trees, shadowy distant hills, and far above them snowpeaks like a row of angular clouds riding the blue sky. I had lost a head and gained a world.

It was all, quite literally, breathtaking. I seemed to stop breathing altogether, absorbed in the Given. Here it was, this superb scene, brightly shining in the clear air, alone and unsupported, mysteriously suspended in the void, and (and this was the real miracle, the wonder and delight) utterly free of "me", unstained by any observer. Its total presence was my total absence, body and soul. Lighter than air, clearer than glass, altogether released from myself, I was nowhere around.

Yet in spite of the magical and uncanny quality of this vision, it was no dream, no esoteric revelation. Quite the reverse: it felt like a sudden waking from the sleep of ordinary life, an end to dreaming. It was self-luminous reality for once swept clean of all obscuring mind. It was the revelation, at long last, of the perfectly obvious. It was a lucid moment in a confused life-history. It was a ceasing to ignore something which (since early childhood at any rate) I had always been too busy or too clever to see. It was naked, uncritical attention to what had all along been staring me in the face—my utter facelessness. In short, it was all perfectly simple and plain and straightforward, beyond argument, thought, and words.

There arose no questions, no reference beyond the experience itself, but only peace and a quiet joy, and the sensation of having dropped an intolerable burden.

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Heart Wisdom + Awakin AI Launch!

Incubator of compassionate action.

‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

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Awakin AI: Heart Wisdom
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Every 15 minutes, humanity generates as much information as we did from the dawn of civilization until 2003. Soon, the majority of this will be “synthetic” data — created by AI, for AI. In this overwhelming flood of information, how will we keep the flame of wisdom alive? Gandhi once offered a profound design principle: fulfillment of needs over multiplication of wants. It is simple, yet powerfully subversive — pointing at joy outside of propagating desires. With that lens, can we envision AI as a force for the common good? A tool to rebuild the non-commercial sectors of society, and to weave a social fabric anchored in noble kinship?

Amidst utopian hopes and dystopian fears, ServiceSpace’s call remains steady: respond with a heart of service. As the 8th-century poet Shantideva prayed, “For as long as space endures, and for as long as living beings remain, until then, may I too abide [in service].”

ai_hi2.jpg Last month, we launched Awakin AI with a fresh interface and ample bells and whistles. Drawing from decades of experiences with ‘awakening with kin’ circles in living rooms worldwide, Awakin AI now holds uncommon digital intelligences: Interfaith AI with 1,700 scriptures from global traditions, a Ram Dass Bot poised to house 6 terabytes of his insights, and a Socrates Bot designed to cultivate better questions. Across communities, children are gathering oral histories for localized Elder Bots, indigenous wisdom keepers are archiving teachings, and a Sanskrit-based LLM takes root in our imaginations. With over 100 diverse AI models, our data commons resembles a blooming garden of “small language models,” where unexpected wisdom intersections are inviting non-linear emergence. #Moonshots
As AI evolves from chatbots to “agents” capable of decision-making and action, what new avenues might evolve as we frame “generative artificial intelligence” as “regenerative heart wisdom“? On a recent call, Tapan and Tulika gave an inspiring flavor of it. Check it out, and take Awakin AI for a spin!

Heart wisdom is what James shared right after Ukraine war started: On resilience and tears. Or what Jojo did right after hearing our call to shift from “critical mass to critical yeast” at Alpbach Forum Europe — build a pay-forward chain across countries! Ideas that spread frictionlessly. Our Gandhi 3.0 retreat framework was replicated at Richard Branson’s “AI + Future of Humanity” gathering on his private island, where Awakin AI was subject of a keynote. In Japan, Miyagi-san and Kotaro are convening indigenous shamans and business leaders at the base of holy Mount Koya, using our “social permaculture” process. In Austria, more than 20 SSp volunteers galvanized couple hundred change-makers to explore the intersection of “me, we and us” — in German. In India, youth retreat led to feedback like: “I am changed person today. I will carry this gratitude till the end of time!” Volunteers from Vietnam are joining various winter events in India, to rev up for a spring gathering in Hanoi.

vietnam_circle.jpg Preserving the sacred feels vital in these times. Nobel laureate Ilya Prigogine reminds us, “When a system is far from equilibrium, small islands of coherence in a sea of chaos have the capacity to lift the entire system to a higher order.” All across ServiceSpace, these small islands — held by forces beyond money or power — are magnetizing into ecosystems of coherence. In the mud, we get to cultivate the lotus. Moonshots are under way. 🙂
Thank you for resonating with Awa-kin — awakening together, one small act of service at a time.
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P.S. Recent Inspirations …
Juan Xi reflects on her 21-day Compassion challenge with these heartfelt words: “I was like a little ant who just happened to enter a magnificent concert hall. All kinds of beautiful notes, vibrations, coming to me from the symphony of our pod.” Watch Touching Video Clip

When Cynthia asked Matthieu Ricard for a mantra, he made us all laugh while pointing to a profound truth: I Need Nothing 🙂

Two nuns across two continents — Sister Marilyn on 4 Stories of Mercy from Africa, and Sister Lucy on When 60 Uncles Came to Kill Me

James-ODea.jpg Even as he battles advanced Parkinson’s, James O’dea wants to serve. He’ll be sharing “two particularly intense and spiritually relevant experiences” with Nipun. To join and help hold space, RSVP here.

