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Archive for April, 2026

Ramen, Potatoes, Pozole: Food as a Common Fabric

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 21, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 21, 2026
Ramen, Potatoes, Pozole: Food as a Common Fabric
“Community is not a goal to be achieved but a gift to be received.”

— Parker Palmer

Ramen, Potatoes, Pozole: Food as a Common Fabric

Ron Guier developed a gift and love for cooking as a very young child. His parents were often absent for long periods of time, and it was either cook or not eat, usually with meager ingredients. His love for cooking continued into adulthood even when he went to prison. It took some time, but with limited access to items in the prison commissary and only a microwave, he began preparing special meals. A mate asked for a childhood favorite, pozole, for his birthday. It required a lot of creativity and imagination, but his friend said “that it tasted like his mom’s pozole, that it tasted like home, that for a moment he was transported out of this place and into his mom’s kitchen where he felt warm, safe and loved.” Through their continued gatherings around food, Ron and friends began to realize “an incredibly supportive and family-like community in one of the most toxic environments anywhere” that led to “organizing and advocating for inmates as a whole and for the common good.”

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Take note of the gifts and talents you bring to your community; invite others to offer theirs. Gather, share a meal and your gifts, and appreciate the emerging rich broth of belonging that nourishes, and feels like home.

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Faith And Certainty Aren’t The Same

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Apr 20, 2026

Faith And Certainty Aren’t The Same

–Stephen Lewis

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69e6d96e55dfe-2649.jpgWhat became clear for me is that we cannot control the volatile tides that life brings, but maybe we can learn to build better boats. I needed a better vessel — a sacred vessel. I would do this for myself and for my people — my daughters, my mother, and my extended community — so that we could navigate the harsh conditions of life without being torn asunder. And so I went in search.

What I discovered is this: Suffering comes with the experience of being human, and one’s perspective can determine how one experiences and works with it. Suffering is psycho-somatic pain, meaning that it impacts the mind, body, and spirit of a person. Sometimes suffering is multigenerational, genetically coded, or situational. It sometimes hides out in the subconscious realms of our psyche and muscle memory, like a kid’s game of hide-and-seek. Life experiences, painful encounters, and anxiety can trigger and awaken moments of trauma or suffering.

I have come to realize that there is no logic when it comes to suffering. Because it is a type of pain, we try to make sense of the pain. We ask: Is there a reason for the pain? What does the pain mean? Is there a cause for my suffering? Is it the result of a choice I have made? While there may be answers for simple forms of temporary suffering, when it comes to more complex forms, adequate answers are more elusive. In these instances, a person and loved ones must come to terms with suffering as a permanent resident in their lives. In these instances, suffering persistently nudges the sufferer and/or loved ones to ask heart-wrenching questions about the meaning and purpose of life.

While not all do so, some choose to wrestle with suffering rather than retreat into denial or bitterness. These sojourners follow a rabbit hole into the dark tunnels of life’s mystery, where only questions illuminate the path in front of them. It is a lonely and isolating inward journey, because only they alone can fully experience their suffering. Encounters with the ultimate source of suffering, however, can lead to transformation, new insights, wisdom, and healing to share with those who might face similar encounters.

For me this journey was intimate and private, but at the same time I found wise guides, teachers, and counselors to accompany me as I descended into the luminous darkness of my own emotional memories. Howard Thurman was one of those guides:

The individual enters a fellowship of suffering and the community of sufferers. The only point to be held steadily in mind is that, despite the personal character of suffering, the sufferer can work his way through to community. This does not make his pain less, but it can make it inclusive of many other people. Sometimes he discovers through the ministry of his own burden a larger comprehension of his fellows, of whose presence he becomes aware of in his darkness. They are companions along the way.

Wrestling with my suffering was necessary in order for me to reckon with the gut-wrenching pain of my own experience in hopes of discovering an illumined path of healing and transformation to share with others. Again, Thurman’s words resonate:

This is why we very often see people as profoundly changed by their suffering. Into their faces has come a subtle radiance and a settled serenity; into their relationships [comes] a vital generosity that opens the sealed doors of the heart in all who are encountered along the way. Such people look out upon life with quiet eyes. Openings are made in a life by suffering that are not made in any other way. Serious questions are raised and primary answers come forth. Insights are reached concerning aspects of life that are hidden and obscure before the assault.

