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Spotlight On Kindness: Superpowers Of Humility

Growing up, I was taught that pride was something to keep an eye on, so I tried to recognize the thin line between confidence and arrogance. With the age of social media normalizing boasting about our achievements, how does humility fit in? Intellectual humility allows our curiosity to learn from one another and understand that our views are often limited. True humility offers us an openness to the interconnectedness that we have with each other. The article at the end shares a simple yet insightful look at the superpowers of humility. –Guri

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“Humility is not thinking less of yourself, it’s thinking of yourself less.” –C.S. Lewis
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Editor’s Note: Growing up, I was taught that pride was something to keep an eye on, so I tried to recognize the thin line between confidence and arrogance. With the age of social media normalizing boasting about our achievements, how does humility fit in? Intellectual humility allows our curiosity to learn from one another and understand that our views are often limited. True humility offers us an openness to the interconnectedness that we have with each other. The article at the end shares a simple yet insightful look at the superpowers of humility. –Guri
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
Jason was sent to the principal’s office when he refused to take off his hat. Instead of sending him home, the principal tried to understand what was going on. He went above and beyond to help.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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She was giving an important presentation when the power went out. Embarrassed by the abrupt turn of events, she continued talking in the dark. The audience brightened her day when they tried to help.
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One Thousand Cranes
Hugs In this moving video, one woman with a tough past teaches young people from challenging backgrounds the skill of origami so that they can make something beautiful. This video is a lovely meditation in itself.
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“Humility is the only quality that disappears the moment you think you have it. It’s an interesting virtue that if fully realized, is a superpower that will lead you to a successful and fulfilling life.” How does humility do this? Here are 11 ways.
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James O’Dea: Conscious Activism

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 3, 2021

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James O'Dea: Conscious Activism

Be courageous and face this moment in time consciously and with all the discernment and clarity within your power.

– James O’Dea –

James O’Dea: Conscious Activism

From award-winning author James O’Dea comes a handbook for Sacred Activism, where spiritual insight and radical action meet. O’Dea shares the arc of his own development as both an activist and mystic. He explores what it means to be conscious activists, and what it takes to move beyond rigid belief systems and outdated structures of power and control, and to accelerate the possibilities of collective evolution. Read an excerpt here. { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with James O’Dea, and ServiceSpace founder, Nipun Mehta. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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The World Needs Your Cargo: Kozo Hattori & Sue Cochrane

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March 2, 2021

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The World Needs Your Cargo: Kozo Hattori & Sue Cochrane

You enter life a ship laden with meaning, purpose and gifts
sent to be delivered to a hungry world.
And as much as the world needs your cargo,
you need to give it away.
Everything depends on this.

– Greg Kimura –

The World Needs Your Cargo: Kozo Hattori & Sue Cochrane

In July of 2020, beloved ServiceSpace friends Kozo Hattori, and Sue Cochrane, came together for a virtual conversation in the presence of community. Both were navigating stark realities with cancer. Their luminous exchange was threaded with laughter, insight, tender truths, poignant moments and profound life-wisdom. Kozo peacefully “changed address,” on March 1st. His transition came just weeks after Sue’s own passing. What follows is an edited selection of excerpts from the conversation between these two extraordinary beings, who leave in their wake, an incandescent legacy of love and courage. { read more }

Be The Change

What is the cargo you are carrying? What do the above quote and conversation spark within you? Do something today to honor the deep legacy that Kozo and Sue shared with our world.

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Awakin Weekly: The False Dichotomy Between Being And Doing

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The False Dichotomy Between Being And Doing
by Rob Burbea

[Listen to Audio!]

2468.jpgOne believes that "being" and "doing" are different. Often, "just being" is regarded as preferable or somehow more authentic. With maturing of insight, however, one realizes that this perceived dichotomy between ‘being’ and ‘doing’, though it might at first seem and feel self-evident, is in fact essentially mistaken and based on a false impression.

It rests on three basic and connection assumptions: (a) that there is an objective reality that we can and should ‘be with’; (b) that anything other than the ‘simply knowing’ awareness is somehow a labored and artificially constructed state; (c) ‘being’ involves no effort and Self will not be constructed there.

It turns out, though, that whenever there is *any experience at all*, there is always some fabricating, which is a kind of ‘doing’. Often, we revert to ‘just being with things as they appear’ and this reversion becomes a default into the assumption of ‘being with things as they are’ without realizing it. Without enough experience in seeing how we fabricate our perceptions, it can be difficult to overcome the tacit assumption that things really are how they appear or that they really are the way they are, in and of themselves. It can be difficult even to realize that such assumptions are there. What seems like ‘just being with things as they appear’ will undoubtedly involve all kinds of views and assumptions, mostly unrecognized, about what is perceived.

Actively cultivating a range of skilful ways of looking is premised on the understanding that we are *always and inevitably* engaged in some way of looking at or relating to our experiences. But we are not usually aware of this fact. Nor are we usually aware of *how* we are looking — what exactly the view is — at any time. We are either engaging a way of looking at experience, self, and the world, that is creating, perpetuating, or compounding suffering to some degree, or we are looking in a way that frees. These habitual and normal tendencies to view things in ways that fabricate, compound, and tighten suffering are deep-seated and difficult to reverse. Nevertheless, that is the great and beautiful work of the path.

