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Archive for October, 2025

How Different Religions Practice Forgiveness — and What We Can Learn From Them

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 31, 2025

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Oct 31, 2025
How Different Religions Practice Forgiveness -- and What We Can Learn From Them
“Forgiveness does not change the past, but it does enlarge the future.”

— Paul Boose

How Different Religions Practice Forgiveness — and What We Can Learn From Them

Forgiveness, as described across Judaism, Islam, and Christianity, is less an erasure of harm and more a courageous recalibration of relationships. In Judaism, the ritual of Yom Kippur and the practice of teshuvah highlight a community’s commitment to reconciliation, demanding face-to-face acknowledgment of wrongs. Islam presents forgiveness through the story of the Prophet’s journey to Taif, illustrating forgiveness as a transcendent act rooted in hope and strength beyond personal grievance. Christianity invites adherents to echo forgiveness in life’s tapestry through prayer and parables, where it signifies deliberate grace rather than facile absolution. At its core, forgiveness defies a simplistic conception, instead asking us to navigate an alchemical transformation of wrongs into new beginnings, pointing toward healing that is as much about humbling the heart as it is about mending the soul. These traditions teach that forgiveness is neither a passive act nor a denial of justice; it is an intentional step toward liberation and renewal amidst humanity’s collective brokenness.

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Inspired by the rich traditions of forgiveness in various faiths, take a moment today to reach out and mend a strained relationship with a simple, heartfelt apology or gesture of reconciliation.

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Transforming the Border Wall into a Teeter-Totter

This week’s inspiring video: Transforming the Border Wall into a Teeter-Totter
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Video of the Week

Oct 30, 2025
Transforming the Border Wall into a Teeter-Totter

Transforming the Border Wall into a Teeter-Totter

Since the early 2000s, architects Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello (Rael San Fratello) have developed numerous proposals for interventions and alternatives to the United States-Mexico border wall. Many of their designs were inspired by stories of “people who, on both sides of the border, transform the wall, challenging its existence in remarkably creative ways.” On July 28, 2019, they installed three pink teeter-totters into the border wall for families to play on. Their design serves as a metaphor, as Rael said, of the “border as a literal fulcrum between US-Mexico relations,” with “actions that take place on one side of a teeter totter having direct consequence on the other side.” For an hour, a small section of the wall between the two countries became a site of joyful connection rather than violent division.
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School Surprises Beloved Principal with Dream Wedding

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 28, 2025

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Oct 28, 2025
School Surprises Beloved Principal with Dream Wedding
“If you have the power to make someone happy today, do it. The world needs more of that.”

— Steve Maraboli

School Surprises Beloved Principal with Dream Wedding

Principal Brianna Lanoye of Buffalo Academy of Science Charter School loves her students and they love her, too. Brianna was planning her wedding and expressed to her coworker and Vice Principal Courtney Champlin that she would love to have all her students attend the wedding. Courtney said that wasn’t possible, but then secretly created a plan to do just that. The school and Brianna’s fiancé were all in on it. When the big day came, Brianna noticed many of the kids looking particularly dressed up and even commented on how nice they looked. Later that day, Courtney walked Brianna down the aisle with all the students in attendance. Briana said, “To see the love and effort the students and team poured into this for me was one of the most touching moments of my life. This is a day I will truly never forget. They are all a part of my family.”

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Create a special moment for someone who makes life so special for others.

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The Day I Learned Giving

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Oct 27, 2025

The Day I Learned Giving

–Dan Clark

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68ffc09fdf70d-2677.jpgOnce when I was a teenager, my father and I were standing in line to buy tickets for the circus.

Finally, there was only one other family between us and the ticket counter. This family made a big impression on me.

There were eight children, all probably under the age of 12. The way they were dressed, you could tell they didn’t have a lot of money, but their clothes were neat and clean.

The children were well-behaved, all of them standing in line, two-by-two behind their parents, holding hands. They were excitedly jabbering about the clowns, animals, and all the acts they would be seeing that night. By their excitement you could sense they had never been to the circus before. It would be a highlight of their lives.

The father and mother were at the head of the pack standing proud as could be. The mother was holding her husband’s hand, looking up at him as if to say, "You’re my knight in shining armour." He was smiling and enjoying seeing his family happy.

