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Archive for January, 2025

Jan 17/18: Live From Gandhi Ashram!

Incubator of compassionate action.

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Stories of Soul Force
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Dear Friends,

This week, noteworthy change-makers from more than a dozen countries are gathering at the Gandhi Ashram in India to collectively hold deep questions at the intersection of social change and inner transformation. Some of them are prominent leaders whose work has impacted billions, while some are invisible ladders whose “deepcast” efforts are vividly felt by the world — and all of whom find themselves exploring different social operating systems in response to today’s poly-crises.

giphy.gif On Jan 17th and 18th, you are invited to join virtually, live from the Gandhi Ashram: RSVP For ‘Stories of Soul Force’ Evening

With stories from luminaries, songs by soulful artists, and performances by children at the Gandhi Ashram, we hope to do our bit to elevate the collective field for the planet — and would love for you to share your blessings as well.

Some of this year’s retreat participants include … the CEO who mainstreamed impact investing; an elected UK politician visiting his Indian roots after 4 generations; a farmer who has popularized permaculture in Vietnam; ezgif-1-ee937a321b.gifa Kashmiri educator of orphaned girls who has withstood 19 assassination attempts with ‘witnessing’ as his only defense; a teen housecleaner who grew into one of Forbes’ 50 Greatest World Leaders; a goose-bump inducing European singer who left a career with Celine Dion to chant for the world; an African shaman dispelling gang violence in Los Angeles; a Japanese entrepreneur running a 100-year-fund but contemplating 10 thousand year ripples; a visionary leader of Harvard’s Osher center for integrative medicine; philanthropists who have signed Gates’s Giving Pledge but are now reflecting on multiple forms of wealth; a monk from Uganda whose humble mobile tent blossomed into a flourishing school; multiple bestselling authors, one of whom Oprah frequently credits with changing her life; cutting-edge researchers exploring the intersection mind, body and brain; globally renowned spiritual elders; and many more leaders and ladders from Kenya to Germany to Hong Kong to Italy … more than a dozen countries.
To join us virtually: RSVP For ‘Stories of Soul Force’ Evening

Vinoba Bhave, Gandhi’s successor in India, shared an almost prophetic quote many decades ago:

“To progress, society doesn’t need ‘leaders’ anymore. This doesn’t mean that we won’t have great people amidst us. I think great people will come and they will be vital for the progress of humanity, but they will be so great that they will refuse to take up this position of leadership. […] When we will all see our role in society as stewards, we will all light up the sky together like countless stars on a dark night. Don’t think of society as the sky on a full moon night. The moon’s harsh light blinds us to the true and humble work of the stars. But on a moonless night, the true servants of emergence shine forth, as though they are connected invisibly in this vast and infinite cosmos.”

Thank you, all, for being servants of emergence.
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P.S. FEW GLOBAL TIDBITS …
Over the last few months, in-person ripples have amped up around the globe, with dozens of events, circles and retreats across continents …

… heartfelt moments with Vietnam love warriors immersed in a rural village community in India!

… a touching impromptu dialogue with life-long activist and mystic, James O’Dea, on dancing with Parkinsons: My Conversation with God (when I couldn’t move for 16 hours).

…Kotaro and Miyagi-san completed their largest KUNI pilgrimage last month, leading 140 changemakers and youth (photos), while in Austrian Alps, Martin and dozens of anchors supported a 300-person dialogue from well-doing with well-being (photos).

… beloved storyteller Brian Conroy’s recent rendition: Big Joe and the Phantom 309.

… as a remote volunteer, Ari’s trying out a new skill — AI music. 🙂 Here’s his first music video offering for Gandhi 3.0: Where New Seeds Sow

… over last three weeks alone, India has been home to 8 retreats — from business to educators to AI to heart intelligence — and loads of local events and circles across 9 cities. Below are some smiles from our Laddership Retreat:

laddership_retreat.jpg

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When kindness becomes a habit, it improves our health

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 11, 2025

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When kindness becomes a habit, it improves our health

There is no better exercise for your heart than reaching down and helping to lift someone up.

