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Archive for November, 2024

Conversation with the ‘World’s Happiest Man’

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 13, 2024

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Conversation with the 'World's Happiest Man'

Happiness is not given to us, nor is misery imposed. At every moment we are at a crossroads and must choose the direction we will take.

– Matthieu Ricard –

Conversation with the ‘World’s Happiest Man’

In this video interview, Matthieu Ricard, called “the world’s happiest man,” shares stories, insight, and humor on some very timeless questions based on his own life’s journey, and his experience as an interpreter for the Dalai Lama over many years. A small sampling: that it is crucial to distinguish between compassion and empathy; that our profound nature is compassion, consideration, and unconditional love for others; that we should not confuse happiness with pleasant sensations — rather, that happiness is a way of being; that pleasure exhausts itself whereas compassion gets deeper and more stable; and so much more. Enjoy a delightful final question about his favorite mantra, and a few smiles. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider a choice you are making today whether small or monumental. Pause. Notice and try to identify a motivation — self-interest, pleasure, empathy, happiness, reward, compassion…? Choose a direction. Make it a practice.

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Gymnastics Of Attention

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 11, 2024

Gymnastics Of Attention

–Menka Sanghvi

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2711.jpgI once tried an improv class to see if that would finally help calm my stage nerves. It didn’t. But I did learn something amazing.

If an actor is trying to show the audience that they love someone, they can do this by spending a lot of time looking at that someone. Returning their gaze to their object of love, again and again, glancing, tracking, noticing details. To us sitting in the audience, this looks a lot like love. We see where the actor’s attention is going, and we intuitively sense their care. Even a child would sense it. The simplicity of this really hit home. What we look at is what we care about!

A great metaphor for noticing is "gymnastics of the attention." It comes from Simone Weil, who taught philosophy of science at the Lycée for Girls in Le Puy. She used the phrase to talk about teaching as the training of attention. And metaphors matter. This one emphasises the role of movement, practice and choice in what we attend to. Sure, we could fall (and stay up late doomscrolling), but we can also get back up and have another go. Over time, what we practice looking at is what we care about.

I began my career working on social challenges such as homelessness and climate change. Fifteen years in, I shifted my focus to the inner dimension of mindfulness, and many of my friends and colleagues were a little worried. They thought I’d been on one too many yoga retreats and given up on the hard stuff! But to me, it was the opposite. It’s when we stop noticing each other, and how connected we all are that we’re more likely to feel lonely, alienated, polarised and even exploitative.

So the question is: What is worth noticing? We have seemingly endless choices in our infinite scrolls and instant searches. But on closer examination, we find algorithms creating monocultures masquerading as choice. It might look like a feast, but it’s mostly just corn syrup. Attentionally malnourished, we can easily start feeling disconnected from ourselves, each other and the natural world.

In my head, there is a thread of logic around slowness -> curiosity -> choice -> noticing -> connecting -> caring, but often, the words all fold into a gloopy mess of earnestness.

From time to time, when you’re paying attention to something, pause to ask yourself, "Was this a choice I made?" Get curious about how much of what you see is directed by habit or external influences versus your own personal practice, your own gymnastics of attention.

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How do you relate to the notion that what we practice looking at is what we care about? can you share a personal story of a time you got really curious about how much of what you saw was directed by habit or external influences versus your own personal practice? What helps you slow down to be curious about your choices?

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Caught in Political Divide, Church Runs Kindness Campaign

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November 11, 2024

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Caught in Political Divide, Church Runs Kindness Campaign

There is no small act of kindness. Every compassionate act makes large the world.

– Mary Anne Radmacher –

Caught in Political Divide, Church Runs Kindness Campaign

Pastor Adam Hamilton was considering giving up being a pastor after years of refereeing debates at his church about polarizing issues of our times. Instead, he decided to begin a Campaign for Kindness. It has billboards, yard signs, and TV spots like a political campaign, but they advertise ethics. “We’re trying to blanket Kansas City in love, compassion, understanding and just calm down, you know?” Hundreds of churches across the country are following his lead. Pastor Hamilton urges his congregation to do kind acts every day, “especially for people they disagree with.” “Choosing kindness isn’t about avoiding our differences but navigating them with respect and compassion.” { read more }

Be The Change

Choose to show some kindness today, especially to someone with whom you may disagree. Make the world a little larger.

