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Caverly Morgan: The Heart of Who We Are

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 17, 2023

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Caverly Morgan: The Heart of Who We Are

Emptiness means empty of limitation.
Emptiness means spaciousness
Emptiness means openness.
Emptiness–the home of possibility.
The great mystery.

– Caverly Morgan –

Caverly Morgan: The Heart of Who We Are

“When Caverly Morgan reentered society after eight years as a Zen monk, she was confronted with a question many of us are asking these days: Considering the enormity of the problems before us, how can one individual’s spiritual practice make a tangible difference in our world? Tami Simon speaks with Caverly about her new book, The Heart of Who We Are, and the connection between self-realization and collective transformation. They explore these topics and more: the difference between the absolute and the relative; introducing teens to inquiry practice; self-improvement vs. self-realization; the core experience of who we are in our depths; the power of community; meeting our deepest needs; “changing costumes within the dance of suffering”; connecting with others “essence to essence”; broadening public access to contemplative practices; escaping the trap of perfectionism; letting go of our conditioning, individually and collectively; egoic behaviors versus “acts of being.””Meditation teacher, non-profit founder, speaker, and author Caverly Morgan is the founder of Peace in Schools, a nonprofit that created the nation’s first for-credit mindfulness class in public high schools. More here. { read more }

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Take a few moments to reflect on what emptiness means to you.

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An Ode To Low Expectations

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jan 16, 2023

An Ode To Low Expectations

–James Parker

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2487.jpgo there i was, staring at my mug of tea.

It was 1993. I was sitting over a plate of eggs in the New Piccadilly Café in Soho, London. Things were not going well. As a man, as a person, as a unit of society, I was barely functioning. More acutely, I was having panic attacks, in an era when people didn’t yet say “panic attack.” They just said Oh, dear. As far as I was concerned, I was going insane.

I took a despairing slurp from my mug, then put it back down. As I did so, the side of my hand touched the Formica tabletop, and I felt the radiant heat from where the mug had been resting a second before. Or, more accurately, I registered it. Through my private cerebral drizzle—the continuous, joy-canceling brain-rain that was my mental reality at the time—I noted it: energy, life, jiggling molecules, the world. A message from the fire of generosity at the heart of the universe. And the message was this: One day, you’ll be able to simply appreciate what’s in front of you. The tea, the café, London, the little lens of warmth on the table. One day, this will be enough.

Strive for excellence, by all means. My God, please strive for excellence. Excellence alone will haul us out of the hogwash. But lower the bar, and keep it low, when it comes to your personal attachment to the world. Gratification? Satisfaction? Having your needs met? Fool’s gold. If you can get a buzz of animal cheer from the rubbishy sandwich you’re eating, the daft movie you’re watching, the highly difficult person you’re talking to, you’re in business. And when trouble comes, you’ll be fitter for it.

“Reality is B-plus,” says my friend Carlo. I’d probably give it an A-minus, but I take his point. “There lives the dearest freshness deep down things,” wrote Gerard Manley Hopkins. But there also lives the dearest shoddiness. We’re half-finished down here, always building and collapsing, rigging up this and that, dropped hammers and flapping tarps everywhere. Revise your expectations downward. Extend forgiveness to your idiot friends; extend forgiveness to your idiot self. Make it a practice. Come to rest in actuality.

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How do you relate to the notion that the dearest freshness and dearest shoddiness both live deep down things? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to revise your expectations downward and extend forgiveness to yourself and others? What helps you rest in actuality?

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Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 16, 2023

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Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder

Awe is the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your understanding of the world

– Dacher Keltner –

Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder

“”Music,” the trailblazing composer Julia Perry wrote, “has a unifying effect on the peoples of the world, because they all understand and love it… And when they find themselves enjoying and loving the same music, they find themselves loving one another.” But there is something beyond humanistic ideology in this elemental truth –something woven into the very structure and sensorium of our bodies; as the great neurologist Oliver Sacks observed, “music can pierce the heart directly; it needs no mediation.” Psychologist Dacher Keltner examines what that unmediated something is and how it pierces us in a portion of his altogether fascinating book Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life (public library) — a taxonomy of wonder derived from his study of twenty-six cultures around the world, across which music, above all other forms of beauty and spirituality, emerges as the most universal of our creaturely portals into transcendence.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this talk by Keltner, “What Science Taught Me About Compassion, Gratitude and Awe.” { more }

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Two Types of Heartbreak

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 15, 2023

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Two Types of Heartbreak

The heart of man is very much like the sea, it has its storms, it has its tides and in its depths it has its pearls too

– Vincent Van Gogh –

Two Types of Heartbreak

“A disciple asks the rebbe: Why does Torah tell us to place these words upon your hearts? Why does it not tell us to place these holy words in our hearts? The rebbe answers: It is because as we are, our hearts are closed, and we cannot place the holy words in our hearts. So we place them on top of our hearts. And there they stay until, one day, the heart breaks and the words fall in. The following passage by Parker Palmer on heartbreak, opens with this Hasidic tale… { read more }

Be The Change

How do you relate to the notion that to make our heart supple, we have to take it all in? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to take in ‘life’s little death’ without an anesthetic? What helps you take all of it in, good and bad?

