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Archive for June, 2025

Toward an Eco-Social Contract for Regenerative Futures

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 04, 2025

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News That Inspires
Jun 04, 2025
Toward an Eco-Social Contract for Regenerative Futures
“What would change if we cared for a place – not because we owned it, but because we belonged to it?”

— Tijn Tjoelker

Toward an Eco-Social Contract for Regenerative Futures

In these increasingly ecologically and socially chaotic times, Fan Yang offers an eco-social framework, a kind of “web for life,” that “ensures governance and economic systems serve both ecological and social well-being.” It is a social contract where all relevant stakeholders are heard and belong. At the heart of her proposal is care – care for the planet and care for one another. “For it to take root, functional states and markets must operate within a larger context of care—ensuring their actions are guided by collective well-being and long-term sustainability,” with commitments and agreements for “living well together.” “It demands a fundamentally relational approach—one that focuses on the quality of relationships and the design of processes that enable collective wisdom, coordination, and care.”

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Considering Fan Yang’s framework, what is one way you might strengthen a sense of belonging and care for people and planet in your local community or government? Share your idea with someone.

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Fullness On The Other Side Of Emptiness

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jun 2, 2025

Fullness On The Other Side Of Emptiness

–Mirabai Starr

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683e4b206eb1b-2744.jpgIn many mystical traditions, across the spectrum of the world’s religions, we find a paradoxical teaching that says the most reliable means for knowing God is by unknowing. Christian mysticism uses the Latin term, via negativa. We are encouraged to actively dismiss any words or concepts to define the vast mystery of the divine, resting in what we cannot say about God, rather than what we think we can say….

I invite you to turn this stark technique on its head. While unknowing has its place on the path of awakening, it can be a disembodied practice that leads to checking out of reality (sometimes called transcendence) rather than fully inhabiting the holiness of your life.

Try this: Sit in a comfortable position with your back straight, allow your eyes to close, take a couple of deep, slow breaths, and ask yourself the question “Who am I?” Rather than responding in the negative, say yes to whatever arises. I am a mother and a daughter, a sister and a lover: yes. I am a cabinet-maker, a gardener, an activist: yes. I am a sensitive person, a drama queen, a tortured artist: yes. I am someone others can come to when their hearts are broken because I listen with love: yes. I am a part of the vast universe, no more or less important than an aspen tree: yes. Now, get creative: I am sunlight on water, a breeze that lifts my hair, the stillness of midnight, a symphony: yes.

You are all of these and beyond them all. You get to be both vast and particular, formless and gloriously made. By accepting all the scruffy and magnificent details of your human condition, and allowing seemingly contradictory things to be equally true, you banish the conditioned voice that designates some things as holy and others as profane. Set your intention to welcome everything you are and watch your life open like a fist, like a flower, like a gate.

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What do you make of the notion that embracing both the vast and particular aspects of your identity can lead to a deeper spiritual understanding? Can you share a personal story that highlights a moment when you allowed yourself to accept seemingly contradictory aspects of your identity, and how that experience transformed your perspective? What helps you cultivate the habit of welcoming all parts of yourself, both scruffy and magnificent?

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Programs Don’t Change Kids — Relationships Do

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 02, 2025

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Jun 02, 2025
Programs Don't Change Kids -- Relationships Do
“The most important things in life are the connections you make with others.”

— Tom Ford

Programs Don’t Change Kids — Relationships Do

Bill Milliken grew up in what appeared to be a typical American family. Yet, underlying issues meant “they couldn’t be there for me, emotionally or in any other way.” He received both subtle and loud messages that he didn’t belong, even that he “was dumb” from both home and school. He briefly felt connected with some guys at a pool hall that could have led him down a destructive path. Fortunately, he was invited to a youth camp where some counselors built a relationship with him. “I could see immediately that they wanted to know me as a person; they cared about who I was, no matter…” It was his first experience of unconditional love. Bill says it was not the program, but the relationship that made the difference. “They didn’t offer us an ‘answer’ or a ‘program’ — they offered themselves; they offered the time, love, and energy it takes to form a relationship with another human being,” and it made a world of difference in his life.

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Be The Change

Spend the time, love, and energy to connect with and/or strengthen a relationship with someone. It may make a world of difference. For inspiration, join an Awakin Call webcast conversation with Bill Milliken this weekend!

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