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Archive for December 9, 2025

Wisdom of Improvisation

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 09, 2025

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News That Inspires
Dec 09, 2025
Wisdom of Improvisation
“Power at its best is love implementing the demands of justice”

— Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Wisdom of Improvisation

Jazz isn’t just music — it’s a way of life, teaching us about participation, collaboration, and self-determination. The magic lies in its ability to show how individualism and community coexist harmoniously, much like the diverse voices in a democracy. “All the information was not put in one place,” says Muhal Richard Abrams, highlighting the importance of diversity. Jazz, as explained by Srinija Srinivasan, encourages us to engage power through love, rather than domination, and to ask, “Who do I need to be in order for you to be whom you’re meant to be?” It calls for a vision of mutual liberation and understanding, urging us to improvise our way toward a more just and loving world.

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In a group activity or meeting, practice being deeply present and shine light on the unique talents or qualities of each person present.

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Where The Ganges Murmur On A Sunny Day

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Dec 8, 2025

Where The Ganges Murmur On A Sunny Day

–Om Swami

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6936ffe4cf577-2763.jpgHave you ever unlocked the main door and entered your home after a vacation of two or four weeks? You are greeted by the smell of a closed home, a sweet smell of dust. You throw yourself on the couch and you let out a big sigh. You say, “Home, sweet home.”

No matter how beautiful the vacation might be, after a while you start missing home. You want to get back to a familiar setting. Your home may not be the plushest, it may not have the luxury of room service and housekeeping, and yet you feel most comfortable in your own home. There’s a natural ease, a sense of belonging, a different sort of freedom. It beats the luxuries of the five-star hotels.

The same goes for our soul as well. Our body is not its permanent home. Our individual consciousness is eternally trying to merge in the supreme consciousness. It wants to go home. It may not be an eloquent orator to tell you so clearly but that’s what it wants to do. Because we are beings of immense freedom and infinite potential, and here we are caught up in the petty tendencies and desires of our mind and body.

The soul wants to go back to its source. This is the most fundamental law of nature, of creation and destruction: everything must return to its source. Our body may be temporary, our minds conditioned, our consciousness a wary traveler, but our soul knows where it belongs.

That’s why every person at some point of time in their lives is forced to think about the meaning of their lives. Everyone, who’s experienced even a minute of fulfillment, embarks on a journey greater than their individual existence. That journey could be the path of Einstein or the passion of Christ; it could be the path of Buddha or the moksha of Vedas.

We may have forgotten our true nature, but our soul – eternal and unblemished – wants to go home. Until you show it the way, the restlessness in life will not go away. No pleasure or relationship can offer you permanent fulfillment because we are all on a vacation, and we are missing home.

Meditation is going home. It is going back to your source, where you belong, so that you are no longer what people [say] you are, or what the world has made you [..] believe, or even what you think of yourself. Instead, it is to discover yourself, to get to your primal source from where bliss, happiness and joy flow constantly. It is to discover your original home, without the furniture of jealousy, covetousness, envy, hatred. A home with no walls of ego and anger. A place where your soul rests in peace, where consciousness flows unimpeded like the gentle Ganges murmuring on a sunny day.

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What do you make of the notion that our soul is akin to a weary traveler longing to return to its true home? Can you share a personal story that reflects a moment in your life when you felt an intense longing to return to a place or state that felt authentically ‘home’ to you? What helps you cultivate a practice of meditation or mindful reflection that allows you to connect with your inner self and rediscover the sense of ‘home’ within your soul?

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