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Freedom University: We Can Be More

This week’s inspiring video: Freedom University: We Can Be More
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Video of the Week

Jan 27, 2021
Freedom University: We Can Be More

Freedom University: We Can Be More

Freedom University is an award-winning, modern-day freedom school for undocumented students who are banned from equal access to public higher education in Georgia. With the aim of “ending modern segregation in higher education” – and of a future where undocumented and documented students can learn in the same classrooms – Freedom University provides tuition-free college preparation classes, college and scholarship application assistance for students seeking higher education opportunities in private universities or outside Georgia, and social movement leadership development for undocumented students.
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The Blue Hour: A Celebration of Nature’s Rarest Color

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 27, 2021

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The Blue Hour: A Celebration of Nature's Rarest Color

I think the real miracle is not to walk either on water or in thin air, but to walk on earth. Every day we are engaged in a miracle which we don’t even recognize: a blue sky, white clouds, green leaves, the black, curious eyes of a child — our own two eyes. All is a miracle.

– Thich Nhat Hanh –

The Blue Hour: A Celebration of Nature’s Rarest Color

“Blue, Rebecca Solnit wrote in one of humanitys most beautiful reflections on our planets primary hue, is the color of solitude and of desire, the color of there seen from here the color of longing for the distances you never arrive in, for the blue world, a world of many blues a pioneering 19th-century nomenclature of colors listed eleven kinds of blue, in hues as varied as the color of the flax-flower and the throat of the blue titmouse and the stamina of a certain species of anemone. Darwin took this guide with him on The Beagle in order to better describe what he saw. We name in order to see better and apprehend only what we know how to name, how to think about.” Maria Popova shares more in this lovely exploration of ‘The Blue Hour’, a book by French author, illustrator Isabelle Simler. { read more }

Be The Change

What does the color blue evoke for you? Try and be aware of the places this shade shows up in your life today. What do you notice that you perhaps might have missed before?

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Don Berwick: Health Care as a Loving Relationship

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January 26, 2021

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Don Berwick: Health Care as a Loving Relationship

When the fabric of communities upon which health depends is torn, then healers are called to mend it. The moral law within insists so. Improving the social determinants of health will be brought at last to a boil only by the heat of the moral determinants of health.

– Donald Berwick –

Don Berwick: Health Care as a Loving Relationship

For the past 30 years, Donald Berwick has been one of the nation’s leading authorities and innovators of quality and improvement in the U.S. healthcare system. A pediatrician by training, a professor at both Harvard Medical School and the School of Public Health, and a top health care administrator during the Obama Administration, Berwick challenges administrators, policy makers, and doctors to go beyond the standard discussion of systems, strategies, and statistics to something more essential, more human–something he considers moral. The secret to improving quality in medical care, he argues, is love. { read more }

Be The Change

Join today’s conversation with Don Berwick, at 10AM PST. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Solitude Is Where Community Begins

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Solitude Is Where Community Begins
by Henri Nouwen

[Listen to Audio!]

2476.jpgSolitude is where community begins. That’s where we listen to God. Sometimes I think of life as a big wagon wheel with many spokes. In the middle is the hub. Often in ministry, it looks like we are running around the rim trying to reach everybody. But God says, “Start in the hub; live in the hub. Then you will be connected with all the spokes, and you won’t have to run so fast.”

It’s precisely in the hub that we discover the call to community. It’s remarkable that solitude always calls us to community. In solitude you realize you’re part of a human family and that you want to lift something together.

By community, I don’t mean formal communities. I mean families, friends, parishes, twelve­step programs, prayer groups. Community is not an organization; community is a way of living: you gather around you people with whom you want to proclaim the truth that we are the beloved sons and daughters of God.

Community is not easy. Somebody once said, “Community is the place where the person you least want to live with always lives.” In Jesus’ community of twelve apostles, the last name was that of someone who was going to betray him. That person is always in your community somewhere; in the eyes of others, you might be that person.

Why is it so important that solitude come before community? If we do not know we are the beloved sons and daughters of God, we’re going to expect someone in the community to make us feel that way. They cannot. We’ll expect someone to give us that perfect unconditional love. But community is not loneliness grabbing onto loneliness: “I’m so lonely, and you’re so lonely.” It’s solitude grabbing onto solitude: “I am the beloved; you are the beloved; together we can build a home.”

