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The Song of Grandmother Cricket

This week’s inspiring video: The Song of Grandmother Cricket
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Video of the Week

Feb 03, 2021
The Song of Grandmother Cricket

The Song of Grandmother Cricket

This beautiful animated short film, inspired by a myth from the Bolivian lowlands, was created by a group of Bolivian animators in collaboration with The Animation Workshop of Denmark. When Abuela Grillo (Grandmother Cricket) sings, it rains, and in a country marked by water shortages, the film is a response to the privatization of Bolivia’s water resources by foreign corporations. The Cochabamba water wars of 2000 was a series of massive protests by the indigenous community to retain access to their water supply, which eventually pressured the government to revoke the international contract. Voiced by Bolivian singer Luzmila Carpio, traditional Quechua singing weaves indigenous melody throughout the film, further illuminating the cultural roots of this fight for the universal right to pure water.
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Francis Weller: Initiation, Trauma and Ritual

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 3, 2021

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Francis Weller: Initiation, Trauma and Ritual

The grief and sense of loss, that we often interpret as a failure in our personality, is actually a feeling of emptiness where a beautiful and strange otherness should have been encountered.

– Paul Shepherd –

Francis Weller: Initiation, Trauma and Ritual

“For hundreds of thousands of years, human beings worked through trauma communally through ritual practices. Ritual was the re-regulating practice after trauma or a death. What happens when we abandon those forms? Again, another thread of what the soul yearns for is dropped. I’ve spent the last 20-plus years developing ritual practices for community around grief, around gratitude, around initiation, around reclaiming lost parts of our being, around renewing the world.” In the following interview Francis Weller delves into the themes of his latest book, “In the Absence of the Ordinary: Essays in a Time of Uncertainty.” { read more }

Be The Change

What has supported you in your own times of grief? And is there anything you are grieving now? A part of our call in these times, according to Weller is, “to reimagine the presence of the sacred.” Where do you experience that presence in your life?

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Happiness Is…

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 2, 2021

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Happiness Is...

If I can find something good in every day, then I can find something good in every person.

– Elizabeth Buechele –

Happiness Is…

In late fall of 2011, after a simple car ride with the windows rolled down, and the music turned up, 17-year-old Elizabeth Buechele posted this update on her social media feed, “Day 1: Happiness is… those perfect car rides where the radio just plays all the right songs.” Day 1 turned into Day 2, and now more than nine years later, Buechele has gleaned and shared a “Happiness is…” moment from every single one of the 3000+ days since that joyful car ride. Learn more about how the founder of The Smile Project is reminding people around the world, to tune in and take notice in daily ways, of the good that surrounds us. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Elizabeth’s journey and The Smile Project here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: The Hole-y Bucket

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Hole-y Bucket
by Gopal Dada

[Listen to Audio!]

2481.jpgA student approaches the teacher with the question, “Could you help me with a question I’ve been struggling with — what is the purpose of my life?”

The wise teacher responds, “We’ll get to that in time. Until then, why don’t you first fill this drum with water from the river down below this valley.”

He then hands him a dirty, greasy, mud wrapped bucket with lots of little holes in them to use as a medium of transfer.

The diligent student does as he’s told. He walks all the way down the valley, fills up this "hole-y" bucket, walks all the way up to the drum that lays it beside their shack. Deeply immersed in the act of doing the task, he doesn’t notice how much water leaks through the holes.

Days pass. Months pass. And the drum is yet to be filled.

Frustrated and tired, the student approaches the teacher: “I’ve been filling this bucket for the past so many months, and the drum is nowhere closer to filling up. I don’t know how I will ever find an answer to my question!”

With a kind heart, the teacher takes the student’s hand and walks him down to the valley. The same path that the student took every day to fulfill his impossible task. Pointing to the beauty on the path, the teacher then explains, "A few months ago, this was barren land. Now, see, it is a blooming garden. Every day that you carried water in your leaky bucket, you didn’t realize it but you watered this land. Now you can see the spring of little bulbs of grass and flowers."

Then he holds up the bucket and adds, "When I first gave you this bucket, it was greasy, mud-covered, dirty inside and outside. Each time that you carried the water in it, a little of the dirt and grease got washed off."

Without any further explanation, the student understood. The answer to his original question sprung forth from within his heart, "I’m like that bucket, with a purpose of filling the drum. I may not be able to see how I’m being cleansed, or all the saplings I’ve accidentally watered, but someday, a kind hand will help me see the blooming garden. I’ll understand that every leak has its own divine purpose. Then, I’ll just act without regard for outcomes or purpose. I’ll simply serve with joy."

About the Author: Gopal Dada was a life-long teacher, volunteer and story-teller. His simple life experiences continue to be a lighthouse for many he touched through word of mouth.