I discovered an ancient, underground river of truth that rises up in all of these traditions. I discovered that faith and certainty are not the same. Too much certainty about what, why, and how God works gets in God’s way.

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How do you relate to the notion that “too much certainty about what, why, and how God works gets in God’s way”? Can you share a personal story of a time when wrestling with suffering, rather than retreating into denial or bitterness, led you into those “dark tunnels of life’s mystery” where you discovered unexpected companions or a new understanding of your own pain? What helps you craft a sacred vessel strong enough to carry both yourself and your people?

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Is Being a ‘Speck’ the Key to Happiness?

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 20, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 20, 2026
Is Being a 'Speck' the Key to Happiness?
“The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena.”

— Carl Sagan

Is Being a ‘Speck’ the Key to Happiness?

Imagine a moment when the weight of your personal stresses vanishes, not by resolving each concern, but through the disarming realization of your own insignificance. This was the unexpected solace a student found in her astronomy class — “I feel relief because I am just a speck on a speck.” In a world that clamors for us to enlarge ourselves in the eyes of others, embracing our smallness offers a path to peace. It may seem paradoxical, but stepping back from the center stage of our own lives allows us a clearer, humbler view of the universe around us. From the ego’s annihilation in Sufi tradition to the silent gift of helping others, there exists a quiet, profound joy in acknowledging that we are just part of something immeasurably grand. Can you find comfort in being “a lovely little speck, and beloved by a few other specks”?

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Spend ten minutes stargazing tonight, contemplating the vastness around you.

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This Week in DailyGood …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 19, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 19, 2026
Weekly Digest
“As you live deeper in the heart, the mirror gets clearer and clearer.”

— Rumi

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

Reflecting on our news this past week, we journeyed through narratives of subtle yet profound transformation.

We explored the deep resonance for reframing heartbreak from a shattering to temporary dislocation, guiding us toward clarity in the infinite. It echoed in stories like an art experiment where strangers answered a mysterious red telephone on a bridge and entered a conversation that unearthed truths beyond appearances. We embraced the Dutch ritual of dusking and its infinite possibilities. We saw a community transform tent encampments into shelter villages and soaked in palpable stories from two nuns who started a decades-long youth community with a simple intention to support a neighbor. Harvard professor Clay Christenson reflected on the power of committing 100 percent of the time. And we danced through mindfulness instructor Helen Eveleigh’s year-long exploration of kindness, where being, not doing, allowed a remembering of “the simple, unguarded ways our hearts already know how to meet.”

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Retired Accountant Becomes ‘School Grandma’

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 19, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 19, 2026
Retired Accountant Becomes 'School Grandma'
“The great thing about getting older is that you don’t lose all the other ages you have been.”

— Madeleine L’Engle

Retired Accountant Becomes ‘School Grandma’

In Denver, Colorado’s Family Star Montessori, retired accountant Sue Alexander finds new purpose. As a child leans against her, whispering, “I love squishy things,” Alexander’s arm (the “squishy thing”) becomes a symbol of connection and care. This scene unfolds within the Early Childhood Service Corps, a program enlisting retirees to step into the shoes of substitute teachers in child care centers. The initiative, founded by Lisa Armao, offers both a solution to staffing shortages and a rich tapestry of human connection for its members. As volunteers, like 72-year-old glass artist Kit Karbler, discover the joy of ’emotional return,’ they also fill crucial gaps in a beleaguered system. Beyond offering bathroom breaks and administrative tasks to teachers who are otherwise constantly on duty, these retirees bring wisdom and warmth to the youngest among us, anchoring a community in need.

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Be The Change

Reach out to a local child care center and offer your time or skills, whether it’s storytelling, administrative help, or simply being a comforting presence.

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Non-Speaking Autistic Novelist on His Journey From Write-off to Writer

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 18, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 18, 2026
Non-Speaking Autistic Novelist on His Journey From Write-off to Writer
“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”

— Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Non-Speaking Autistic Novelist on His Journey From Write-off to Writer

Woody Brown is a great writer. He graduated with top writing honors from UCLA, and completed his master’s at Columbia University. At age 28, he published his highly reviewed first book, Upward Bound. The book reveals the inner lives of neurotypical “clients” and those who care for them at an adult day care center. Woody is able to see this inner world because in early childhood, autistic and non-speaking, he was written off as a “lost cause,” a “no-hoper.” His parents could see something else. With persistence and help, his Mom found he could spell at the age of three. She got him a letterboard so he could communicate, and he and his talents burgeoned with another new book in the works. While he has and continues to face many challenges, Woody focuses on what is essential. “I want people to read my book, not out of pity but because it is good,” and he wants to reach “the hordes who underestimate and infantilize us, and show them how vivid and magnificent we are.”

