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The Poet & the Scientist

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 21, 2020

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The Poet & the Scientist

Science and poetry are, in fact, inseparable. By providing a vision of life, of Earth, of the universe in all its splendor, science does not challenge human values; it can inspire human values. It does not negate faith; it celebrates faith.

– Jacques-Yves Cousteau –

The Poet & the Scientist

“My father has collected the most substantial body of fish-based Index of Biotic Integrity data for a watershed of its size anywhere in the world. This is an accomplishment he can claim. Though there are too many dull, qualifying words inserted between those superlatives — or at least thats what I think…” So begins this poet’s lovely piece on her father’s work. { read more }

Be The Change

Try looking at the world through the eyes of a poet today.

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The Very Best Way to Pray for Peace

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 20, 2020

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The Very Best Way to Pray for Peace

Peace is the only battle worth waging.

– Albert Camus –

The Very Best Way to Pray for Peace

When a CIA analyst began an interfaith quest for citizen diplomacy by standing shoulder to shoulder with a veiled woman, and listening to the Imam ask, “Don’t we all bleed when we’re hurt?” she was grateful to be praying alongside Muslims instead of interrogating them in Afghanistan for the CIA after 9/11. She continues to work with Muslim communities in the belief that peace in the Middle East can only emerge from small, grassroots efforts. Politicians could profit from her story… { read more }

Be The Change

Join a special webinar with Janessa Wilder and other special guests this weekend. “Designing for Deeper Inclusion.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Lonnie Holley: The Man is the Music

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 19, 2020

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Lonnie Holley: The Man is the Music

When artists give form to revelation, their art can advance, deepen and potentially transform the consciousness of their community.

– Alex Grey –

Lonnie Holley: The Man is the Music

Prolific artist, musician and lover of Mother Earth, Lonnie Holley treasures the discarded and nurtures the neglected, finding healing in the transformative power of art. This short documentary is not so much a portrait of the prolific artist and musician, as an experiential reflection on art as a way of life. Atlanta-based Holleys work is a product of the environment in which he was raised Jim Crow Alabamaand reflects the impact of being socially discarded. Holley compulsively creates and his work is a means to deal with loss. Its through his unique perspective and the process of creating beauty that Lonnie draws us into an imaginative and captivating world. { read more }

Be The Change

How has art and music healed and changed you in this difficult time?

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Lonnie Holley: The Man Is the Music

This week’s inspiring video: Lonnie Holley: The Man Is the Music
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Video of the Week

Jun 18, 2020
Lonnie Holley: The Man Is the Music

Lonnie Holley: The Man Is the Music

Prolific artist, musician and lover of Mother Earth, Lonnie Holley treasures the discarded and nurtures the neglected, finding healing in the transformative power of art. This short documentary is not so much a portrait of the prolific artist and musician, as an experiential reflection on art as a way of life. Atlanta-based Holley’s work is a product of the environment in which he was raised —Jim Crow Alabama—and reflects the impact of being socially discarded. Holley compulsively creates and his work is a means to deal with loss. It’s through his unique perspective and the process of creating beauty that Lonnie draws us into an imaginative and captivating world.
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Peter Levine and Thomas Huebl: Healing Trauma & Spiritual Growth

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DailyGood News That Inspires

June 18, 2020

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Peter Levine and Thomas Huebl: Healing Trauma & Spiritual Growth

Trauma has the power to rob our lives of vitality and destroy it. However, we can also use it for powerful self-renewal and transformation. Trauma, resolved, is a blessing from a greater power.

– Peter Levine –

Peter Levine and Thomas Huebl: Healing Trauma & Spiritual Growth

In this memorable conversation from SAND 18 Peter Levine, the father of trauma therapy work, and Thomas Huebl, a spiritual teacher known for his work integrating healing of collective trauma, discuss the relationship between healing trauma and spiritual growth. One theme that repeats throughout the discussion is that we are all connected through the traumatization of the world, and that the healing of trauma is a way of returning to the wholeness and fullness of living. { read more }

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Learn more about Peter Levine’s work here. { more }

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Warriors Wanted: Training People to Defend the Human Spirit

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June 17, 2020

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Warriors Wanted: Training People to Defend the Human Spirit

Change always involves a dark night when everything falls apart. Yet if this period of dissolution is used to create new meaning, then chaos ends and new order emerges.

– Meg Wheatley –

Warriors Wanted: Training People to Defend the Human Spirit

“Seventy-five year old writer, consultant and activistMargaret Wheatley has studied the cyclical nature of civilizations throughout history and she is quite confident that the end of our civilization is closer than we might like to think. And she is doing something about it… something radical. Wheatley is building an army of ‘warriors for the human spirit’ with people who want to lessen the suffering in the world — whether it be from natural disasters, political strife, war, famine, or from the tyranny of daily injustices in modern life.” More in this interview… { read more }

Be The Change

Join a webinar with Meg Wheatley and John Powell this Wednesday on “Finding Ground in a Groundless Time.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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A Third Force (+ Thursday)

How do we respond with compassion?  â â â â â âÂ

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Dear Friends,

On a recent blog post, Bonnie elaborated on Rumi’s field “beyond wrong-doing and right-doing” as a Third Force: “The Third Force teaches that a conflict contains both an affirming and denying factor — a yes and a no. Our typical response is to struggle with that duality, and try to get the other side to change. The Third Force, however, is a reconciling factor that offers something greater, by first identifying the affirming and denying factors and then surrendering to the tension of opposites. We stop looking for answers in the limits of our knowing and trust a vastness that is both infinite and intimate.”