The ticket lady asked the man how many tickets he wanted? He proudly responded, "I’d like to buy eight children’s tickets and two adult tickets, so I can take my family to the circus." The ticket lady stated the price.

The man’s wife let go of his hand, her head dropped, the man’s lip began to quiver. Then he leaned a little closer and asked, "How much did you say?" The ticket lady again stated the price.

The man didn’t have enough money. How was he supposed to turn and tell his eight kids that he didn’t have enough money to take them to the circus?

Seeing what was going on, my dad reached into his pocket, pulled out a $20 bill, and then dropped it on the ground. (We were not wealthy in any sense of the word!) My father bent down, picked up the $20 bill, tapped the man on the shoulder and said, "Excuse me, sir, this fell out of your pocket."

The man understood what was going on. He wasn’t begging for a handout but certainly appreciated the help in a desperate, heartbreaking and embarrassing situation.

He looked straight into my dad’s eyes, took my dad’s hand in both of his, squeezed tightly onto the $20 bill, and with his lip quivering and a tear streaming down his cheek, he replied; "Thank you, thank you, sir. This really means a lot to me and my family."

My father and I went back to our car and drove home. The $20 that my dad gave away is what we were going to buy our own tickets with.

Although we didn’t get to see the circus that night, we both felt a joy inside us that was far greater than seeing the circus could ever provide.

That day I learnt the value to Give.

The Giver is bigger than the Receiver. If you want to be large, larger than life, learn to Give. Love has nothing to do with what you are expecting to get – only with what you are expecting to give – which is everything.

The importance of giving, blessing others can never be over emphasised because there’s always joy in giving. Learn to make someone happy by acts of giving.

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What do you make of the notion that there can be something meaningful to experience when we give from our own share of life. Contemplating the fine line between offering help and respecting dignity, how do you navigate giving in a way that supports both needs and pride? What helps you see the opportunity to give from your own share as greater than the opportunity to keep your share to yourself?

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This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 26, 2025

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Oct 26, 2025
Weekly Digest
“The earth does not belong to us, we belong to the earth.”

— Chief Seattle

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

This past week has unfolded with stories that remind us of the unexpected ways in which kindness and resilience manifest.

In the heart of Nevada, Texas, a high school volleyball team gifted their cheerful janitor, Abel Rodriguez, a new car, weaving gratitude into the fabric of community spirit. Thousands of miles away, two doctors in rural India empowered 10,000 women with health awareness and rights, turning silence into voices of change. In the UK, the app Wildling bridges the gap between people and nature, fostering a renewed sense of environmental stewardship. On the shores of Ascension Island and Hawaii, the green sea turtle makes a comeback, a testament to the resilience of life under human care. Meanwhile, Welsh puppies trained by conservationists aid in the fight against wildlife poaching in Africa, demonstrating innovation in safeguarding vulnerable species. In Kashmir, 14-year-old Jannat Patloo cleans Dal Lake, embodying youth-led environmental stewardship. Finally, in Labrador, geothermal greenhouses promise a sustainable future for Inuit communities, transforming ancient warmth into a beacon of hope.

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Time to Rise

This week’s inspiring video: Time to Rise
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Video of the Week

Oct 23, 2025
Time to Rise

Time to Rise

The needs of this world can paralyze us with despair – until we remember – we are here to meet life with the gift of our deep gladness. In a powerful blend of poetry and music, poet Lucy Grace and sitarist Paul Livingstone calls us to awaken our connection to the universe and embrace our unique gifts. With evocative imagery and soulful sitar accompaniment, the poem composition urges us to remember our place in the larger tapestry of life, emphasizing the potential for unity in diversity and celebrating individual uniqueness as part of a larger existential fabric. The piece reminds us we are "made to connect love to the ache," highlighting the beauty in merging the spiritual with the earthly.
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Unhoused in Denver, He Emptied His Bank Account to Save His Elderly Aunt

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 23, 2025

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Oct 23, 2025
Unhoused in Denver, He Emptied His Bank Account to Save His Elderly Aunt
“One person caring about another represents life’s greatest value.”