– Bernard Meltzer –

When kindness becomes a habit, it improves our health

Research through the years shows volunteering and acts of kindness increase happiness and psychological well-being. Newer findings reveal they can improve physical health as well. Some results: less decline in memory and executive function; ability to walk longer at older ages with better balance; lower levels of physical pain; healthier body mass index; less stress that can drive up blood pressure and cholesterol levels; healthier inflammatory markers and total cholesterol; and decreases in cardiovascular risk. One of the researchers said we really can’t go wrong when we engage in behaviors that aim to help others. “At the very least, it will make the world a little bit better place for many others. And we might just make it a little bit better for ourselves.” { read more }

Be The Change

If you don’t already volunteer, sign up for one of many possibilities in your community, and get started. Make volunteering and acts of kindness part of your physical fitness routine. Exercise your heart.

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Paint and a Paintbrush Are Rebuilding Community for Austin’s Homeless

This week’s inspiring video: Paint and a Paintbrush Are Rebuilding Community for Austin’s Homeless
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Video of the Week

Jan 09, 2025
Paint and a Paintbrush Are Rebuilding Community for Austin's Homeless

Paint and a Paintbrush Are Rebuilding Community for Austin’s Homeless

Can the chance to sit down and create art, be "an artist" and belong to an art community, impact a person’s ability to find a way out of homelessness? Find out just how powerful the idea of being worthy can be.
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The algorithm says crisis. The social worker says trust.

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 9, 2025

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The algorithm says crisis. The social worker says trust.

When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, “Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.”

– Fred Rogers –

The algorithm says crisis. The social worker says trust.

Los Angeles County social workers are getting a little help from an Artificial Intelligence (AI) system to identify people at risk of losing their housing using digital warnings such as “repeated emergency room visits, mounting unpaid bills, food stamp applications that suddenly stop.” It is a shift in social work that helps identify people before a crisis, whereas, traditionally, they have to wait for people to seek help after a crisis. The system is very accurate though not perfect, and there are privacy concerns. Yet, the Outreach Program Manager says, “Our clients are so grateful and so happy to be connected to someone who understands where they might be at, who is open to listen to them, who holds their hand for the duration.” While AI helps, preventing homelessness and helping people still relies on the personal touch: “a social worker reaching out, a connection made, trust built one conversation at a time.”

{ read more }

Be The Change

Find one way to help someone in your community, and show some love to the “helpers” who give a little hope every day to those in need.

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Looking Through A Window

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jan 6, 2025

Looking Through A Window

–Sam Harris

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2717.jpgEveryone has had the experience of looking through a window and suddenly catching sight of his own reflection staring back at him from the glass. At that point, he can use the glass as a window, to see the world outside, or as a mirror, but he can’t do both at the same time.

Sometimes your reflection in the glass is pretty subtle, and you could easily stand there for ten minutes, looking outside while staring right through the image of your own face without seeing it.

For the purposes of this analogy, imagine that the goal of meditation is to see your own reflection clearly in each moment. Most spiritual traditions don’t realize that this can be done directly, and they articulate their paths of practice in ways that suggest that if you only paid more attention to everything beyond the glass—trees, sky, traffic—eventually your face would come into view. Looking out the window is arguably better than closing your eyes or leaving the room entirely—at least you are facing in the right direction—but the practice is based on a fundamental misunderstanding. You don’t realize that you are looking through the very thing you are trying to find in every moment. Given better information, you could just walk up to the window and see your face in the first instant.

The same is true for the illusoriness of the self. Consciousness is already free of the feeling that we call “I.” However, a person must change his plane of focus to realize this. Some practices can facilitate this shift in awareness, but there is no truly gradual path that leads there. Many longtime meditators seem completely unaware that these two planes of focus exist, and they spend their lives looking out the window, as it were. I used to be one of them. I’d stay on retreat for a few weeks or months at a time, being mindful of the breath and other sense objects, thinking that if I just got closer to the raw data of experience, a breakthrough would occur. Occasionally, a breakthrough did occur: In a moment of seeing, for instance, there would be pure seeing, and consciousness would appear momentarily free of any feeling to which the notion of a “self” could be attached. But then the experience would fade, and I couldn’t get back there at will. There was nothing to do but return to meditating dualistically on contents of consciousness, with self-transcendence as a distant goal.

However, from the non-dual side, ordinary consciousness—the very awareness that you and I are experiencing in this conversation—is already free of self. And this can be pointed out directly, and recognized again and again, as one’s only form of practice. So gradual approaches are, almost by definition, misleading. And yet this is where everyone starts.