In just three minutes, Sharon Salzberg expands our perspective with Looking at the Sky Through a Straw, as Tim Harrison reflects on the Science of Compassion.

retreat1.jpg If you find yourself in South Asia this winter, join us for December’s Laddership Retreat or January’s Gandhi Immersions. Or simply send a blessing via the inner-net!

From Hawaii, spiritual teacher Jac O’Keeffe offers a memsmerizing rendition of a Rumi poem: Come Come, Whoever You Are.

ServiceSpace is a unique incubator of volunteer-run projects that nurture a culture of generosity. We believe that small acts of service can nurture a profound inner transformation that sustains external impact. To get involved, you can subscribe to our newsletters or create an account and complete our 3-step process to volunteer.
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Matchmakers Spark Friendships Between Teens and Elders

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2024

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Matchmakers Spark Friendships Between Teens and Elders

Diversity is not about how we differ. Diversity is about embracing one another’s uniqueness.

– Ola Joseph –

Matchmakers Spark Friendships Between Teens and Elders

Andrea Levitt, 82, and Angelo Williams, 16, are paired by one of several nonprofits “that work to make US society less segregated by age to get the generations together.” Griffin, a non-profit director, pointed out, “We have an epidemic of loneliness and isolation that was exacerbated by the pandemic and has serious consequences.” Additionally, we create communities, services, infrastructure and policies that build up “artificial silos and barriers between the generations. “She says these relationships with the young remind older people of their worth in the world.” And the benefits go both ways. “She says kids need a sympathetic, non-judgmental ear — someone other than their parents.” Angelo signed up thinking it was about him helping older people. But he said, “You get to learn a lot about somebody else and also like, keep their stories with you, and even learn from their experiences and get really great advice.” { read more }

Be The Change

Start a conversation with someone unlike yourself in terms of age. Discover one thing you have in common. What is their unique story?

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A Meditation on Crafting a Beautiful Human

This week’s inspiring video: A Meditation on Crafting a Beautiful Human
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Video of the Week

Nov 21, 2024
A Meditation on Crafting a Beautiful Human

A Meditation on Crafting a Beautiful Human

In this short film, Buddhist teacher Tarchin Hearn and flutemaker Kevin Falconer take us on a journey through the art of flutemaking to discover within our own humanity the "flute-like" nature of being alive. The film is a meditation on the unlikely similarity between the making of the shakuhachi flute from bamboo and the making of a beautiful human from the events of life that breathe through each and every one of us.
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The Giant Study Showing How Dancing Affects the Brain

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November 19, 2024

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The Giant Study Showing How Dancing Affects the Brain

Life is the dancer and you are the dance.

– Eckhart Tolle –

The Giant Study Showing How Dancing Affects the Brain

Dancers and audience members alike talk about synchrony – a feeling of being connected with the dancers, others in the audience, and the dance. They describe it as “the ‘knowing’ that can happen in the moment; it’s something you sense, bypassing language.” Using neuroscience technology, such as electrodes, researchers can now capture “inter-brain synchrony, when people’s brain activity aligns, signaling that they’re focusing on the same thing.” Among both dancers and audience, they expected the brainwave patterns associated with paying attention. Instead, they found them in the slower waves “associated with internal concentration, meditation and tuning into each other during social interactions,” like “collective daydreaming.” One of the scientists said, “You might have a sense that you’re connected with someone, but we can show that this magic is actually happening.” { read more }

Be The Change

Notice a moment of synchrony – a “knowing” sense of connection with others. Trust your embodied intelligence and intuition. Be the dance.

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We Can See Only What We Can Think

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 18, 2024

We Can See Only What We Can Think

–Michael Lipson

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2638.jpgFortunately or not, everything we do is led by our thinking. There’s just no way around it. Even if I say, "I’m going to stop thinking and let feeling be my guide" — that’s a thought. Like the first step of a journey, it may pass unnoticed and forgotten, but you know it must have been there. If we are going to transform our basic capacities, we’d better begin with the most basic of all: the one that helps us choose and guide all others.

We may despise any reliance on thought as unromantic; we may suspect our thinking of being limited and culturally determined; we may complain of thinking as inadequate to its task of understanding this world and directing our behavior. What we can’t do is avoid it. Each of these critiques is itself an example of thinking, and indeed dwells in an ocean of thinking. When we question thinking’s authority, we haven’t escaped it at all, since the process by which we could doubt it is (again) thinking itself.

