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Archive for March, 2025

The Danger of a Single Story

This week’s inspiring video: The Danger of a Single Story
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Video of the Week

Mar 27, 2025
The Danger of a Single Story

The Danger of a Single Story

Growing up in Nigeria, author Chimamanda Adichie only read stories about blue-eyed British children, playing in the snow and eating apples. She loved these stories, but she could not connect to these stories. Growing up in an English-speaking former colony, Adichie nevertheless embraces Nigerian history and tradition to write critically acclaimed diasporan literature. Watch her discuss her own youth and the perceptions about Africa she had to overcome.
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Two Sides of the Orchard

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March 27, 2025

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Two Sides of the Orchard

To truly know the world, look deeply within your own being; to truly know yourself, take real interest in the world.

– Rudolf Steiner –

Two Sides of the Orchard

In 2011, Ezra Sullivan joined a harvest crew in an apple orchard at the base of the Andes Mountains in Argentina. Half of the orchard was well tended in neat rows. They worked it in a task focused, quick and effective way. The other half had been left unattended for years. “You could barely walk a straight line through it. One had to traverse fallen trees, ant hills, dense undergrowth and uneven ground. Harvesting was a rewilding experience, and a lesson in the cultivation of patience.” Ezra noticed there was greater diversity in the old orchard in the interesting fruit, grass, shrubs, vines, animal life, and “local honey bees thronged to this rewilded patch of orchard.” “This complexity held a warmth of heart, which matched our humanity in a certain way.” Ezra says, in meeting the old orchard, “I had a strong trust that my guiding spirit was leading me towards an unfolding biography that would integrate agriculture with spirituality.” { read more }

Be The Change

The wild orchard taught a lesson in cultivating patience. Consider one way your outer ecosystem, such as a wilderness or orchard, might inform your inner life. For more inspiration, join a live Awakin Call conversation with the article author this weekend! Details and RSVP here: { more }

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Unexpected Strength

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Mar 24, 2025

Unexpected Strength

–Author Unknown

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67e1f6fbea9b1-2729.jpgA 10-year-old boy decided to study judo despite the fact that he had lost his left arm in a devastating car accident.

The boy began lessons with an old judo master. The boy was doing well, so he couldn’t understand why, after three months of training the master had taught him only one move.

The boy finally said, “Teacher, should I be learning more moves?”

“This is the only move you know, but this is the only move you’ll ever need to know,” the teacher replied.

Not quite understanding, but believing in his teacher, the boy kept training. Several months later, the teacher took the boy to his first tournament. Surprising himself, the boy easily won his first two matches. The third match proved to be more difficult, but after some time, his opponent became impatient and charged; the boy deftly used his one move to win the match. Still amazed by his success, the boy was now in the finals.

This time, his opponent was bigger, stronger, and more experienced. For a while, the boy appeared to be overmatched. Concerned that the boy might get hurt, the referee called a time-out. He was about to stop the match when the teacher intervened and said, “No, let him continue.” The match resumed, the boy’s opponent made a critical mistake: he dropped his guard. Instantly, the boy used his move to pin him. The boy had won the match and the tournament. He was the champion.

On the way home, the boy and his teacher reviewed every move in each and every match. Finally, the boy summoned the courage to ask what was truly on his mind, “Teacher, how did I win the tournament with only one move?”

“You won for two reasons,” the teacher answered. “First, you’ve almost mastered one of the most difficult throws in all of judo. And second, the only known defense for that move is for your opponent to grab your left arm.” The boy’s biggest weakness had become his biggest strength.

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Can you think of a time when something you saw as a weakness turned out to be a strength? If you could apply the lesson from this story to your life, what would you do differently? How have other teachers in your life influenced what you see as possible?

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From Prison to Purpose Through Wildland Firefighting

This week’s inspiring video: From Prison to Purpose Through Wildland Firefighting
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Video of the Week

Mar 20, 2025
From Prison to Purpose Through Wildland Firefighting

From Prison to Purpose Through Wildland Firefighting

While asking incarcerated people to fight fires has been viewed with some controversy by outsiders, this film provides another viewpoint from those who are on the frontlines fighting fires. When wildfires rage in California and in other states, incarcerated people are often asked to step into the danger of fighting the flames. This is dangerous, underpaid work, but it also creates a shift for many incarcerated people who gain power and agency by seeing themselves as having something of value to offer to society after they made a mistake by committing a crime. They say they gained a sense of freedom and purpose in life that would otherwise have been spent behind bars. TED Fellow Royal Ramey was one of them. He shares the story of how doing public service in prison inspired him to co-found the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program, a nonprofit helping formerly incarcerated people become wildland firefighters — and find purpose along the way.
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On Community: The More-Than-Human World