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How To Turn Down The Tension in a Conversation

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November 9, 2024

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How To Turn Down The Tension in a Conversation

Words are windows, or they’re walls, They sentence us, or set us free. When I speak and when I hear, Let the love light shine through me.

– Ruth Bebermeyer –

How To Turn Down The Tension in a Conversation

With decades of research, Julia Minson developed a practice that people can very quickly learn to effectively deal with conflict and disagreement, using the acronym HEAR: H is hedging — speaking with less dogmatism, using words like “sometimes, or maybe;” E is emphasizing what you can agree on such as “we both want;” A is acknowledgement by restating the other person’s perspective; R is reframing using positive words, and avoiding negatives like “no, don’t, can’t, won’t.” Julia’s research also shows that people mimic emotions. “So if I’m more positive and warm, that makes you more positive and warm—and if I’m more negative, that makes you more negative.” She emphasizes that it is a practice, and “it’s ‘contagious’—when one person learns and implements it, it affects the people around them, therefore creating a ripple effect of better communication.” { read more }

Be The Change

Choose one of the HEAR practices. Practice it in your next conversation, and the one after… Shine a love light.

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Traveling Unalone

This week’s inspiring video: Traveling Unalone
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Video of the Week

Nov 07, 2024
Traveling Unalone

Traveling Unalone

When we bear witness, we lovingly give our attention to the other without judgment. When we allow another to bear witness to us, we give ourselves the freedom to be known. It is an honour to bear witness, if we choose to see this life as an opportunity for extraordinary growth. So here’s to doing so in strength, in weakness, with resilience, with love. In this film, Anis Mojgani shares his poetry and his presence outside his window each Friday night; inviting anyone who wishes to come.
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Forgiving the Unforgivable

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November 7, 2024

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Forgiving the Unforgivable

To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover that the prisoner was you.

– Lewis B. Smedes –

Forgiving the Unforgivable

Nine years after a brutal 11-year civil war, a community center in a tiny village in Sierra Leone reflected the community itself — burned and charred, weeds growing, “left alone and untended.” Then a drummer appeared, and began a rhythm that signaled a time to gather. Little by little, the community came, built a fire out of the debris, and within the safety of the circle, a Village Chief invited them to finally talk about what had happened. “He urged people not to be afraid to speak, emphasizing that those who confessed would not be prosecuted, nor would there be any shame for sharing how you had been hurt.” Almost immediately, a young man came forward and admitted to a crime that seemed unforgivable, yet he was forgiven that very evening. “By the will to acknowledge, apologize, and forgive…together,” they were able to move forward to restore community, no longer imprisoned by their past. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider, just for a moment, how apologizing to or forgiving someone might open up a path to greater freedom. What would a safe circle look like in which to make it happen? Light a fire. Create an invitation. For more inspiration, join the author of this piece in an Awakin Call conversation this weekend: { more }

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Conversation with Paul Van Slambrouck: Reflections on Journalism

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November 6, 2024

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Conversation with Paul Van Slambrouck: Reflections on Journalism

A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.

– Winston Churchill –

Conversation with Paul Van Slambrouck: Reflections on Journalism

Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Paul Van Slambrouck grew up with a love of newspapers and its high calling: “You only know the truth that you can come to at a particular moment. It’s not always an ultimate truth, but the pursuit of the truth is a pretty pure thing. Most reporters I’ve met are independent thinkers. They’re after the truth. I tell students that as a journalist you’re an advocate, too, but it’s for the truth. It’s something rare, freedom of the press.” Paul had retired from the Christian Science Monitor and was teaching journalism at Principia College when this interview took place a decade ago. What follows is an intriguing conversation on the personal power of journalism, insights on humility from a disarming encounter with Nelson Mandela, a newsroom lens on historical moments across history, and more. { read more }

Be The Change

There’s no shortage of competing versions of the truth. Take a break from the confusion and step away from the Internet. Go for a walk. Take some time just being in the unmediated space around you. Remember to breathe.

