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The Gift of Ecological Humility

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 23, 2021

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The Gift of Ecological Humility

I love to think of nature as unlimited broadcasting stations, through which God speaks to us every day, every hour.

– George Washington Carver –

The Gift of Ecological Humility

“In my early 20s, I apprenticed myself to the The Queen Mothers of Kroboland in Ghana with the hope of understanding more about my cultural heritage. Early one morning, I arrived at the compound of Paramount Queen Mother Manye Nartike, who was particularly animated by a rumor she had heard about our diasporic practices in relation to land. In disbelief she admonished me, ‘Is it true that in the United States, a farmer will put the seed into the ground and not pour any libations, offer any prayers, sing, or dance, and expect that seed to grow?’ Met with my ashamed silence, she continued, ‘That is why you are all sick! Because you see the Earth as a thing and not a being.'” { read more }

Be The Change

Look out your window. Right now, here in this moment, what is being broadcast to you?

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Awakin Weekly: If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?
by Sylvia Boorstein

[Listen to Audio!]

2454.jpg"If there is no self, whose arthritis is this?" is one of a list of a dozen questions that have been appearing regularly in my email. I think it’s the choice of arthritis, out of all the ills of the world, which makes this particular statement funny. It’s also mildly mocking, making a joke out of the understanding of selflessness. Since mocking is derisive, it occurs to me each time I read it, and chuckle, that perhaps I am being spiritually incorrect. I think, though, that it isn’t a joke about dharma: it’s a joke about jumbling vocabularies. Un-jumbled, in their own contexts, self and no-self, no ego and strong ego, are completely understandable.

Twenty-five years ago, when I began my mindfulness practice, I remember hearing my teachers describing the "three characteristics of experience" as the insights that I needed to directly encounter in order to liberate my mind from its habits of greed, hatred and delusion. The insight about impermanence seemed reasonable to me. I saw how things were always changing, that time passed, how the impact of an event changed with the passage of time. Suffering made sense to me too. I understood, at least intellectually, the pain of craving. I did not understand what no permanent self meant. "My teachers are wrong," I thought. "Who is it, in here, having this whole life happen to them, if not me? This is my body and my thoughts and my story." I remember being quite sure that I was right and my teachers were wrong, but I liked everything else about dharma so much I decided I could leave it an open question.

In addition to my own felt sense of, "There is so someone in here who owns this story," I had my training as a psychologist. I believed, and I still do, that a strong sense of differentiated ego — "This is me. These are my skills. I use them competently in a world full of other people. I can take care of myself" — is a vital part of healthy emotional development. "I am me, separate from you," is the awareness that is crucial to the formation of a sense of morality. "I undertake the precept to refrain from harming living beings," requires an understanding of beings other than ourselves, beings who, like ourselves, experience suffering. And being able to say, "I am his mother," or, "I will teach your class next Tuesday," or, "This is where I live," is useful. Those "I – s" are not problems. They’re the ego-equipment with which we manage our lives. They describe situations, not a separate, unchanging entity.

The "I" that is a problem is a storytelling "I" that isolates and traps itself in suffering.

Here’s an example. I said to my husband during a period when we were both studying with a teacher who emphasized non-dual awareness, "I am so angry at so-and-so. I can’t believe what she said about me." He said, "Where is the ‘I’ that is angry?" So I got angry at him. I said, "You and I both know that there is no ‘I’ here and no ‘I’ there. But anger exists! Suffering exists!" Had I not been upset, I might have seen that the solid, enduring ‘I’ I had put in place with the story—"I can’t believe she said that about me"—was causing my ongoing pain. It constructed an ‘I’ who had been humiliated, who now suffered. "I – s" with needs—any kind of needs—are suffering "I – s". They arise with any discomfort. They aren’t mistakes or spiritual flaws: they are clues that something needs attention. They disappear when the mind and the body are comfortable. They, like everything else, are impermanent, empty of self, arising and passing away according to conditions.

At a talk the Dalai Lama gave some years ago, a young man said, "I have a very hard time meditating. I keep thinking that I am not worthy of happiness, that I don’t deserve it." Apparently, the Dalai Lama leaned forward and responded in an uncharacteristically strong, correcting voice. "You are wrong!" he said. "Every being is a beautiful expression of nature. How much more so a being with a precious human birth, one with a capacity for wisdom and compassion."