About the Author: Excerpt from the book ‘Seeing That Frees‘.

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The False Dichotomy Between Being And Doing
How do you relate to the notion that “whenever there is any experience at all, there is always some fabricating, which is a kind of ‘doing'”? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware that the dichotomy between doing and being was a false one? What helps you cultivate looking in a way that frees?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: There is a basic difference between searching and finding. In searching we have a goal to achieve. So there is a seer and the seen, subject and object. There is duality between the subject and the obj…
David Doane wrote: I am in body, I’ve been very conditioned and indoctrinated by family, community, and world, and every sensory experience I have is filtered through my body and my conditioning, so I do a great dea…
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Awakin Circles:
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Some Good News

• Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living
• Be A Blessing
• One Thousand Cranes

Video of the Week

• Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

Kindness Stories

Global call with Dakshayani Athalye and Mandar Karanjkar!
564.jpgJoin us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>

About
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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On our website, you can view 17+ year archive of these readings. For broader context, visit our umbrella organization: ServiceSpace.org.

Claire Dunn: Nature’s Apprentice

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DailyGood News That Inspires

March 1, 2021

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Claire Dunn: Nature's Apprentice

Soul is that unconditioned, mysterious, untamed, undomesticated, unique individual wild core of ourselves which is inextricably connected to the mysteries of wild nature.

– Claire Dunn –

Claire Dunn: Nature’s Apprentice

Claire Dunn is a guide to the wilds inside and out, and her passion is nature-based human development. Since quitting her job campaigning for the Wilderness Society over a decade ago, she has travelled her own mystical path. She left the confines of the offices, shopping centres and other concrete boxes of modernity to discover something deeper, more instinctive. She spent a year in the bush, which she recounts in her memoir My Year Without Matches, and now runs re-wilding events and guides Vision Quests. Since settling back into city life, shes been writing a second memoir about re-wilding the urban soul.

{ read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this passage by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee,”Meaning and the Song of the Soul.” { more }

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The Caribou Guardians

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 28, 2021

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The Caribou Guardians

The animals of the planet are in desperate peril. Without free animal life, I believe we will lose the spiritual equivalent of oxygen.

– Alice Walker –

The Caribou Guardians

High on a forested mountain in northern British Columbia, in the traditional territory of the West Moberly Dunne-za First Nations (WMFN) and Saulteau First Nations (SFN), Starr Gauthier is on patrol with a twelve-gauge shotgun slung over her shoulder and a laptop bag in hand. Starr is a Caribou Guardian charged with tending to the Klinse-za Caribou Maternity Pen built by these First Nations, as part of their effort to protect an animal that is vital to their cultures.
{ read more }

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For more inspiration, check out this short film “The Refuge.” { more }

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Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

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February 27, 2021

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Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

The witchery of living
is my whole conversation
with you, my darlings.
All I can tell you is what I know.

– Mary Oliver –

Mary Oliver & The Witchery of Living

“Will the hungry ox stand in the field and not eat
of the sweet grass?
Will the owl bite off its own wings?
Will the lark forget to lift its body in the air or
forget to sing?
Will the rivers run upstream?

Behold, I say — behold
the reliability and the finery and the teachings
of this gritty earth gift.”

So begins this poem from Mary Oliver. It is a poem that bristles with imperatives, pointblank inquiries and penetrating insight. It is a poem large of heart and long of stride, that whisks the reader right into the enchanted thicket that is,’the witchery of living.’ Read it here. { read more }

Be The Change

What does this poem spark within you?
If you were to try to encapsulate the sum of all that you know of life, what would you say?

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One Thousand Cranes

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 26, 2021

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One Thousand Cranes

Although the world is full of suffering, it is also full of the overcoming of it.

– Helen Keller –

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. { read more }

Be The Change

Read the story of Sadako’s paper cranes and how she has become a universal inspiration toward peace. { more }

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Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

This week’s inspiring video: Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Feb 25, 2021
Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

Instituto Terra: Restoring a Forest

Brazil, which was once a leader in climate action, is now most often mentioned with worry in discussions about climate change, desertification and deforestation. But there are lights in the darkness. Watch the seemingly miraculous results grounded in the simple acts of planting trees and a desire to improve the lives of both the animal and human kingdoms, at the heart of Instituto Terra.
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Be A Blessing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 25, 2021

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Be A Blessing

When memory is transmitted, it makes witnesses. Witnesses are activated people who now are telling other people’s stories.

– Rabbi Ariel Burger –

Be A Blessing

“There is a question rolling around even in the most secular of corners: What do religious people and traditions have to teach as we do the work ahead of repairing, renewing, and remaking our societies, our life together? Krista Tippett’s conversation with Rabbi Ariel Burger, a student of the late, extraordinary Elie Wiesel, delves into theological and mystical depths that are so much richer and more creative than is often imagined even when that question is raised.” { read more }

Be The Change

Who or what are you bearing witness to in this time? How is the process of witnessing shaping you? For more inspiration, check out this conversation between Parker Palmer and Burger: Learning to Face the Dark. { more }

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