Sometimes you are close, and that’s wonderful. Sometimes you don’t feel much love, and that’s hard. But we can be faithful. We can build a home together and create space for the sacred.

Within the discipline of community are the disciplines of forgiveness and celebration. Forgiveness and celebration are what make community, whether a marriage, a friendship, or any other form of community.

What is forgiveness? Forgiveness is to allow the other person not to be God. Forgiveness says, “I know you love me, but you don’t have to love me unconditionally, because no human being can do that.” We all have wounds. We all are in so much pain. It’s precisely this feeling of loneliness that lurks behind all our successes, that feeling of uselessness that hides under all the praise, that feeling of meaninglessness even when people say we are fantastic—that is what makes us sometimes grab onto people and expect from them an affection and love they cannot give.

If we want other people to give us something that only God can give, we become a demon. We say, “Love me!” and before you know it we become violent and demanding and manipulative. It’s so important that we keep forgiving one another — not once in a while, but every moment of life. Before you have had your breakfast, you have already had at least three opportunities to forgive people, because your mind is already wondering, "What will they think about me? What will he or she do? How will they use me?"

To forgive other people for being able to give you only a little love — that’s a hard discipline. To keep asking others for forgiveness because you can give only a little love — that’s a hard discipline, too. It hurts to say to your children, to your wife or your husband, to your friends, that you cannot give them all that you would like to give. Still, that is where community starts to be created, when we come together in a forgiving and undemanding way.

This is where celebration, the second discipline of community, comes in. If you can forgive that another person cannot give you what only God can give, then you can celebrate that person’s gift. Then you can see the love that person is giving you as a reflection of God’s great unconditional love. “Love one another because I have loved you first.” When we have known that first love, we can see the love that comes to us from people as the reflection of that. We can celebrate that and say, "Wow, that’s beautiful!"

About the Author: Excerpted from here.

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Solitude Is Where Community Begins
How do you relate to the connection between the discipline of community and the disciplines of forgiveness and celebration? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to exercise the discipline of forgiveness and celebration? What helps you recognize the reflection of the ultimate unconditional love in the love that anyone gives you?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: In the worldly world, we judge people who are outwardly and inwardly different from us and who may have a differentorientation to life. Sadly, such a way of thinkingand behaving has caused divisivenes…
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Some Good News

• Amanda Gorman: The Miracle of Morning
• Social Distance: A Community-Style Poem
• Lisa Dolby Chadwick: Letting in the Light

Video of the Week

• The Miracle of Morning

Kindness Stories

Global call with Don Berwick!
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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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Social Distance: A Community-Style Poem

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 25, 2021

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Social Distance: A Community-Style Poem

A person is a person through other persons; you can’t be human in isolation; you are human only in relationships.

– Desmond Tutu –

Social Distance: A Community-Style Poem

In the early weeks of the pandemic last year, “NPR asked listeners to respond to art with a poem — a style of poetry called ekphrastic. For inspiration, Kwame Alexander, NPR’s poet in residence, selected two paintings: Kadir Nelson’s Heatwave and Salvador Dali’s Young Woman At A Window. Both show women inside looking longingly out into the world. The paintings struck a chord with those experiencing the global coronavirus pandemic quarantined inside. We received more than 1,300 submissions. Alexander took lines and excerpts from some of the submissions and created a crowdsourced, community poem of hope.” Check it out here. { read more }

Be The Change

Whether you consider yourself a poet or not, try writing a haiku (or other form of verse) on your experience of social distancing.

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Fatherland

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 24, 2021

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Fatherland

There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique.

– Martha Graham –

Fatherland

“When I was growing up, my father worked for a United Nations agency. His job meant that I was raised a nomad, moving to a different country every few years: Tanzania, Italy, Ethiopia, Uganda, and England. Annually, my father was granted what the UN calls ‘home leave.’ When we stepped off the plane in Ghana’s capital, Accra, my father would sometimes turn to me, spread his arms wide, and say, “Akwaaba!–Welcome.” As many diplomats do, my father moved easily wherever we were. But in Ghana, even more so. In Ghana, he seemed to glide.” This personal essay from Orion magazine powerfully explores the intertwined threads of identity, stories and climate grief. { read more }

Be The Change

Make time today to reflect on the following questions: What is your own relationship to your home country? How does it influence your sense of identity?