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The Hole-y Bucket
What do you make of the metaphor of the leaky bucket and its connection to the purpose of our life? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of the blooming garden you had watered accidentally? What helps you act without regard for outcomes or purpose?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: What is the purpose of life is a perennialquestion asked by philosophers, mystics, sages, spiritual seekers and persons like me. Gopal Dada uses the metaphor of the Hole-y or leaky bucket and its conn…
David Doane wrote: My graduate education was metaphorically a leaky bucket. I learned and it helped me get into my chosenprofession, but it had many holes in it. Then I discovered that my profession is also a leaky buck…
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Awakin Circles:
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Some Good News

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Kindness Stories

Global call with Padma and Narsanna Koppula !
562.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.

John Lewis: Love in Action

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DailyGood News That Inspires

February 1, 2021

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John Lewis: Love in Action

We may not have chosen the time, but the time has chosen us.

– John Lewis –

John Lewis: Love in Action

“Here is an extraordinary conversation with the late congressman John Lewis, taped in Montgomery, Alabama, during a pilgrimage 50 years after the March on Washington. It offers a special look inside his wisdom, the civil rights leaders spiritual confrontation within themselves, and the intricate art of nonviolence as ‘love in action.'” More from On Being. { read more }

Be The Change

What are these times calling forth in your life? Take a moment to reflect on this question, and take action in that direction today.

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My First Best Friend

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 31, 2021

a project of ServiceSpace

My First Best Friend

If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water.

– Loren Eiseley –

My First Best Friend

“In 1945, a child too young for school, I wandered from Grandma’s porch and a short distance away, found one of those little creeks that would be my playground for the next few years. Here I formed my first friendship.” Thus begins this writer’s meditation on the deep, and often overlooked, joy of water and its essential place in life. As she observes, the aging process has a way of deepening our sensitivity to the eternal…” { read more }

Be The Change

Take a few minutes and think back to your earliest memories of water. Was it at a lake, stream or river? Taking a bath? Playing with a watering hose? An experience at a beach as a wave rolled up across the wet sand over your bare feet? Do we take water, and its protection, too much for granted?

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Walking With George

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 30, 2021

a project of ServiceSpace

Walking With George

A dog can never tell you what she knows from the
smells of the world, but you know, watching her,
that you know almost nothing.

– Mary Oliver –

Walking With George

“I had never been good at practicing mindfulness, or being mindful–period–until I got a dog. Observing your breath, extolled as the surefire way to become present, left me in such a deep state of hyperventilation I quickly wanted a break from taking a break. I was in constant, anxious movement, starting projects but never finishing them, leaving things halfway done, forgetting items, moving from one thing to the next, constantly apprehensive. But then I got George Lucas: a miniature schnauzer that was the doppelganger of the Star Wars director, down to the salt-and-pepper beard and pensive dark eyes.” This lovely piece from Parabola magazine shares a story of mindfulness, connection and a canine teacher. { read more }

Be The Change

As a special gift to readers in these challenging times, Parabola has made a PDF of “The Search For Meaning” issue available for download. You can check it out here. { more }

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Contact with the Sacred

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 29, 2021

a project of ServiceSpace

Contact with the Sacred

And while I stood there I saw more than I can tell and I understood more than I saw; for I was seeing in a sacred manner the shapes of all things in the spirit, and the shape of all shapes as they must live together like one being.

– Black Elk –

Contact with the Sacred

With spectacular visual images, this film reminds us of the necessity of connecting with the sacred in everyday life. It honors the sacred through sensory feelings of connection, with both the vast expanses such as mountain tops and waterfalls, and with the single dandelion sending its seeds into the future. This connection is further enhanced by the peaceful music that accompanies the images, providing an immersive experience. { read more }

Be The Change

As you go through your day make note of the people and places you encounter who help you to connect with the sacred.

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For the Sake of One We Love and Are Losing: A Meditative Poem

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 28, 2021

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For the Sake of One We Love and Are Losing: A Meditative Poem

She was no longer wrestling with the grief, but could sit down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her thoughts.

– George Eliot –

For the Sake of One We Love and Are Losing: A Meditative Poem

The origin story of “For the Sake of One We Love and Are Losing” lies in a dream that writer Phyllis Cole-Dai had last year. This remarkable poem was published in the early days of the pandemic that has now claimed over 2 million lives worldwide. Cole-Dai’s words have comforted many people through the grief and loss of these challenging times. What follows here is the poem’s backstory in her own words, as well an exquisite downloadable version of the poem– for anyone who might benefit from the solace and support it offers. { read more }

Be The Change

Join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Phyllis Cole-Dai: Writing Across the Divide. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: Against All Odds

Have you ever noticed that some people walk around like they’re carrying the secret to life in their little pockets? Nothing really seems to get in their way. Even if it does, it’s just another obstacle that they climb over and joyfully move along to the next thing. It’s not that they don’t suffer the same fate as the rest of us, just that no curveball in life keeps them down for too long. This week’s stories celebrate the strength of their spirits, conviction, their love of living, and loving those around them. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: Have you ever noticed that some people walk around like they’re carrying the secret to life in their little pockets? Nothing really seems to get in their way. Even if it does, it’s just another obstacle that they climb over and joyfully move along to the next thing. It’s not that they don’t suffer the same fate as the rest of us, just that no curveball in life keeps them down for too long. This week’s stories celebrate the strength of their spirits, conviction, their love of living, and loving those around them. –Guri
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