— Jim Rohn

Unhoused in Denver, He Emptied His Bank Account to Save His Elderly Aunt

Mark Gaskin had a good job and a home with a private back yard when he was seriously injured in an on-the-job accident. He became unable to work and pay his bills, and lost his home. He lives in his car parked outside his aunt’s apartment. Last year, his 81-year-old aunt’s account got hacked, and she got an eviction notice. When Mark found out, he paid her rent, and became her caregiver, cleaning her house, doing laundry, and taking her shopping. Even though he was sleeping in a car, and having to go to rec centers to shower and food banks to eat, he didn’t want his aunt living that way. “You know, it’s tough right now because my situation, living outta my car. But it doesn’t change my duty as a member of this family.” “I’m glad I was able to show her that our relationship goes beyond finances. It’s just love.”

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Reach out to someone in need. Show you care.

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To Dance Is More Than Just a Radical Act

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 21, 2025

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Oct 21, 2025
To Dance Is More Than Just a Radical Act
“Dance yourself free of this womb of mirrors into the canyons and meadows of your greater landscape.”

— Ricardo Gutierrez

To Dance Is More Than Just a Radical Act

For Kimerer L. LaMothe, dance is more than just movement. “Dancing, we cultivate a sensory awareness that helps us discern how to think and feel and act in ways that honor nature – the nature surging through our veins, crackling in our thoughts, roaming with our senses, moving in and out of our bodily selves…” It is an integrative and imaginative interaction that invites “relationships with the nature at work in us, through us, and around us.” Kimerer relates four experiences in which the dance unfolds: the movement I make is making me; pleasure is the path; desire is the source; the goal is to play. Dancing is another way of embracing and “being with” nature. “Our greatest strength as human beings and our greatest hope for survival on this planet lies in working with rather than against the forces of nature.”

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Take some time to feel your body tune in and join in the dance with your greater landscape of nature. For more inspiration, join a live interview with Kimerer this Saturday!

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Who Am I? I Am Thine!

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Oct 20, 2025

Who Am I? I Am Thine!

–Deitrich Bonhoeffer

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68f6a3dd27177-2732.jpgWho am I? They often tell me
I stepped from my cells confinement
Calmly, cheerfully, firmly,
Like a Squire from his country house.

Who am I? They often tell me
I used to speak to my warders
Freely and friendly and clearly,
As thought it were mine to command.

Who am I? They also tell me
I bore the days of misfortune
Equably, smilingly, proudly,
like one accustomed to win.

Am I then really that which other men tell of?
Or am I only what I myself know of myself?
Restless and longing and sick, like a bird in a cage,
Struggling for breath, as though hands were compressing my throat,
Yearning for colors, for flowers, for the voices of birds,
Thirsting for words of kindness, for neighborliness,
Tossing in expectations of great events,
Powerlessly trembling for friends at an infinite distance,
Weary and empty at praying, at thinking, at making,
Faint, and ready to say farewell to it all.

Who am I? This or the Other?
Am I one person today and tomorrow another?
Am I both at once? A hypocrite before others,
And before myself a contemptible woebegone weakling?
Or is something within me still like a beaten army
Fleeing in disorder from victory already achieved?

Who am I? They mock me, these lonely questions of mine.
Whoever I am, Thou knowest, O God, I am thine!

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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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This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Oct 19, 2025

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Oct 19, 2025
Weekly Digest
“The earth is the mother of all people, and all people should have equal rights upon it.”

— Chief Joseph

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

As the past week unfolded, it brought to light stories of unexpected resilience and the quiet strength inherent in both people and nature.

In the quiet village of Haralahalli, Karnataka, Anke Gowda crafted a sanctuary of learning with a library housing two million books, a testament to knowledge that welcomes everyone from schoolchildren to judges. At 95, Dr. Bankey Lal Sharma embodies resilience, finding solace in meditation and teaching that loneliness can be softened by one’s own company. On Virginia’s shore, bay scallops have returned to the Chesapeake Bay, a century after their disappearance, demonstrating nature’s resilience and the dedication of scientists in ecological restoration. In north St. Louis, Jubilee Oasis Farm stands as a beacon of hope, addressing urban food deserts and stormwater management with sustainable innovation. Priya Donti’s journey bridges AI and climate science, illustrating the dual promise of technology to combat climate change while inspiring a community of motivated individuals. In Gaza, amidst the wreckage of war, children and teachers clutch onto education as a beacon of hope, defying the loss of their futures with enduring dreams and determination. Meanwhile, an intergenerational household weaves lessons of empathy and resilience, teaching that life’s true curriculum lies in shared experience and the raw beauty of imperfection.

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