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Lisa Dolby Chadwick: Letting in the Light

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January 23, 2021

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Lisa Dolby Chadwick: Letting in the Light

It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there

– William Carlos Williams –

Lisa Dolby Chadwick: Letting in the Light

Chadwick talks about her struggle to keep her San Francisco gallery afloat in the pandemic. Emailing her list, she began pairing poems with paintings from her artists. “With that first one, I paired Naomi Shihab Nye’s poem, “So Much Happiness” with a great John DiPaolo painting. I was doing it five days a week. Responses came back from all over the world, really personal ones from people I don’t know — Paris, Capetown, Denmark — with messages like, ‘You have no idea how much I needed this today. My father died two days ago from Covid.’ ‘I’m alone in Paris. The streets are empty. I look forward to this every day.'” { read more }

Be The Change

Is there a particular work of art that buoys your spirit in challenging times? Share it with friends and family today along with a reflection on what it means to you. For more inspiration read Naomi Shihab Nye’s poem “So Much Happiness” here. { more }

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Kiss the Ground: The Soil Story

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DailyGood News That Inspires

January 22, 2021

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Kiss the Ground: The Soil Story

To forget how to dig the earth and to tend the soil is to forget ourselves.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Kiss the Ground: The Soil Story

“Science meets inspiration in this tale of nature’s best hidden innovation: soil. ‘The Soil Story,’made by Kiss the Ground, is a five-minute film that shares the importance of healthy soil for a healthy planet. Learn how we can “sequester” (store) carbon from our atmosphere, where it is harmful, and pull it back into the earth, where it belongs, through regenerative agriculture, composting, and other land management practices. The film was directed in partnership with Louis Fox, best-known for the acclaimed viral series, ‘The Story of Stuff’.” Watch the trailer here. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, join an Awakin Call with Kiss the Ground co-founder, Ryland Engelhart, on ‘Sacred Commerce, Love Activism, and the Solution of Soil’. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Amanda Gorman: The Miracle of Morning

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January 21, 2021

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Amanda Gorman: The Miracle of Morning

But one thing is certain:
If we merge mercy with might,
and might with right,
then love becomes our legacy

– Amanda Gorman –

Amanda Gorman: The Miracle of Morning

Amanda Gorman has achieved many firsts, including being the first-ever National Youth Poet Laureate in the United States at age 19. On January 20, 2021, the 22-year-old Gorman read at the inauguration of President Joe Biden. What follows here is a video of her reciting “The Miracle of Morning,” a poem written several years ago “when hurricanes, hate crimes, and deportations were some of the many crises in our headlines.” The poem now re-emerges during a pandemic, each line filled with words of hope for a golden morning. { read more }

Be The Change

Watch or read Amanda Gorman’s powerful inaugural poem “The Hill We Climb,” and discuss it with different generations of people in your life today. What does it evoke in you? { more }

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Spotlight On Kindness: 3,000+ Days Of Happiness

How do you define happiness? It’s an integral part of our lives, something we all strive for, yet we all kind of define it differently. In most languages, the word “happy” comes from the word “lucky.” Could there be truth to that? Or does this point to the difference between us and how previous generations perceived it? This week we had a chance to interview someone who boldly sought out happiness every single day for the past nine years. She is wise beyond her years, and we are thrilled to share her story with you below. –Guri

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Editor’s Note: How do you define happiness? It’s an integral part of our lives, something we all strive for, yet we all kind of define it differently. In most languages, the word “happy” comes from the word “lucky.” Could there be truth to that? Or does this point to the difference between us and how previous generations perceived it? This week we had a chance to interview someone who boldly sought out happiness every single day for the past nine years. She is wise beyond her years, and we are thrilled to share her story with you below. –Guri
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At 17, Liz Buechele set on a journey to find the true meaning of happiness. She was deeply committed to her search every day. We sat down with Liz 3,307 days later to hear how the journey unfolded.
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She was dining at a restaurant over the holidays. With only one other family in the restaurant, she wondered how the pregnant waitress was doing without many tips. It led to this sweet surprise.
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The Smile Project Celebrates 3,000 Days of Happiness
Hugs Over 9 years ago, Liz Buechel, a teenager in Pennsylvania started writing down what made her happy every single day. Today, that teenager runs a nonprofit organization called The Smile Project and is dedicated to empowering youth to create kinder communities.
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In other news …
“We can cultivate empathy throughout our lives, says Roman Krznaric — and use it as a radical force for social transformation.” From Greater Good Magazine, here are Six Habits of Highly Empathic People.
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