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Archive for December 30, 2025

The Grandma Stand of New York

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 30, 2025

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News That Inspires
Dec 30, 2025
The Grandma Stand of New York
“Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a creative force… When we are listened to, it creates us, makes us unfold and expand.”

— Karl Augustus Menninger

The Grandma Stand of New York

Mike Matthews valued his Grandma Eileen and her wisdom so much that he connected her with a coworker who had asked for advice. Calls with Grandma Eileen became a regular occurrence. Mike wanted others to have the grandma experience, so he set up a lemonade stand with the technology to connect her to anyone in New York City who was walking by. “For six years, Eileen called in and spoke with thousands of complete strangers, until she passed away in 2018 at the age of 102.” A few years later, Mike had another idea. “I purchased a new lemonade stand, painted it Grandma Eileen’s favorite color — purple — and invited a kind grandma from my building to participate.” Since then, Grandma Stands have popped up all over the country and internationally with grannies from all walks of life who listen and care. Mike said, “They’ve lived through world wars, don’t care about social media, and have mastered the art of listening and asking questions. They just care about you and who you really are.”

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Have a conversation with your grandma, someone else’s grandma, or other kind elder. Open your heart to listen, and see what unfolds and expands.

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Just Note Gone

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Dec 29, 2025

Just Note Gone

–Shinzen Young

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69531bb17ebb7-2771.jpgWhich technique would I pick as the quickest path to enlightenment? That is a question that I’m often asked. It’s a difficult choice, but I think it would be the technique that I call ‘just note gone.’

We’ve all had the experience of the dog’s barking, the dog’s barking, and the dog stops barking. A plane passes over, you hear it, you hear it, it gets fainter, fainter, but then at some point, it goes from being faint to it’s not there anymore. […] Sooner or later, sensory experiences come to an end.

That would seem to be a trivial observation, but it turns out that it’s highly non-trivial. If you start to notice the instant when things vanish, that is pointing you towards something. The place where things go when they come to an end is the place from which they arise when they begin. Each time you notice a vanishing, you are briefly having your attention directed towards what might be called the deepest level of consciousness. […]

The first taste of richness—of gone—might be that it gives you relief when you’re in discomfort. Then, the next taste might be that you notice that there’s a kind of tranquility that propagates from each moment of vanishing. However, as your appreciation of gone grows, a couple things become evident that logically do not make any sense at all, but are part of the picture and indeed an important part of the picture.

You start to develop a sense of fulfillment associated with that gone-ing. Now, there’s a word in Sanskrit that means both cessation, to come to an end, and fulfillment in the sense that you have quenched your thirst. No other language in the world has the concepts linked that way—a single word in the language that links the notion of passing with the notion of having everything you want or contentment or fulfillment. That word in Sanskrit is nirvana. […]

There’s another thing that can come from the gone, and that’s that it leads to a sense of love, which doesn’t make any sense at all because it’s so impersonal and vacuous. Why should the best of the human arise due to contact with something that is utterly non-human? It doesn’t make any sense, but that’s the way it works.

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What do you make of the notion that the moment things vanish can direct your attention toward the deepest level of consciousness? Can you share a personal story of a time when your awareness of the end of a sensory experience brought you an unexpected sense of tranquility or fulfillment? What helps you cultivate an awareness of the ‘gone-ing’ moments in your daily life?

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