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Archive for May, 2026

This Week in DailyGood …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 24, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 24, 2026
Weekly Digest
“Compassion is the greatest form of love humans have to offer.”

— Rachel Joy Scott

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

This past week’s inspirations reveal the subtle threads of kindness and change weaving through our lives.

We explored the profound nature of compassion, reminding us that it is the greatest form of love humans can offer. This sentiment was echoed in the transformative story of a mother’s forgiveness, where the act of forgiving the person responsible for her son’s death healed a deep wound. The unexpected journey of a kindergarten teacher who became the guardian of 200 king penguins underlines the idea that actions speak louder than opinion. Neuroscientist Dr. Richie Davidson invited us to the revelation that when the mind sees clearly, new paths to human flourishing emerge. The story of a 73-year-old achieving her lifelong dream to become a doctor is a testament to creating one’s opportunities. A community of volunteers showed us that art helps us find and lose ourselves simultaneously, while a generous commencement speaker paid off student loans for the graduating class. Finally, the simplicity of a “Grandma Stand” in New York City’s Central Park reminded us of the pure gift of attention. Each story this week weaves a tapestry of kindness, resilience, and transformation.

READ MORE STORIES (210 New!)

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Native Plants and a Quiet Revolution in Relating to Land

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 24, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 24, 2026
Native Plants and a Quiet Revolution in Relating to Land
“In nature, nothing exists alone.”

— Rachel Carson

Native Plants and a Quiet Revolution in Relating to Land

What was once dismissed as weeds is now flying off shelves at plant nurseries across the country, as gardeners rediscover that working with nature rather than against it offers something both practical and profound. At Chicago’s Kilbourn Park, over 2,300 people lined up for the annual plant sale — double the usual attendance — with native species making up nearly one in five plants sold. “I’ve watched this for 44 years, from almost zero to now,” says Neil Diboll, whose Wisconsin native plant nursery has seen sales multiply from thirteen thousand to hundreds of thousands annually. The shift reflects a quiet revolution in how people relate to their land: choosing plants with deep roots that prevent flooding, support vanishing pollinators like Monarch butterflies, and thrive without constant intervention. As one volunteer puts it, “We’re not fighting against the climate here. We’re working with it.”

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Be The Change

Today, take a walk around your neighborhood or yard and notice one plant you’ve always dismissed as a “weed” — perhaps that persistent dandelion, clover, or milkweed pushing through the sidewalk crack. Pause and consider what native pollinators might depend on it, how its deep roots might be preventing flooding, or what it reveals about the landscape that existed here long before lawns. This small shift from judgment to curiosity is where ecological gardening begins.

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More: 209 New Stories This Week!
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Endangered Butterflies Are Thriving Behind Bars

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 23, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 23, 2026
Endangered Butterflies Are Thriving Behind Bars
“Transformation literally means going beyond your form.”

— Wayne Dyer

Endangered Butterflies Are Thriving Behind Bars

In a greenhouse beside a low security women’s prison in Washington state, incarcerated women are raising Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies one by one, tracking egg clusters, monitoring larvae through months of growth, and contributing to the recovery of a species that has lost 97 percent of its habitat. For Margaret Taggart, who is serving a three-year sentence, the meticulous work as a Butterfly Technician has sparked something unexpected: “The education portion of this program has really stirred me up to want to learn more and to pursue a degree, which is something I haven’t done before,” she says softly. Since 2011, the Sustainability in Prisons Project has helped release 80,000 caterpillars into restored prairies while offering participants college credits and a glimpse of purpose that prison rarely provides. The conditions that allow a butterfly to survive — care, stability, the right environment — turn out to be remarkably similar to those that support human transformation.

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Be The Change

Today, tend to something small with the patience you’d give a creature that cannot speak: a houseplant, a garden seedling, even a patch of weeds pushing through pavement. As you do, notice what it asks of you: attention, consistency, the willingness to see growth that happens too slowly to measure in a single glance.

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More: 204 New Stories This Week!
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The Sight of Three Stripes

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 22, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 22, 2026
The Sight of Three Stripes
“Compassion is the greatest form of love humans have to offer.”

