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Archive for January 27, 2026

Love Logic: 25 Years Later (+ New Website, Pods)

A lotus doubles every day. For twenty days, the pond looks empty. ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

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2010 Retreat in California

25 Years of Poetry

“True poets do not display their art so as to make it appear real; they display the real in a way that reveals it to be art.” —James P. Carse

A lotus doubles every day. For twenty days, the pond still looks empty. On day twenty-five, only three percent of the surface shows green—you would say nothing is happening.

On day twenty-nine: half-covered. Day thirty: full.

We keep photographing surfaces. We forget the tendrils were moving beneath us the whole time.

This month, we launched a new home for twenty-five years of experiments in love logic: servicespace.org Wander through when you have a quiet moment.

It reminded us what the lotus already knew: growth funded by sunlight requires no business plan.

What began as a social experiment now feels like a civilizational rehearsal.

Twenty-five years ago, some friends tested a hypothesis everyone believes but no one thinks will work: that what we do for love will always surpass what we do for money.

They gathered in ordinary living rooms for Awakin Circles—silence, a reading, a meal where no one sits until everyone is served. They shipped Smile Cards into the world with one instruction: do something kind, leave this behind. They turned restaurants into Karma Kitchens where your bill read zero—not because it’s free, but because someone you’ll never meet already paid for you.

Market logic said this would collapse. But something kept happening in those circles, pods and retreats. When people come together in service, they become like mycelia that forgot they were separate — suddenly conducting sugar and secrets through the dark, discovering that the truest reward for giving is the wild grace of getting to give again.

Ripples spread to dozens of countries. Nearly fifteen million visitors a month. No paid staff. No fundraising. No impact measurement—because just as a mother can’t tabulate her love into a spreadsheet, real ripples escape the ledger.

Looking around: loneliness spreading, polarization deepening, climate unraveling, trust collapsing.

Underneath it all, a common thread: we’ve forgotten how to cohere. We want systems so good that we don’t have to be. But when we skip personal coherence, we can’t reach social coherence — and without that, no system can sustain the deeper field. AI may be the logical conclusion of that bypass: intelligence without coherence.

AI capacity doubles every few months. Wisdom takes decades to cultivate. Two billion people talk to chatbots today, and that number will soon double. But intelligence was never what was missing.

This is a crisis of wisdom.

Market logic photographs the surface. Love logic stays long enough to tend the roots.

The Science


What Love Logic Knows

On this month’s Awakin Call, Rollin McCraty

How to Find Inner Resolve in Times of Upheaval

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jan 27, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Jan 27, 2026
How to Find Inner Resolve in Times of Upheaval
“Small actions anchored in personal values can restore a sense of agency in the moments when people feel most powerless.”

— Pninit Russo-Netzer

How to Find Inner Resolve in Times of Upheaval

These days, it’s easy to be overwhelmed by news cycles filled with various pitfalls, whether climate chaos to digital misinformation. In the face of that, research suggests that taking small, values-driven actions can be a game-changer. As psychologist Pninit Russo-Netzer reveals, “When life feels chaotic, acting on our values, even in small ways, can restore a sense of direction.” By aligning our small, daily actions with what truly matters, we create a powerful feedback loop that builds inner resolve and boosts our well-being. It’s not just about contemplation; it’s about turning those thoughts into actions that reflect who we aspire to be.

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Identify one core value important to you and take a single action today that aligns with it, whether it’s reaching out to a loved one or volunteering for a cause you care about.

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The Super Chrysalis

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jan 26, 2026

The Super Chrysalis

–John J. Prendergast

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69781ff868699-2767.jpgWhile walking along a creek path a few weeks ago, I stopped to inspect a Monarch Waystation that had been constructed this past spring. There were a series of carefully tended planter boxes filled with Milkweed plants (the only plants that Monarch butterflies will deposit their eggs upon) and colorful Zinnias. There I met Suzanne, the Waystation’s cheerful creator, tending her caterpillars. She told me that she had just released a large batch of newly hatched butterflies, a few of which were delicately sipping nectar on the nearby blossoms. She worried that with the cooler days it might be too late for them to migrate and thrive. I was touched by her care for these delicate insects.

The journey from caterpillar to butterfly is as amazing to witness now as it was when I was a little boy. Who would expect this large, ravenous, black and yellow-striped, crawling worm to form a chrysalis, disappear for days, and then re-emerge so radically and beautifully transformed?

This apparent magic act is often used as a metaphor for the process of spiritual awakening and transformation. At first we are like a hungry caterpillar, unconsciously devouring as much as we can. At some point, the outer world no longer satisfies us and there is a natural turning of attention inward. We begin to sense and tend the “spark of inner radiance” as Adyashanti so eloquently calls it. As we do, a natural process of transformation unfolds. We are less identified with and attached to our old stories and images and simultaneously more accepting of and intimate with our experience as it is. This catalyzes a profound transformative process. As this happens, it can sometimes feel like we are living in a house while it is being remodeled.

Being on retreat is like being in a super chrysalis. Immersed in a shared field of presence and collectively dedicated to realizing the truth of our being, the body/mind acclimates to the light of awareness, sometimes slowly and gently, and other times quickly and tumultuously. And like a little boy who watches in awe as a butterfly emerges from its chrysalis and spreads its new orange and black wings, at the end of a retreat I marvel as many retreatants emerge from their mis-taken identities and contractions and more fully open to the spacious and loving reality of who they really are.

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How do you relate to the notion that the transformation from caterpillar to butterfly serves as a metaphor for spiritual awakening and the shedding of old identities? Can you share a personal story that reflects a time when you experienced a profound transformation similar to the metamorphosis of a butterfly? What helps you create a ‘super chrysalis’ in your daily life, allowing you to be more accepting and intimate with your experience, and less attached to old stories?

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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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