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Eight Questions That Can Help You Survive Election Stress

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November 5, 2024

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Eight Questions That Can Help You Survive Election Stress

The greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one thought over another.

– William James –

Eight Questions That Can Help You Survive Election Stress

In 2024, 43% of American adults have felt more anxious than they did the previous year, the American Psychological Association reports. Three-quarters of respondents identified this year’s presidential election as one of the biggest causes of their anxiety. “What can we do to stay resilient in the face of this election? One way is to check in with ourselves daily to make sure we’re doing the things that sustain our health and well-being, while remaining empowered to make a positive impact on the election itself.” UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center offers eight inquiries that can help us navigate stress during the elections — from checking in with the body and mind to proactively seeking out good news to a gratitude practice and beyond. { read more }

Be The Change

Which of these inquiries resonate with you most at this time? Practice one or more of them, or consider sharing them with other friends and family who might benefit.

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Between Knowing And Not Knowing

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 4, 2024

Between Knowing And Not Knowing

–Ruth Ozeki and Ezra Klein

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2541.jpgEzra Klein: I sometimes play with the idea — and recognizing that I know nothing in these areas — that a lot of what is being described here is simply unreliableness. And that sounds negative to people, but when I sit with it, a lot of what is being said is that your thoughts, your sense of self, what’s going on around you is just unreliable. And your tendency to really feel fixed about it, to believe you really know what’s going on, that’s giving it a solidity. I always like emptiness as thinking of it as an alternative to thinking of things as solid and their meaning as solid and their nature as solid.

Ruth Ozeki: Yeah, that’s lovely. I like that a lot. That just makes me think of teachings about not knowing. There’s a phrase in Zen Buddhism that comes from a koan, which is, not knowing is most intimate.

And that it’s when we don’t know something and when we can sit in that state of not knowing is when there’s a kind of an intimacy with the world around us. And this is something that Shunryu Suzuki, who is the founder of the San Francisco Zen Center — he talks about beginner’s mind. This is another iteration of beginner’s mind.

And what he says about beginner’s mind is that in the beginner’s mind, possibilities are endless, and in the expert’s mind, they’re few. And so this idea that in this state of not knowing, curiosity and engagement with the world arises, for lack of a better word. And that engagement, that curiosity is intimate and very, very alive.

And this really pertains, I think, to the process of any kind of creation, music, art, certainly literature, is the ability to sit in that state of not knowing and somehow find some way to rest there, somehow find some way to be comfortable there. Because it’s a very uncomfortable feeling as a novelist. When I start writing a novel, I know nothing about it. And what I really want is to know something. I want to know everything about it, about this fictional world.

And so there’s a kind of tension between the state of not knowing and then the state of knowing. And so somehow through meditation, I’m trying to cultivate the ability to sit in a relaxed state in that generative tension between knowing and not knowing until some kind of answers start to arise.

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Why Children Perceive Time Slower Than Adults

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November 2, 2024

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Why Children Perceive Time Slower Than Adults

Maybe there is no such thing as time; there are only moments, each with its own story.

– Robin Wall Kimmerer –

Why Children Perceive Time Slower Than Adults

Researchers are learning how children perceive time, and how “learning to see time through their eyes may be fundamental to a happier human experience.” Many factors are at play, one being emotional state: “A person’s experience of time passages in daily life does not fluctuate with age, but with their emotional state. Put simply – if you are happier, time passes faster. If you are sad, time drags.” Attention also matters. “The more attention that you pay to a period of time passing, the slower it seems to go for you.” Alternatively, “the more time pressure, boredom and routine in a person’s life, as well as the more future-orientated an individual is in contrast to living in the moment, the faster time is experienced.” Other factors include the link between speed and duration, vision, heartrate, memory, and physical exercise. “What you are doing in the present is unsurprisingly paramount to our understanding of time, no matter our age.” { read more }

Be The Change

There are 1,440 moments in your day. Devote a few of those moments to mindfully experience something outside of your ordinary routine: surprise yourself or someone else, engage your inner child, play… Make a memory and share the story.

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