A patient walked into my office one day and stewed in the juices of this problem for a few minutes. "I’m sick of my whole mind," he said. A lawyer, he relied on clear, critical understanding for his business life, and he knew there was something wrong with his very ability to think. "I’m always angry" he said, "and I know it’s because I’m always judging people. I mean, people do such stupid things. But criticizing them is making me sick. I wish I could get away from my thoughts and be at peace. We got back from vacation in Florida this week, and it was good in a lot of ways, but even when I’m fishing on a sunny day and everything’s going well — the water is great, the boat is great, the fish are biting — still my mind is constantly racing and worrying. I might as well be at work. Then when I am at work, it’s nothing but distractions. You know, when I was fresh out of law school I could focus on a brief or a letter or whatever it was and really get into it. Now my mind is either judging, worrying, distracted, or a little of each. I swear it would be better if I could just stop thinking altogether for a while. And here I am, criticizing myself too much! It just won’t stop."

Eventually he came to see that what he really wanted was not no thinking, but more concentrated and livelier thinking. It wasn’t so much that he wanted to shut his mind off. He wanted his mind to be clear. Instead of getting lost in anger and worry, he wanted to be able to focus. He sensed that his style of understanding had become both hardened and splintered when he needed it to be supple and whole.

Maybe our thinking, as much as our bodies, stands in need of exercise. We worry about our physical health, and spend fortunes to improve it, but do we ever apply that kind of self-improving zeal to our ability to think? Our minds, like our bodies, need a combination of flexibility and strength, qualities that are unlikely to return unless we do something. […]

Most of the time, most of what we call thinking is a maze of distractions. But thinking, whether clear or muddy, is not something added to our reality like a sprig of mental parsley adorning the main dish. It is what makes the substance of the world for us. We all know this in a general way, and most people can admit that they tend to live in a narrow zone of mental habits. But the role of thinking is more primary and pervasive than we generally realize. For what we call "reality" in normal consciousness — even the stuff of the world around us — is itself only our own past thoughts. Let me explain.

When we see a car, or an oak tree, or a cloud, we see them according to the thoughts we ourselves, and our whole society, have already thought about these things. In other cultures, dominated by other thoughts, they are seen differently. Adults teach them to children through language. The children learn these language-given concepts and see the world accordingly. There isn’t any other reality for you than the concepts you have acquired or those you now acquire in the very act of perception.

Someone who has never learned the concept of writing will see a written page as a sheet of paper with black marks on it. We know that archaic cultures see the world differently. They live a reality largely alien to our own, shaped by thoughts we can only translate askew as we try to fit them into our standard assumption of a physical world "out there" with minds observing it. Analysis of the Homeric texts has shown that the ancient Greeks understood colors differently and therefore saw colors differently.

When we dare to take this view seriously—and anthropology is full of examples to confirm it—we begin to realize that there is no world for us outside our thinking (or our past thoughts) about the world. Our very seeing, hearing, touching, and so on — the categories by which we anchor what is real to us—are permeated with concepts particular to our culture, language, and personal history. We can see only what we can think.

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About Awakin

Many moons ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. The ripples of that simple practice have now spread to millions over 20+ years, through local circles, weekly podcasts and more.

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What Does Love Mean? How 4-8 Year-Old Kids Describe Love

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 15, 2024

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What Does Love Mean? How 4-8 Year-Old Kids Describe Love

The longer I live, the more deeply I learn that love — whether we call it friendship, or family, or romance — is the work of mirroring and magnifying each other’s light.

– Maria Popova –

What Does Love Mean? How 4-8 Year-Old Kids Describe Love

This wonderful capture of kids responding to the question, “What does love mean?” reminds us that they are magnifying and mirroring those around them. They are watching, and they are listening. From their parents, grandparents, schoolmates, elderly neighbors, and more, they see and say what they see and hear about what love means. Love shows up in many ways: When “Mommy gives Daddy the best piece of chicken;” when grandfather paints grandmother’s toenails “even when his hands got arthritis too;” or when a 4-year-old sits on an elderly neighbor’s lap, saying nothing, because it simply “helped him cry.” And Nikka, age 6, provides this sage advice: “If you want to learn to love better, you should start with a friend who you hate.” { read more }

Be The Change

“You really shouldn’t say ‘I love you’ unless you mean it. But if you mean it, you should say it a lot. People forget,” says Jessica, age 8. Tell someone you love them. Say it a lot lest they forget. Magnify their light.

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Earthscapes: Art that Goes Out with the Tide

This week’s inspiring video: Earthscapes: Art that Goes Out with the Tide
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Video of the Week

Nov 14, 2024
Earthscapes: Art that Goes Out with the Tide

Earthscapes: Art that Goes Out with the Tide

For Andres Amador, the earth is his canvas, literally. Instead of paintbrushes or pencils, Amador uses garden rakes to create beautifully crafted designs in the sand. From his hands emerge bold graphics, symmetrical sequences and organic patterns. The medium of using sand means sustainable designs that come from the earth and return to the earth. While there is no permanence to Amador’s art, he does not feel a loss after the tide reclaims his work — he feels complete.
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