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Window of Possibility

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 14, 2023

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Window of Possibility

Open your eyes and see what you can with them before they close forever.

– Anthony Doerr –

Window of Possibility

“We call our galaxy the Milky Way. There are at least 100 billion stars in it and our sun is one of those. A hundred billion is a big number, and humans are not evolved to appreciate numbers like that, but heres a try: If you had a bucket with a thousand marbles in it, you would need to procure 999,999 more of those buckets to get a billion marbles. Then youd have to repeat the process a hundred times to get as many marbles as there are stars in our galaxy.” Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Anthony Doerr shares more in this essay on, why the Hubble Ultra Deep Field is the most incredible photograph ever taken. { read more }

Be The Change

If inspired to, take a moment, right now. To look around and see what you can.

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The Just Listen Project

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 13, 2023

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The Just Listen Project

To hear each other…to listen to one another, is an exercise in recognition.

– bell hooks –

The Just Listen Project

Toussaint Bailey, a “husband, father, son, brother, executive and Black man in America,” like so many others, has experienced daily the pain of racism. His sense of rage, sadness and confusion became more prominent after overtly racist events of the past few years. Struggling with how to continue to function as a Black CEO in a nearly all white firm, he had for the first time an authentic, raw conversation about racism at work. As a result he founded The Just Listen Project, which works to reduce the problems of racism through one to one conversations in which participants connect on a human level, deeply listening to Black people and their experiences of racism. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn how you can participate in the Just Listen Project. { more }

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The Just Listen Project

This week’s inspiring video: The Just Listen Project
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Video of the Week

Jan 12, 2023
The Just Listen Project

The Just Listen Project

Toussaint Bailey, a "husband, father, son, brother, executive and Black man in America," like so many others, has experienced daily the pain of racism. His sense of rage, sadness and confusion became more prominent after overtly racist events of the past few years. Struggling with how to continue to function as a Black CEO in a nearly all white firm, he had for the first time an authentic, raw conversation about racism at work. As a result he founded The Just Listen Project, which works to reduce the problems of racism through one to one conversations in which participants connect on a human level, deeply listening to Black people and their experiences of racism.
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How to Question Your Own Decisions

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 12, 2023

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How to Question Your Own Decisions

It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.

– Eugene Ionesco –

How to Question Your Own Decisions

“When the Nobel Prizewinning physicist Arno Penzias was asked what led to his success, he explained that he made a daily habit of asking what he called “the jugular question.” Penzias said, The first thing I do each morning is ask myself, Why do I strongly believe what I believe? Penzias felt it was critical to constantly examine your own assumptions. And this is important to do whenever making decisionsbecause our assumptions and preconceived notions can greatly influence decisions (assumptions, and the tendency to want to confirm them, is one of the most perilous decision traps, according to research).” Read more from Warren Berger in this excerpt from his book, “The Book of Beautiful Questions.” { read more }

Be The Change

What’s your inquiry quotient? If interested you can take the quiz here. { more }

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Into the Middle of Nowhere

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 11, 2023

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Into the Middle of Nowhere

Play is the mediator of the invisible and visible.

– Dora M. Kalff –

Into the Middle of Nowhere

“This film captures the wonder of childhood as 3 to 5-year-olds explore and test the boundaries of reality through play and imagination at an outdoor nursery in Fife, Scotland.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this piece,”How Imagination Shapes Your Reality.” { more }

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Ikebana and the Jedi Model

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January 10, 2023

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Ikebana and the Jedi Model

The art of ikebana is to listen to the spirits of flowers and plants.

– Kasen Yoshimura –

Ikebana and the Jedi Model

“The Japanese traditional arts including ikebana have adopted the apprenticeship model [of the Jedi]. Once you enter the world of ikebana, you are trained under one certain master for at least several years and if the master thinks you are ready to be a master, which is called “shihan” in Japanese, the master recommends you to the board of masters which would approve you as shihan. If approved, you are allowed to teach others as your apprentices. To be perfectly honest, this model was quite frustrating to me for a long time, who started ikebana at the age of nineteen.” To Mayuka Yamazaki, a high-level business executive, ikebana — the ancient Japanese art of floral creations –is not just about arranging flowers. It is about attuning to the wisdom and beauty of nature and enriching our experience of being human. As a master of the art, she explains that ikebana is a word derived from the verb ikeru (to bring alive) and hana (flowers), or combined, “letting flowers live.” For over 20 years, Mayuka has been letting flowers live, and most recently, she has brought this practice to help restore wholeness to schools, international organizations, communities, and most notably, corporations. In the following piece she connects dots between ikebana, Jedi training, and her own unique work in the world. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call with Mayuka this weekend. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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