— Rachel Joy Scott

The Sight of Three Stripes

A busload of blind children rises at dawn, too excited to sleep before their maybe once-in-a-year field trip. Among them is Asha — mute, seven or eight, hair bunched under a maroon cap — who playfully discovers she can avoid walking by standing atop a volunteer’s feet. Through temple visits, river splashing, and carnival rides, she claims this volunteer as her anchor. On the evening bus ride home, a luminous scene emerges. Asha wakes and works her way up the aisle, feeling the legs of sleeping passengers until she finds the right pair: track pants with three raised stripes. “Her shoulders relaxed and she clambered onto my lap where she quickly fell asleep”. They ride home this way — hand in hand, his sciatic nerve screaming, neither one moving. Love, it turns out, doesn’t need eyes to see or words to speak. It just needs three stripes and the willingness to stay still.

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Be The Change

Today, be someone’s anchor without announcement. Hold space for another person — a child, an elder, a stranger — even when it’s uncomfortable, even when your own body protests. Stay present past the point of convenience.

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More: 184 New Stories This Week!
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Lost Sheep

This week’s inspiring video: Lost Sheep
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

May 21, 2026
Lost Sheep

Lost Sheep

“Lost Sheep” is a paper, stop motion short film by Lukas Rooney that explores the symbolic struggles that any one of us may go through when we find ourselves feeling less than others. The artistry of stop-motion is used to tell the story of a three legged black sheep who must find his way in life among the other four-legged sheep. The shepherd sees not his deficiencies but his gifts even in the small amount of wool that the three legged sheep is able to offer. One day, the sheep wanders away and is lost. The shepherd goes in search of the lost sheep and at great risk, rescues the sheep. He finds a way to help the three legged sheep overcome his differentness and it runs free again. The beauty of this film is in the lessons of hope, resilience and service that are a reminder to us to be there for one another in our own difficulties in life.
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Meeting the Man Responsible for Her Son’s Death

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 21, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 21, 2026
Meeting the Man Responsible for Her Son's Death
“When a deep injury is done to us, we never heal until we forgive.”

— Nelson Mandela

Meeting the Man Responsible for Her Son’s Death

Joan Scourfield’s son, James, died from a single punch over a pair of sunglasses, leaving her with nothing but rage and unanswered questions about the man who killed him. Through a restorative justice program, she eventually met Jacob Dunne, the man responsible for the fatal punch. In their face-to-face meeting, she found not the monster from the mugshot but “a vulnerable young man” who wanted to answer for what he’d done. Her forgiveness came gradually — not from erasing the past, but from watching Jacob transform his life and realizing that her own bitterness “would not end well.” Today they share stages together, speaking to young people about violence and redemption, a collaboration Joan sees as honoring her son’s legacy of helping others from tough backgrounds. She distinguishes carefully between forgiving Jacob for the death itself and forgiving the punch, a nuance that reveals how forgiveness need not be absolute to set someone free.

READ FULL STORY

Be The Change

Today, think of someone whose actions have hurt you, and ask yourself one genuine question that you’ve never been able to answer about what happened. Simply write the question down and notice whether naming what you truly need to know shifts something inside.

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More: 194 New Stories This Week!
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How a Kindergarten Teacher Became the Accidental Guardian of 200 King Penguins

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 20, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 20, 2026
How a Kindergarten Teacher Became the Accidental Guardian of 200 King Penguins
“The world is changed by your example, not by your opinion.”

— Paulo Coelho

How a Kindergarten Teacher Became the Accidental Guardian of 200 King Penguins

When king penguins began nesting on Cecilia Durán Gafo’s windswept Chilean farm in 2010, she watched tourists dress them in caps for selfies and saw the colony collapse from 90 birds to just eight within a year. The 72-year-old former kindergarten teacher began spending her days on the frozen beach with a thermos and sandwich, standing guard. “I’d spend the whole day, frozen to the bone … making sure people didn’t disturb the penguins,” she recalled. Then, she fenced off 30 hectares and spent years working through the night to lure invasive predators like mink away from vulnerable chicks. Her vigilance transformed what had been an impossible place for penguins into the world’s only continental king penguin colony, now nearly 200 strong. “Last year, 23 chicks survived — a record,” she noted. What goes unspoken yet echoes across the air is that this thriving colony is the result of a quiet devotion — one that shows conservation sometimes requires nothing more than one person deciding to show up, every single day.

READ FULL STORY

Be The Change

Today, notice something in your surroundings that needs a gentle guardian. Spend just fifteen minutes watching over it. It might be picking up litter on the street, sitting with a struggling tree, or simply observing neighborhood wildlife and what threatens them.

