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Cooking in the Ainu Way

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 11, 2022

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Cooking in the Ainu Way

The Earth is alive and contains the knowledge you seek. It is your consciousness that determines what it reveals.

– Barbara Marciniak –

Cooking in the Ainu Way

“Eiko Soga is a Japanese-born artist and teacher who has had a long-term interest in exploring new forms of relationship with the natural world.She has just completed a PhD research project at the University of Oxford which involved living with a community of Ainu people in Northern Japan. In this interview she speaks about what her experience with the Ainu taught her about ecologically-aware ways of living, and in particular, her experience of learning traditional cooking from an Ainu elder.” { read more }

Be The Change

Sit with an elder in your community this week, invite them to share what their Earth walk has revealed to them.

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Peter Singer: The Life You Can Save

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 10, 2022

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Peter Singer: The Life You Can Save

What greater motivation can there be than doing whatever one possibly can to reduce pain and suffering?

– Peter Singer –

Peter Singer: The Life You Can Save

“Say you’re walking past a shallow pond and see a child drowning. Would you try to rescue the child?
That’s the famous “drowning child” scenario that Peter Singer, the Australian philosopher, presented in his 1972 article “Famine, Affluence, and Morality.” He points out there could be some minor inconveniences — you’d get wet and muddy and would probably have to change your clothes. But, of course, you’d go for it.” In this NPR piece the philosopher and bioethicist Peter Singer shares more about his views on altruism.

This seemingly uncontroversial scenario has profound moral implications.” { read more }

Be The Change

You can learn more about Singer’s work through his website here. { more }

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The Lost Art of Breathing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 9, 2022

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The Lost Art of Breathing

Listen, are you breathing just a little, and calling it a life?

– Mary Oliver –

The Lost Art of Breathing

“After recovering from pneumonia for the third time, journalist James Nestor took decisive action to improve his lungs. He questioned why so many humans — and only humans — have to contend with stuffy noses, snoring, asthma, allergies, sinusitis and sleep apnea, to name but a few. James hears remarkable stories of others who have changed their lives through the power of breath. His deep dive into the unconscious and oft-ignored act of human respiration offers us all a way to breathe easier.” More in this BBC special. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this Fresh Air interview with James Nestor on how breathing can impact sleep and resilience, particularly in the time of COVID. { more }

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The Opponent Relationship Is Not A Contest

The World’s Hidden Harmony

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 8, 2022

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The World's Hidden Harmony

By letting go of what is known, you are free to encounter the living present, in all its perplexity and revelation. Just as silence is the possibility of sound, self-confessed ignorance is the possibility of encounter.

– Philip Shepherd –

The World’s Hidden Harmony

“We’ve been blind-sided by our top-down approach. If the body is a bell, resonating to the
world around it, it’s as though we have stuffed the bell full of cotton balls that stifle its ringing. The present is whispering to us, “Come and play, come and risk,” whatever it may be. But we don’t notice. We don’t feel the present in that way. We don’t feel its presence. We feel it as a collection of things. And as for retiring our self-consciousness and allowing our relationship with the present to be primary rather than the one with the selfthat sort of partnership is almost unavailable to us as a culture. The path to embodiment, if we choose it, means finding those cotton balls in the body–those barriers that dull us to the worldand releasing them and releasing them and integrating them, so that we can once again resonate to the present and find guidance there. If you cannot feel that guidance, all you can do is go it alone; all you can do is guide yourself. And however clever your rational mind
may be at supervising you, it will be pitifully inadequate to the task of assessing the world and finding your way through it in a state of grace.” Embodiment expert, author and co-founder of The Embodied Present Process, Philip Shepherd shares more in this powerful interview. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this conversation with Shepherd, “Bringing Clarity to a Chaotic World.” { more }

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WoodSwimmer

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 7, 2022

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WoodSwimmer

Learn to see what you are looking at.

– Christopher Paolini –

WoodSwimmer

This short film by engineer and stop-motion animator Brett Foxwell, in collaboration with musician and animator bedtimes, offers a mesmerizing look into cross sections of a piece of raw wood as it goes through a milling machine. The imagery produced captures the wood’s unique growth rings, knots and weathered spots. Due to the speed with which the images are animated, the grains begin to flow in a vibrant dance that is both abstract and yet very real. { read more }

Be The Change

Focus on one plant, tree or other natural object in your environment that you see regularly. Can you see anything on close examination that you have missed before?

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How to Be a Citizen of Earth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 6, 2022

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How to Be a Citizen of Earth

Tread softly! All the earth is holy ground

– Christina Rosetti –

How to Be a Citizen of Earth

“One small country, in which 0.0002% of the worlds population lives in one of the planets most biodiverse habitats, has taken it upon itself to model for the rest of humanity an inspired step along the path forward. In 1981, just after a dazzling new species of nautilus was discovered in its turquoise waters, the Republic of Palau — a tiny, vast-spirited Pacific island nation midway between Australia and Japan, crowned with coral castles and radiant with otherworldly jellyfish — voted for the world’s first constitutional ban on nuclear and biological weapons, overriding political pressure from the titanic United States to continue testing and storing its own nuclear arsenal there.” More in this inspiring post by Maria Popova. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out Cynthia Barnett’s “eco-social serenade to the seas,” here. { more }

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East Hill Farm: A Leap of Faith

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August 5, 2022

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East Hill Farm: A Leap of Faith

Each day is a journey, and the journey itself is home.

– Matsuo Basho –

East Hill Farm: A Leap of Faith

“Once upon a time…many years ago, when a now very old man was but a youth, he felt something was mysteriously missing in his life, but he didn’t know what it was or where to find it. He wasn’t even sure how to begin looking for it. “Go find Truth and Knowledge,” he was told. “When you find them, you’ll know what’s missing and how to find it.” What follows is an excerpt from Jonathan James’s book, ‘Jumping into the Abyss: Finding yourself at East Hill Farm while traveling on the road to somewhere.’ { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the most transformative journey you’ve taken in your own life. How did it change you?

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The Cosmic Miracle of Trees

KarmaTube: Do-Something Videos

Taking Time to Make Time

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DailyGood News That Inspires

August 4, 2022

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Taking Time to Make Time

Time is the measurer of all things, but is itself immeasurable, and the grand discloser of all things, but is itself undisclosed.

– Charles Caleb Colton –

Taking Time to Make Time

“When the 33-year-old Michelangelo was painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling, Pope Julius II would impatiently ask him when it would be complete. The artist would reply, “When I am satisfied.” Rodin took 37 years to compete his Gates of Hell. The Taj Mahal took 22 years, two more that the Great Pyramid at Giza. The Great Wall of China took 2,000 years!” Artist Durriya Kazi explores our relationship to time, and the value of slowing down. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this post by Patty de Llosa, “I Have Time.” { more }

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