There is no self, but there are precious lives.

About the Author: Excerpted from here. Sylvia Boorstein is an American author, psychotherapist and Buddhist teacher.

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If There Is No Self, Whose Arthritis Is This?
How do you relate to the notion of the storytelling “I” that isolates and traps itself in suffering? Can you share an experience of a time you were able to recognize and move beyond the storytelling “I”? What helps you stay aware of the storytelling “I” without losing your healthy emotional vitality?Â
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Who am I is a perennial inquiry made in all wisdom traditions. Is there oneness underlying manyness? Is there unity underlying diversity? What causes suffering? Who is suffering? Is there something ev…
David Doane wrote: There is "I" that is a story initiated by environmental conditioning and created to a great extent by me. It’s what I use to interact with the world. Storytelling I sees I as separate, e…
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Some Good News

• Click Here for Unconditional Love
• A Meditation on Grief
• My Vision Quest

Video of the Week

• One Thousand Cranes

Kindness Stories

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Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

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Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 22, 2021

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Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

Poetry is life distilled.

– Gwendolyn Brooks –

Discovering Poetry En Route to Life

“Poetry, my father quoted it frequently, my grandmother collected it in scrapbooks –cards from friends, I memorized snatches of it in school. Poetry really came to me as a young father when my family and I needed to move across the country away from our best friends. It was an unsettled, lonely. time and I started taking walks in the evening to relax. It was spring. Lemon blossoms. Amazingly, I felt something in me wanting to flow out and dance– and words– short poems tumbled out of me. I was surprised, encouraged, and felt happily hooked. Then one day I serendipitously discovered another poet, and then a small community of poets. For the next 25 years I shared poetry with them. Poetry is a discovery I have made on my way to finding my life.” Jim Glaser shares a few of his thoughtful poems here. { read more }

Be The Change

Do you have favorite poems of your own — or other people’s, that have helped you find your way on life’s journey? If so inspired, share them with others.

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This Land Was Made

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 21, 2021

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This Land Was Made

I speak of change not on the surface but in the depth–change in the sense of renewal.

– James Baldwin –

This Land Was Made

“The soil of this land has been altered–altared–by blood, sweat, and tears falling from black and brown bodies. Even when I am not aware of this, I am aware of this. How many ways can we read the refrain, “This land was made for you and me” ? How was this land made? Who was made to do the making? Who is the you? Who is the me?” Poet Ama Codjoe shares more in this powerful essay. { read more }

Be The Change

Take time today to learn something new about the land you are living on.

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A Meditation on Grief

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 20, 2021

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A Meditation on Grief

Grieving allows us to heal, to remember with love rather than pain. It is a sorting process. One by one you let go of the things that are gone and you mourn for them. One by one you take hold of the things that have become a part of who you are and build again.

– Rachel Naomi Remen –

A Meditation on Grief

“Grief is one of the hearts natural responses to loss. When we grieve we allow ourselves to feel the truth of our pain, the measure of betrayal or tragedy in our life. By our willingness to mourn, we slowly acknowledge, integrate, and accept the truth of our losses. Sometimes the best way to let go is to grieve.” Jack Kornfield shares more here. { read more }

Be The Change

What are the resources you find yourself turning to in times of grief? Take a moment to share them with someone who might benefit from them today.

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The Reverence Movement

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 19, 2021

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The Reverence Movement

Forgiveness is not about condoning or forgetting, it’s a creative exploration and analysis of the circumstances that brought you to that place. It’s a metamorphosis of the given idea about the experience, so that it serves us, as opposed to working against us.