Of course, this non-dual teaching, too, can be misleading—because even after one recognizes the intrinsic selflessness of consciousness, one still has to practice that recognition. So there is a point to meditation after all—but it isn’t a goal-oriented one. In each moment of real meditation, the self is already transcended.

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How do you relate to the notion that we don’t realize we are looking through the very thing that we are trying to find in every moment? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware that your ordinary consciousness was already free of self? What helps you practice the recognition of intrinsic selfness of consciousness?

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Glimpses of Hope in 2024

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January 6, 2025

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Glimpses of Hope in 2024

And now let us believe in a long year that is given to us, new, untouched, full of things that have never been, full of work that has never been done…

– Rainer Maria Rilke –

Glimpses of Hope in 2024

In the midst of what may seem like only bad news and more bad news, enjoy these ten examples of what Solutions Journalism Network calls “hope with teeth — not naive assumptions everything will resolve perfectly, but awareness of the scope of the problem and potential solutions, along with a belief in the possibility of better outcomes rooted in action.” They include clergy finding creative ways to reduce polarization in their congregations; women in Nigeria building self-esteem and gender equality; peace through mediation; waste warriors in India and many more. These stories are an important reminder that “terrible things are happening in the world, but not everything that happened this year was terrible.” { read more }

Be The Change

Share one or more of these stories with someone you know, and ask them to share with others. Help shine a light on new possibilities.

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How a Group’s Ornament Exchange Helps with Grief During Holidays

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 4, 2025

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How a Group's Ornament Exchange Helps with Grief During Holidays

Grief is just love with no place to go.

– Jamie Anderson –

How a Group’s Ornament Exchange Helps with Grief During Holidays

Grieving Gracefully is a virtual support group that gives people a “place to go” with their grief. Founder Kelly Sammon said they hoped to “shine just a little bit of light in somebody’s life” during those painful times, and especially during holidays. After her own grieving and extensive research, Kelly realized people feel alone in their grief, and more readily connect and relate to others who are also grieving. The group hosts events, book clubs, forums, and podcasts for people to be together. This holiday season, they organized an exchange where each participant got the name of someone to whom they could send a card and an ornament. “It’s really important for anyone grieving to give yourself grace, take a breath and honour your feelings.” { read more }

Be The Change

Recall a time of grief – recent or not. Connect and share with someone who is grieving now. Be a little holding place for their love.

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Once Upon a Forest

This week’s inspiring video: Once Upon a Forest
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Video of the Week

Jan 02, 2025
Once Upon a Forest

Once Upon a Forest

Maria was a romantic, animal-loving, dreamy child who, growing up, had a hard time conforming to the demands associated with the trajectory towards "a normal life". As a young adult she became depressed, and was encouraged by her therapist to go for walks in the forest. The myriad of funny-looking twigs and sticks she found along the way immediately put her on a path to recovery. When a climate related crisis strikes the forest where she lives and works, she’s forced into a new type of creativity in order to save the place that once upon a time saved her.
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All Life is Sacred: A Conversation with John Malloy

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 2, 2025

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All Life is Sacred: A Conversation with John Malloy

When you commit an act of violence, you are basically disconnecting yourself. You are putting yourself outside the circle.

– John Malloy –

All Life is Sacred: A Conversation with John Malloy

“By the time John Malloy was seventeen, he had moved forty-four times. In his young life as a rolling stone, Malloy learned to rely on himself. Whatever allies and friends he might have begun to cultivate in one place were always torn away by his constant displacement. In schools in New York, Washington D.C., San Francisco, and Oakland, as the new kid, he learned to fight. Every day was a trial. While living in San Francisco, he ended up in juvenile hall. Later, he did time for assaulting the perpetrators of a rape. Being unprotected from bullies in school wasn’t so different from how it was in jail. The big eat the little. But Malloy was a warrior. It was during his time in jail that something crystallized for him: ‘I knew that I was going to clean up my mess and spend the rest of my life working in institutions to help take care of the people who no one else was taking care of.'” This interview from our archives a decade ago offers a shining window into the authentic lifework and spirit of a remarkable man. { read more }

Be The Change

Many indigenous culture live the understanding that all life is sacred: that the sky, the earth, and its waters are sacred. At least nearly a billion of the world’s people lack clean, healthy drinking water. This new year, become more conscious of this gift, and the many other gifts of nature that support you. For more inspiration, read about the 500-mile run in that spirit: { more }

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