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When the Brain Suddenly Sees

DailyGood: News That Inspires – May 19, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
May 19, 2026
When the Brain Suddenly Sees
“Because when the mind learns to see clearly — even for a moment — new possibilities for human flourishing begin to open. When perception changes, the world you inhabit changes.”

— Dr. Richard J. Davidson

When the Brain Suddenly Sees

In an exploration of the intersection of science and contemplative wisdom, Dr. Richard J. Davidson relates how extraordinary brain activity occurred while conducting an EEG on Tibetan Buddhist monk and teacher Mingyur Rinpoche while in a deep meditative state. His brain almost immediately began generating gamma oscillations “when the brain integrates information across distributed neural systems — periods of perceptual binding, learning, and insight.” They realized the “capacity for insight itself may be trainable.” Insight generates powerful “aha” learning in that it helps distinguish mental constructions created by the mind from fixed truths. “This recognition does not eliminate thoughts or emotions. But it changes our relationship to them,” and can free a sense of self previously limited by those constructs.

READ FULL STORY

Be The Change

Try this exercise from the article: Sit comfortably and bring awareness to the breath for a minute. Notice the next thought that arises. Instead of following the thought’s storyline, gently ask: What is this? Recognize the thought as a mental event — a representation generated by the brain. Watch it arise… linger… and dissolve. When another thought appears, repeat the same recognition.

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I Would Like …

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading May 18, 2026

I Would Like …

–Lariv Athem

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6a0bc7d219b07-2730.jpgWhat would I like?

I would like to live a life of wisdom and compassion, like the sunflower, turning toward what deeply nourishes it.

I would like to be at the edge of my knowing and becoming, present with joy and wonder, to the beauty of life’s emergence.

I would like to live without fear for myself or my loved ones, extending to all beings, and without causing fear to any living being.

I would like to live with a radical tenderness and the confidence that everything is workable.

I would like to engage with others with an attunement to their greatest gifts, and mine, and with an attunement to what wants to emerge.

I would like to engage in my work with a sense of privilege and possibility.

I would like to be be a hub for interconnection, letting flows flow through, without needing to hold on to anything.

I would like to welcome and play with what arises in the moment, in any situation.

I would like to live, to love, as an invitation to infinite things.

What would you like?

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How would you like to live and engage with your work? Can you share a personal story of engaging with others with an attunement to your and their greatest gifts? What helps you engage in your work with a sense of privilege and possibility?

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The Story Only You Can Tell (+ June 7th!)

A 21-day story challenge starts June 7 — plus Story Booth, KarmaTube Theatre, and ripples from the Flourish Pod ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

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Podmates on last month’s Born to Flourish orientation call

The Story Only You Can Tell

Every culture has a story. What’s the new one trying to emerge through yours?

In 1953, a woman stepped onto an American highway with no money, no organizational backing, and no map. For the next twenty-eight years, she walked over 25,000 miles, carrying only a toothbrush and a few leaflets, calling herself simply “Peace Pilgrim.” She vowed to remain a wanderer until humanity learned the way of peace. When skeptics asked how she survived without a safety net, her answer was disarming: she didn’t rely on the charity of strangers — she relied on the goodness already inside them. Her absolute vulnerability woke it up.

Peace PilgrimPeace Pilgrim told a new story — or perhaps helped us remember a very ancient one. Last month, more than a thousand of us from 54 countries joined the Flourish Pod; as you might’ve read in The Field That Taught Itself, more than 1,800 pages of collective stories unfolded.

As AI saturates our world with content and concept, we are excited to share two new projects that deepen the context — what we think of as a shift from audience to community, and more subtly, from broadcast to deepcast:

Story Booth — Every person carries a story that could change a room — but most never get told. Story Booth creates the conditions for those stories to surface: no sponsorship, no subtle product, no agenda except love. Everyday heroes share their journeys of inner transformation, held by volunteers whose sole practice is to listen. What began with one woman’s journey through 185 places of worship is now blossoming into many others. Seven story booths are under way. Join one, or nominate your own.
Loving KarmaKarmaTube Theatre — KarmaTube has curated over 6,000 inspiring videos with actionable ideas. Now, we’re building watch parties around them. Watch a film together, spend a week reflecting on clips via a virtual pod, then have a live conversation with the filmmakers. The debut: Loving Karma, documentary by Emmy–winning filmmakers Andrew Hinton and Johnny Burke, telling the story of an unsung children’s community in the Himalayan foothills — and Lobsang Phuntsok, a former Tibetan monk whose unconditional care in the face of destitute circumstances nurtured the community into being. Join the journey →

Which brings us to the question underneath all our work this season: What is a new story you want to step into?