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Be The Change

Develop a practice to see with your heart, to listen with your heart, for what is essential.

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Corrective for a Broken Heart

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 17, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 17, 2026
Corrective for a Broken Heart
“As you live deeper in the heart, the mirror gets clearer and clearer.”

— Rumi

Corrective for a Broken Heart

Maria Popova reframes heartbreak not as shattering but as dislocation — a temporary loss of bearing in a universe where even the north star changes every twenty-six thousand years. Her poem refuses “the threadbare drama, the stale catastrophism” of brokenness, insisting instead that the heart still beats, still trembles at beauty, and needs only “the firm, fastidious hand of time to slide it back into place.” What looks like catastrophe is revealed as something closer to wandering, a natural state in a cosmos built on drift and reversal. Sometimes the deepest comfort comes not from being told we’ll be fine, but from learning that being lost is part of the design.

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Be The Change

Today, when you catch yourself using catastrophic language about something painful — calling it “broken” or “ruined” or “destroyed” — gently pause and ask what is actually still beating, still trembling, still alive within the situation. Notice what has been dislocated rather than shattered, and let your words reflect that distinction, because the stories we tell ourselves about our pain shape our experience of it.

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Flipped Learning

This week’s inspiring video: Flipped Learning
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Video of the Week

Apr 16, 2026
Flipped Learning

Flipped Learning

In "flipped learning," students watch podcasts of their teacher’s lectures on their own time and spend their time in the classroom applying what they’ve learned at home. This allows students to learn at their own pace by watching the lecture as many times as they need. Schools that have applied this method of teaching in all their classrooms have seen their failure rates drop dramatically.
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Strangers Answer a Mysterious Red Telephone on a Bridge

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 16, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 16, 2026
Strangers Answer a Mysterious Red Telephone on a Bridge
“The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.”

— Aristotle

Strangers Answer a Mysterious Red Telephone on a Bridge

When a red telephone appears on a London bridge, strangers pick up, and something unexpected happens. Artist Joe Bloom, troubled by how “street interview” culture had become invasive and exploitative, wanted to reimagine the format into something genuinely human. His project “A View from a Bridge” places vintage handset phones on random bridges, and when passersby answer, Bloom is on the other end, ready to listen. The distance and anonymity lower people’s guards in a way that face-to-face encounters cannot, and as Bloom notes, “The action of holding the phone to your ear is powerful. It’s quite a calming thing.” What emerges are raw, tender conversations — a boy philosophizing about the human body, a young man reflecting on connection in the age of virtual reality — that help millions of viewers feel a little less alone.

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Be The Change

Today, notice someone who appears to be alone: perhaps a widowed neighbor, someone eating alone, or a person who seems a bit invisible. Walk over and start a simple conversation, not out of pity, but from genuine curiosity for their story. Sometimes the smallest gesture of presence creates an opening for real human connection that both people didn’t know they needed.

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A Dance of Invisible Kindness

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 15, 2026

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News That Inspires
Apr 15, 2026
A Dance of Invisible Kindness
“…kindness is less about doing and more about being — about remembering the simple, unguarded ways our hearts already know how to meet.”

— Helen Eveleigh

A Dance of Invisible Kindness

For a year, Helen Eveleigh and a fellow member of the Auroville Community in South India inquired about kindness among other community members in interviews and sharing circles. They learned that “kindness is so intrinsic to life that we don’t even see it.” They found that an anonymous kind action inspires a kind action in return that has ripple effects; simply observing a simple kind act stirs the spirit; kindness does not expire but is remembered in shared objects and spaces; cultural values such as self-reliance, and anxiety about asking for help may be barriers. And sometimes, kindness is simply kind thoughts that may shift something deep within. “Kindness isn’t always something we do; it can arise from an inner opening.” As Auroville’s founder once said, kindness is “an indispensable step towards the widening and illumination of the consciousness.”

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Be The Change

Spend a day observing acts of kindness you witness, receive, or give throughout the day no matter how small. Notice what insights arise.

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