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March 20, 2025

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On Community: The More-Than-Human World

Nature’s intelligence wants to live through us…

– Gail Bradbrook –

On Community: The More-Than-Human World

Instead of imposing our human world onto the “more-than-human” world, Tess James helps us understand how the world arrives for her. “I step into the human world through the mirror of the more-than-human world, finding ease in its familiar safety. People exist in the background; my foreground is the present moment. Never empty. Always a canvas—Butterflies. Dried leaves. Twigs I like to hold. Worm castings brushing my heels. A bird call.” She breathes better. In fact, she says, “I am breathed,” in the way she breathed “a quiet sigh before I knew I needed one.” She also feels invited: “A twig. A dying lizard. The first summer rain. Everything calls, if I listen.” Tess seeks to understand “the nature of invitations in the human world too.” “Through the more-than-human world, I find the safety to look again—at the people who matter to me. I cannot live without notions. I cannot live without friends.” { read more }

Be The Change

Accept an invitation to become a student of one life form in your more-than-human world – bird, plant, bee… What is the intelligence they share with you?

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We See Into The Life Of Things

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Mar 17, 2025

We See Into The Life Of Things

–William Wordsworth

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67d8cad8e9d6a-2726.jpgThese beauteous forms,
Through a long absence, have not been to me
As is a landscape to a blind man’s eye:
But oft, in lonely rooms, and ‘mid the din
Of towns and cities, I have owed to them,
In hours of weariness, sensations sweet,
Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart;

And passing even into my purer mind
With tranquil restoration:—feelings too
Of unremembered pleasure: such, perhaps,
As have no slight or trivial influence
On that best portion of a good man’s life,
His little, nameless, unremembered, acts
Of kindness and of love.

Nor less, I trust,
To them I may have owed another gift,
Of aspect more sublime; that blessed mood,
In which the burthen of the mystery,
In which the heavy and the weary weight
Of all this unintelligible world,
Is lightened:—that serene and blessed mood,
In which the affections gently lead us on,—
Until, the breath of this corporeal frame

And even the motion of our human blood
Almost suspended, we are laid asleep
In body, and become a living soul:
While with an eye made quiet by the power
Of harmony, and the deep power of joy,
We see into the life of things.

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How do you relate to the notion of being laid asleep in body and becoming a living soul? Can you share a personal story of a time you saw with an eye made quiet by the power of harmony and joy? What helps you see into the life of things?

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Mimes Directing Traffic in Bogotá Had Surprisingly Loud Impacts

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March 17, 2025

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Mimes Directing Traffic in Bogotá Had Surprisingly Loud Impacts

Self-efficacy and outcome-efficacy are essential—the belief in people that they can make a difference with what they do.

– Paulius Yamin –

Mimes Directing Traffic in Bogotá Had Surprisingly Loud Impacts

In 1995, a mayoral candidate in Bogota, Colombia, began his campaign with a slogan: “arm yourself with love.” Past efforts to “mitigate waves of violence with, well, violence, had proven ineffective.” His first effort was to tackle 1,500 annual traffic-related deaths. He hired a few mimes armed with signs that read correcto and incorrecto, who “mocked lawbreakers and applauded polite motorists” with cartwheels and applause. The behavior change was powerful and effective with a 50% reduction in traffic violence. While stationed in only a few select intersections, word-of-mouth spread their praises, and citizens became more self-aware. The mime program ended in the late 1990s, but has since spread to other countries. “The scheme used art and expression to ask the spectator, a passive citizen, to challenge how they lived and behaved in the city.” People still remember them as a symbol of “citizen culture” – a collective responsibility to change. { read more }

Be The Change

How might you and your community “arm yourself with love?” What is one way performance artists might help your community create a “citizen culture?” Make a suggestion. Make a difference.

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The Feminine Principle and Balance of Power

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March 14, 2025

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The Feminine Principle and Balance of Power

The feminine principle, this untapped subtle potential that lies at the core of our being, must now be realised to restore a balance between intellect and intuition, facts and feelings, reason and realism.