21-Day Challenge • Starts June 7

New Story Pod

Stories are how we make sense of our lives — and how we change them. This June, ServiceSpace is hosting New Story, a 21-day challenge that invites you to explore lived experience through carefully crafted daily prompts: What was an accident that shaped your life? When did you first discover the power of imperfection? Describe a moment of unexpected fear — how would you respond to it now? Each day, as you write, you’ll also read what others have shared — and something quietly remarkable happens when a stranger’s story lands in you like a memory you didn’t know you had. Over 21 days, hundreds of voices weave together into something none of us could create alone. Join us starting June 7th.

Join the New Story Pod →
In a recent essay on moving from transaction to relationship, a parable by Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa read:

“Who are you?” said the salt doll to the sea. The sea smilingly replied, “Come in and see.”

So the doll waded in. The farther it walked, the more it dissolved, until there was only very little of it left. Before that last bit dissolved, the doll exclaimed in wonder: “Now I know what I am!”

Maybe every pod, every Story Booth, every circle of strangers sitting together with a film — is a version of that sea. Not a transaction between intact selves, but a dissolving into something the selves alone could never have found. The old story says: protect what you are. The new story whispers: come in and see.

The story only you can tell is waiting. 🙏

FEW RECENT TIDBITS …
♫ SONG YOU MIGHT PLAY ON REPEAT

On our closing call for the Flourish Pod, a volunteer performed an original song woven from direct quotes from the pod’s curriculum. Richie Davidson recalled, “My heart broke open and I wept.” Watch the video →

📜 UPCOMING STORY BOOTHS WITH PILGRIMS

In Portugal, Vasco’s journey of trusting hummingbirds over big checks; Chris’s experience of starting a school in one of Nairobi’s harshest slums; Rama and Alex, on the third year of a 7-year pilgrimage from home to home, currently in transit from Jerusalem to Beirut; in Uganda, Bhante Buddharakkhita jokes of a “bed sheet sangha” of young children who take a principled stance for peace.

❤ HEARTS TRAVELING AROUND THE WORLD

Heart pinsWomen in India hand-stitched heart pins and sent them to Ruth Pittard in North Carolina. What happened next: they traveled to a cancer clinic, a cupcake shop, a wedding in Ohio, a women’s elder retreat in Oregon, a town intersection where eight people have stood with a LOVE sign every Wednesday for eight years, and a stranger’s hands in Asheville — nobody refused one. Read the full journey →

🤖 DEEPENING OUR INQUIRIES

Someone asked our nonviolence bot: “Nonviolence doesn’t seem to be working with the wars in Gaza and Iran. It did work years ago.” Check out the response. From the Shinzen Bot on meditation to the 100 questions for the Flourish Bot on the mechanics of personal and social uplift — do check them out. Explore Awakin AI →

🕊 METTA CIRCLES

After the first round, where the Circle Agent matched 50 podmates into small groups by resonance rather than demographics, the majority of groups continued on their own. Round two is forming →

🌳 IN INDIA

Building off the March retreat, inspired teachers are convening for this year’s Educators Retreat. What does compassion in the classroom actually feel like? Can silence, listening, and presence become educational tools? What shifts when learning moves from transaction to relationship? As they put it: “We won’t resolve these. We’ll live inside them, and let them live inside us.”

✍ FROM NIPUN’S KEYBOARD

Latest in the 2026 series of 12 essays around AI + Humanity: The Beam, where Nipun explores our approach to technology through a 1656 physics experiment: two pendulum clocks on a wooden beam synchronized on their own — not because the beam kept time, but because it transmitted vibrations too subtle for the eye. “Most AI is designed to be the clock. We are building tools designed to be the beam. Tech that helps humans find each other’s rhythm — and then disappears.”

📖 ICYMI ON DAILYGOOD

Trupti’s touching reflection on a woman who gave what she didn’t have. A firefighter shares what he learned from surviving burns as a child: I Suffered Burns, Then I Became a Firefighter. When the embodied teacher becomes the curriculum. And a quietly beautiful piece on how nuns say goodbye after one of their dear sisters passed.

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