– Aqeela Sherrill –

The Reverence Movement

Growing up the youngest of 10 siblings in a Watts, Los Angeles housing project, and a member of the famed Crips gang, Aqeela Sherrills witnessed from the inside the pain and devastation of the countrys most violent urban street gang war, which would proceed to claim 30,000 lives between 1983-2003. By 1992, he and his brother and a few other key community players had brokered a historic peace agreement between the rival Bloods and Crips. He is now a leading campaigner against gang violence and the death penalty, as a subject matter expert on victim service and community-based public safety.Tragically, in 2004 Sherrill’s own 18-year-old son died to gun violence while at home on break from college. In response, Aqeela in 2005 visited sacred sites around the world, and upon returning to Watts he embarked on a new phase of work and activism, launching The Reverence Project. He shares more in this powerful talk. { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Aqeela Sherrill. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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One Thousand Cranes

This week’s inspiring video: One Thousand Cranes
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Video of the Week

Feb 18, 2021
One Thousand Cranes

One Thousand Cranes

Cranes are revered in Japan as mystical creatures and are said to live for a thousand years. A thousand paper cranes are often given to wish for the recovery of a seriously ill person. In this moving video one woman with a traumatic past uses her fingers, eyes and heart to teach young people from difficult backgrounds the skill of origami so that like her they are able to make something beautiful. Though their scars do not go away in the process, they learn to use the lines of those scars to create something of beauty to share with others. She eloquently points out that one person cannot do it alone but with a collective effort, bit by bit, each person’s potential for growth and hope can be realized.
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Barrio De Paz: Peace Town

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 18, 2021

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Barrio De Paz: Peace Town

We are not our experiences. The harm we do and things we experience do not define us or who we are, they just inform who we are becoming.

– Aqeela Sherrills –

Barrio De Paz: Peace Town

“Everything in society tells us to distrust others. I think it’s the other way around. We need to profoundly trust in those around us, in their potential and in who they are,” the grandmotherly Nelsa Curbelo Cora says. In 1999, she walked into the violence infested city of Guayaquil, Ecuador to BE peace. Through her grassroots work, many of Guayaquil’s most dangerous gangs have disarmed, agreed to abandon violence–and now work together to rebuild their community! Watch this profile of Nelsa Curbelo Cora’s work. { read more }

Be The Change

Take an attitude of profound trust in your interactions with everyone you meet today.For more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Aqeela Sherrills; “Transforming Trauma in Urban War Zones.” RSVP details and more info here. { more }

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Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times

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February 17, 2021

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Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times

To get better at wintering, we need to address our very notion of time. We tend to imagine that our lives are linear, but they are in fact cyclical.

– Katherine May –

Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times

“Wintering is a season in the cold. It is a fallow period in life when you’re cut off from the world, feeing rejected, sidelined, blocked from progress, or cast into the role of an outsider. Perhaps it results from an illness or life event such as bereavement or the birth of a child; perhaps it comes from a humiliation or failure. Perhaps you’re in a period of transition and have temporarily fallen between two worlds.”Katherine May’s poignant and personal book, “Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times,” braids together insights from literature, mythology and the natural world. It makes a compelling case for the transformative power of slowing down and stepping back. Read an excerpt here. { read more }

Submitted by: Wendy Berk

Be The Change

Learn more about the book and some of the personal struggles that May ‘wintered’ through in her own life, in this NPR interview. { more }

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My Vision Quest

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 16, 2021

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My Vision Quest

When we are able, when we are sufficiently still and relaxed–letting it happen, not doing it–we can receive a resonance from a greater consciousness.

– James George –

My Vision Quest

“I must begin by asking myself, ‘What do I want?’ What do I want, really — not because of my background and education, self-image and vanity, but what does this ‘I’ that I am actually want from this short life? Indeed. What, or who am I? And what for? That stops me. And I begin, in silence, to listen – to look up to what I can see and know about the great Universe…”Jim George was a celebrated Canadian diplomat, environmental activist, and author. Across the course of his prolific career, he held a series of challenging, adventurous posts around the world. First and foremost, however, he was a spiritual seeker, one who established meaningful connections with some of the most influential teachers of the last century. He was 101-years-old when he passed, and as one of his interviewers put it, George was, “a translucent diamond radiating the wisdom and experience of a well-lived life.” In this short and potent piece, written in his nineties, George shares the essence of his ‘vision quest.’ { read more }

Be The Change

What is your vision quest? Do share it with DailyGood if inspired to do so. And for a deep-dive into more of James George’s worldview and insights, check out, “If Not Now, When.” { more }

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