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Satish Kumar: In Service of Humanity and Mother Earth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 28, 2022

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Satish Kumar: In Service of Humanity and Mother Earth

We are dependent on each other. Therefore, replenishing the soil, replenishing society and being part of one continuum — that’s the new story.

– Satish Kumar –

Satish Kumar: In Service of Humanity and Mother Earth

In 2020, a dialog was held at Plum Village with environmental, and multi-faith peace activist Satish Kumar. What follows are two excerpts from that evening, the first titled, “Activism — Caring without Burning Out,” and the second, “Encouragement to Young Activists — on Anger, Love and Grief.” In these excerpts Kumar shares “how he has been able to find an inexhaustible source of energy to continue his activism with enthusiasm for over 60 years.” As well as, “insights on acting from anger or from love, healthy grieving for Mother Earth, and his vision for the way forward in these times of climate change.” { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this short passage, “The Spirit of Gift,” excerpted from Satish Kumar’s book, “You Are, Therefore I Am.” { more }

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Nipun Mehta: A Deeper Thanksgiving

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November 27, 2022

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Nipun Mehta: A Deeper Thanksgiving

What gives me hope is that life unfailingly responds to the advances of love.

– Nipun Mehta –

Nipun Mehta: A Deeper Thanksgiving

On a recent episode of the podcast Gray Matter, renowned broadcaster, Michael Krasny, talks with ServiceSpace founder, Nipun Mehta. “As a small sampling of the conversation’s many gems, we touched on the hierarchy of generosity, and the ability to ‘throw a better party’ when we replace transactions with relationships. Nipun advocated for our own personal experimentation with generosity, knowing that if we listen closely, we may discover wonderful changes happening within ourselves. He explained how gratitude can be regenerative, and reminded us that it emerges from the recognition that we are nestled in so many gifts that we can never reciprocate. This knowledge invites us to pay forward what we can never pay back. Apparently the most valuable resource in navigating this path is to have noble friends who help us find the way through these and many other inspiring insights. We invite you to be our noble friends, and join us on this transformative journey…” Listen to the interview here. { read more }

Be The Change

If so inspired, experiment with generosity in anyway that feels accessible to you today. And every day.

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This Land is Their Land

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November 26, 2022

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This Land is Their Land

Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.

– Chinua Achebe –

This Land is Their Land

“Most of us who are not Wampanoag or American Indian will never fully grasp the raw emotions indigenous people associate with Thanksgiving.[…]If how we tell history is one of the ways we shape our present and future, we can do no better than to rethink the myth of the First Thanksgiving and its role in the Thanksgiving holiday.” Dr. David J. Silverman, is a professor and writer who specializes in Native American, Colonial American, and American racial history. He is the author of several works of nonfiction, including, “This Land is Their Land: The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Troubled History of Thanksgiving,” a deeply researched book that explores the past from all angles — “and makes the case that the way we remember and consider Thanksgiving requires thoughtful reconsideration as we endeavor to tell the full story of American history.” What follows is an in-depth interview with him by the award-winning platform Preservecast. { read more }

Be The Change

For more, check out this conversation between David Silverman and Aquinnah Wampanoag tribal elder David Vanderhoop. { more }

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Uncommon Gratitude

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November 25, 2022

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Uncommon Gratitude

The gifts a place gives to people are abundant.

– Trebbe Johnson –

Uncommon Gratitude

“When I receive a gift I am acutely conscious of both the gift and the giver, and gratitude spreads through me. This gratitude coalesces into a wish to give something back. I long to please my giver, endow that generous benefactor with something that will offer comfort, nourishment, and delight equal to what Ive received. When my benefactor is a place rather than a person, however, my role as recipient is less direct. Im someone who has inadvertently stepped beneath a stream of beneficence not specifically intended for me but suddenly pouring all over me. If I wished to offer thanks, how would I do so? Does a place have consciousness, such that it can receive gratitude for what it has given just by being itself?” Trebbe Johnson shares more on giving thanks to wounded places. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this additional piece by Johnson, “Rituals for Wastelands.”

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Thanksgiving Address

This week’s inspiring video: Thanksgiving Address
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Nov 24, 2022
Thanksgiving Address

Thanksgiving Address

Robin Wall Kimmerer states: "You can’t listen to the Thanksgiving Address without feeling wealthy. And, while expressing gratitude seems innocent enough, it is a revolutionary idea. In a consumer society, contentment is a radical proposition. Recognizing abundance rather than scarcity undermines an economy that thrives by creating unmet desires… The Thanksgiving Address reminds you that you already have everything you need… That’s good medicine for land and people alike." This video of the Thanksgiving Address captures the multidimensional ways that the Haudenosaunee greet and give gratitude for the natural world.
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Thanksgiving Blessings

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November 24, 2022

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Thanksgiving Blessings

Thank you for the wind and rain
and sun and pleasant weather,
thank you for this our food
and that we are together.

