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Archive for April 9, 2026

Time Out of Joint, Global Shakespeare in Prison

This week’s inspiring video: Time Out of Joint, Global Shakespeare in Prison
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Video of the Week

Apr 09, 2026
Time Out of Joint, Global Shakespeare in Prison

Time Out of Joint, Global Shakespeare in Prison

Rehabilitation through the Arts brought a screening of three films based on Shakespearean works to an upstate New York prison with powerful results. The timeless themes of Shakespeare’s writings, themes such as what it means to be a man, to be human, to live in a society with many ills which also provides possibilities for growth and transformation, are discussed after the films are viewed by the residents of the prison. The programs helps incarcerated individuals to reclaim and sustain their humanity. In a place where, as one participant says, you learn "to appreciate time when all you have is time," Shakespeare’s works come alive as they spark hope and inspiration.
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Why Pain Is Different From Suffering

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Apr 09, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Apr 09, 2026
Why Pain Is Different From Suffering
“Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.”

— Haruki Murakami

Why Pain Is Different From Suffering

It was an “utterly unfun experiment to be part of,” recounts Cortland Dahl with a smile. “But it was also very illuminating.” Lying in a brain scanner, participants in this research study were subjected to scalding water piped through a small thermode on their wrists — at regular intervals over and over, for hours. Before each jolt of heat, a sound would signal what was coming. The test subjects were either people who did not meditate or people with at least 10,000 hours of meditation practice. In non-meditators, the brain’s pain network lit up immediately at the sound, rehearsing future agony before it arrived. In the meditators? Their brains stayed quiet until the heat actually came — and then they felt it even more acutely. The difference wasn’t in the sensation, but in what happened next: “Suffering does not equal pain. Suffering equals pain times resistance.” When resistance drops to zero, pain remains but suffering vanishes. The meditators weren’t controlling the weather of experience; they were changing their relationship to the storm. This insight invites an curious idea: What if the difficult stuff in life isn’t something to avoid, but a doorway — one that opens only when we stop bracing against it?

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Be The Change

Next time you feel physical or emotional discomfort, pause and notice your resistance to it — the clenching, the mental rehearsal, the wishing it away. For thirty seconds, see if you can stay present with the sensation itself without adding the layer of resistance. For more inspiration, join a live conversation with Cortland Dahl tomorrow!

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