– Sister Gayatri Naraine –

The Feminine Principle and Balance of Power

“Personal growth and human development are as old as the hills perhaps two of the more popular banners flapping in the breeze [in] the 21st century. So what’s new? Aren’t these two old chestnuts that humanity has been chewing over throughout history? The issues may indeed be the same, but what is new is the emergence of a suppressed part of the human dynamic that can be called the feminine principle. This principle does not cater to a prejudiced belief in the superiority or inferiority of one group compared to another. Nor does it seek to replace male chauvinism with female chauvinism. Its aim is to allow the blossoming of a full and balanced personality that is at once vigorous and serene in an era of both light and might.” Sister Gayatri Naraine draws from “hindsight,” “foresight,” and “insight” to reflect on the transformative potential of the balance of the masculine and feminine in today’s world. { read more }

Be The Change

This weekend, join a live Awakin Call conversation with the author of today’s article. Details and RSVP here: { more }

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Black String Triage Ensemble

This week’s inspiring video: Black String Triage Ensemble
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Video of the Week

Mar 13, 2025
Black String Triage Ensemble

Black String Triage Ensemble

A volunteer organisation with a truly unique mission, the Black String Triage Ensemble arrives in the aftermath of violent and tragic events on the streets of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to perform concerts for the community in an act of healing. In doing so, the group, which is composed of Black and Latinx performers, seeks to fight hopelessness and send the message that ‘a different reality is possible’ for residents of the city, which has one of the highest violent crime rates of any urban centre in the United States. The short documentary Black Strings follows the ensemble as they sit ‘on call’, monitoring police, ambulance and fire department radios, awaiting a situation they deem suitable for a performance. In this profile of the ensemble, the US director Marquise Mays captures how spirituality drives their work, as well as how their performances can be met with mixed reactions by the communities they’re attempting to heal and inspire.
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Inner Voice Vs. Ego Voice

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Mar 10, 2025

Inner Voice Vs. Ego Voice

–David Sudar

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67cfafc5bdf4c-2727.jpgI was recently talking to a friend who was laboring over whether or not to move in with her boyfriend. She had previously lived with a partner and it didn’t go well. She had much apprehension at the thought of doing it again—especially after less than a year of dating.

After listening to all her nervousness, I said, “then don’t do it”.

“But he’s so wonderful”, she said, “we have such an amazing connection… and, logistically, it just makes a lot of sense”.

“Well, then do it,” I said.

“But I told myself I wouldn’t do this again unless I was 100% sure he was the one—and I guess I’m not totally sure yet”.

Sound familiar? Maybe for you it’s not a relationship decision, maybe it’s related to your career, a big journey, what kind of communication to maintain with old friends or perhaps something as simple as where to eat for dinner.

At some point or another, we all have an inner conflict similar to my friend. Some situation where voices inside us are pointing two opposing directions. What to do?

I thought about her situation for a moment and I said, “imagine you were on a game show, like Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, and the question was whether or not to live with your boyfriend. The general advice is that the first answer that instinctively comes into your mind is the best one—but, there’s such a strong tendency to second guess ourselves that people often reject their instinctive response, overthink it, rationalize it, justify it and end up deciding against their instincts, only to get it wrong! In other words, when that question comes up, what’s your gut response?”

Ripe with vulnerability, she replied softly, “I should go for it”.

One of my working definitions of sincerity is embodying your inner voice. Initially, the major task is just learning the difference between the inner voice and its greatest imposter—the ego.

The game show thought experiment is good way to figure it out. So is labeling. At a decision point, whether small or life-changing, silently say or write to yourself, “my inner voice says…”. Then notice all the stories the ego will tell, and likewise say or write, “my ego says…” Note the difference between the two, but keep grounding yourself in the inner voice.

Alongside those tactics, it’s helpful to have some information on the difference between the two:

The inner voice doesn’t justify itself. It doesn’t speak in stories. It doesn’t try to convince you of anything. It’s just a felt sense of knowing. Deep inside you feel that voice. You intuit it. You know it like you know how important friendship is.

The ego rationalizes, analyzes, justifies, comes up with reason after reason—in short, it thinks about things. It’s cognitive. Often, the ego speaks from a place of fear or craving. It might try to tell you that you can do it alone, that friendship doesn’t matter much, that vulnerability should be avoided—stories!

Once you have a pretty solid understanding of the the difference between these two—not intellectually, but being able to know the difference in real time—then, the next major task is daring to actually enact what the inner voice is saying. Of course, this can be terrifying, but it’s the work that must be done if we’re to walk the Path of Sincerity.

A couple weeks after that initial conversation, I checked back in with my friend, “so what did you decide?” I asked.

“We just signed a lease,” she said brightly.

Well done! Well done!

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How do you relate to the difference between the inner voice and the ego voice? Can you share a personal story of a time you dared to enact what your inner voice was saying? What helps you walk the path of sincerity?

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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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