– Mennonite blessing –

Thanksgiving Blessings

From the team at Gratefulness.org comes this rich compilation of, “blessings, prayers, and invocations from diverse traditions, for meal times, gatherings, and Grateful Living.” { read more }

Be The Change

From LivingRoom Conversations comes this set of holiday resources for connecting lovingly with family even across widely different belief systems. { more }

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Fostering Self-Organization

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November 23, 2022

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Fostering Self-Organization

In a self-organizing system, leadership is distributed– it can come from anywhere, from anyone, at any time, manifesting in ways that may stretch beyond some people’s narrow definition of the word.

– David Ehrlichman –

Fostering Self-Organization

“When working in collaboration with others, where theres no single person in charge and the way forward is unclear, it can be hard to know when to lead and when to follow. In these situations, you may hope that people spontaneously self-organize to get things done, but the reality is that leadership always matters. Leadership is needed to facilitate conversations, weave connections, coordinate actions, and catalyze a network of people with aligned goals. But it requires a different kind of leadership than we usually see in traditional, hierarchical, do-as-the-leader-says environments, one we call network leadership.” In this excerpt from his book, ‘Impact Networks,’ David Ehrlichman shares four key principles to realize the immense potential of collaborative and purpose-driven networks. { read more }

Be The Change

Watch the short film Ehrlichman produced,”Impact Networks: Creating Change in a Complex World.” { more }

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Ross Gay: Inciting Joy

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November 22, 2022

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Ross Gay: Inciting Joy

What if joy is not only entangled with pain, or suffering, or sorrow, but is also what emerges from how we care for each other through those things?

– Ross Gay –

Ross Gay: Inciting Joy

“Now that weve defined joy, and concluded it is important, there are two guiding inquiries in this book. First, I mean to investigate what practices, habits, rituals, understandings you know, the stuff we do and think and believemake joy more available to us. What in our lives prepares the ground for joy. I mean to try to find out, in other words, what incites joy. And second, I intend to wonder what the feeling of joy makes us do, or how it makes us be. I will wonder how joy makes us act and feel. Thats to say, I wonder what joy incites.” { read more }

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Hear more from Ross Gay in this interview, “We Belong to Each Other.” { more }

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Good Bones, Pushing Water

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 21, 2022

Good Bones, Pushing Water

–Carrie Newcomer

Listen to Audio Translations RSVP for Awakin Circle
2594.jpgWe had a small water crisis at our home this week. The break happened within a wall, and so we didn’t realize at first that a pipe had begun to leak until morning when my husband noticed water spreading from underneath the bathroom wall baseboard. We quickly pulled out the den couch (which shares the same wall) and after being a little grossed out by how much dust and detritus can accumulate under a piece of furniture that has not been moved in a good while, I started sopping up the water. The break was not huge — at least not yet. I tried using towels and a mop to push back the water, but the leak was becoming a steady flow and this was our indicator, a sign that something deep within the wall needed our attention. A small leak can become a larger break and eventually do serious structural damage to a house and home. This is when a wise person stops whatever they thought they would be doing that day and shuts down the main water line to begin the messy work of repairing what is damaged or broken. Although we still have quite a bit of dry wall repair and painting to do, the leak has been mended and the water is back on.

This story is a matter of plumbing, pipes and home repair. But there is a metaphor that came to me during this experience, and I’ve have been thinking about how many times in my personal life I chose to not notice a slow leak or inner call to attention. I’ve been thinking about all the times in my life that I tried to push back the water, or the times I did not alter the perpetual motion of my days to address what was seeping under the baseboards. Sometimes my attempt to push back the water looked like overwork (the most revered addiction in our culture) or a selfless form of not taking care of myself (a revered spiritual misconception in our culture). It has also looked like a wide variety of well-honed survival techniques and distractions. But, even though there are plenty of ways to keep trying to push back the water, there comes a time when there is little left to do but open up the wall and start working on the real problem.

Like my house, our essential spirits have “good bones”. We are born with with what Thomas Merton called the “True Self”, Quakers call “The Inner Light”. But then life happens—trauma, tragedy, loss, illness, grief, burdens that arrived as legacy from our ancestors, an unkindness or injustice that echoed for years. All these experiences have put pressure and stress on the good bones of our internal system. It is no wonder that life will brings us moments when we wake up from our sleep and notice water pooling from beneath the baseboards. Granted, sometimes with love and care healing can happen without tearing out entire walls. But there have also been times in my life when I needed to trust my spiritual good bones, tap into trusted inner and outer resources, and start the messy work of attending to what has been stressed or unduly burdened. The process of new growth and healing is ever present and always possible. I believe that. But working with what’s been stressed or harmed can require time and it can be surprisingly messy.

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How do you relate to the notion of the slow leak being a metaphor for our lives in perpetual motion ignoring small signs of a problem until it becomes a crisis? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to see the big looming crisis in a small leak? What helps you start the messy work of tending to what has been unduly burdened?

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The Man Who Planted Trees

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November 21, 2022

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The Man Who Planted Trees

On the last day of the world I would want to plant a tree.

– W.S. Merwin –

The Man Who Planted Trees

“Who says a single person can’t make a difference? This Academy Award-winning short film, based on a story by Jean Giono, was created in 1987 by renowned animator Frederick Back. It beautifully showcases one shepherd’s long and successful effort to re-forest a desolate valley in the foothills of the Alps near Provence in the first half of the 20th century.” { read more }

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Share the original text version of this beautiful story with a friend. { more }

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