In service to that third force, a few upcoming events …

  • 490.jpgThis Thursday, on the heels our disrupting education panel, we will be in dialogue with one of the foremost public intellectuals on civil rights, john powell, alongside a systems luminary and author of nine books, Margaret Wheatley. RSVP for Finding Ground in Groundless Times.
  • It’s summer. As a start, that means, we’re revving up for the buzz of youthful energy. Next week, seven amazing teens are kicking off our summer internship. If you read their illuminating wisdom and enthusiasm, you’d see why all the mentors are wondering, 🙂 “Who’s the intern and who’s the mentor?” Also, next week, Audrey and crew are hosting over 200 change-makers across 25 countries in our first-ever Laddership Pod! Even just reading their inspirations can leave you with goosebumps.
  • Bowing. The only time that our heart is higher than our hands and head is when we bow. In the late 70s, Rev. Heng Sure’s remarkable bowing pilgrimage across 800 miles inspired many. This weekend, two monks are offering a virtual one-hour ‘three steps and a bow’ practice. Join this Saturday.

On a recent call that Preeta called "truly transportive and transformative", Rabbi Ariel Burger shared a beautiful story from the Jewish oral tradition. Fortunately, it’s now transcribed. 🙂 Here’s how it starts: "One day, Baal Shem Tov saddled up his wagon and horses. His driver, Alexi, had a peculiar way of traveling — he would sit facing backwards and let the horses go wherever they want to go. That Sabbath eve, they traveled several hours until they stopped at a poor man’s house." Full story here. #ThirdForce

To close, here’s a prayer by Larry Yang that Bradley recently shared at our Awakin Circle: “May I be loving, open, and aware in this moment; If I cannot be loving, open, and aware in this moment, may I be kind; If I cannot be kind, may I be nonjudgmental; If I cannot be nonjudgmental, may I not cause harm; If I cannot not cause harm, may I cause the least harm.”

In the spirit of service,

Nipun
(on behalf of ServiceSpace)
P.S. Over the last couple weeks, KarunaVirus team has been asking: how does compassion respond to racism? In Philadelphia, two friends bring a basketball hoop to protests, inviting officers and protesters and anyone to play. In California, one woman organizes a different kind of protest, where hundreds turned out to clean the streets. In Tennessee, a black man shares his fear of walking alone and being seen as a threat. Next day, 75 neighbors show up to walk with him. In Minnesota, a school asks for 80 bags of groceries for riot-hit families. Next day, 25,000 bags fill its lawns. In Chicago, a store owner loses everything to looters. In two weeks, 6,400 people help cover his costs. In New York, an 18-year-old pulls an all-nighter cleaning up protest damage. When word got out, strangers gifted him a car and scholarship. As cities and sports revise policies, reporters ask: what does it really take to bring lasting change?
Â
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Spotlight On Kindness: Transformative Transitions

A few transitions in our lives are apparent, like graduations, starting a new career, or a relationship, whereas — most are not. Every event, every occurrence, every challenge is a natural transition. We are summoned to be present, take stock of our lives, and consciously move forward with full integrity. We must decide, not merely what we are leaving behind, but what we are inviting in. –Guri

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“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” –Viktor Frankl
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Editor’s Note: A few transitions in our lives are apparent, like graduations, starting a new career, or a relationship, whereas — most are not. Every event, every occurrence, every challenge is a natural transition. We are summoned to be present, take stock of our lives, and consciously move forward with full integrity. We must decide, not merely what we are leaving behind, but what we are inviting in. –Guri
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Hugs John Krasinski highlights some good news around the world and sends the class of 2020 off with advice from Oprah Winfrey, Steven Spielberg, Malala Yousafzai, and Jon Stewart.
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This Thursday, join us for “Finding Ground In a Groundless Time.” An interview with one of the foremost public intellectuals on civil rights, John A. Powell, and a systems luminary and author of nine books, Margaret Wheatley. INFO.
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Eula Bliss: Talking About Whiteness

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June 16, 2020

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Eula Bliss: Talking About Whiteness

We are, in other words, continuous with everything here on earth. Including, and especially, each other.

– Eula Bliss –

Eula Bliss: Talking About Whiteness

You can’t think about something if you can’t talk about it, says Eula Biss. The writer helpfully opens up lived words and ideas like complacence, guilt, and opportunity hoarding for an urgent reckoning with whiteness. This conversation was inspired by her 2015 essay in The New York Times, “White Debt.” More from Krista Tippett here. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about Eula Bliss and her work here. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Four Types Of Listening

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Four Types Of Listening
by Otto Scharmer

[Listen to Audio!]

2426.jpgIn my years of working with groups and organizations, I have identified four basic types of listening.

“Ya, I know that already.” The first type of listening is downloading: listening by reconfirming habitual judgments. When you are in a situation where everything that happens confirms what you already know, then you are listening by downloading.

“Ooh, look at that!” The second type of listening is object-focused listening: listening by paying attention to factual and to the novel or disconfirming data. In this type of listening you pay attention to what differs from what you already know. You attend to ideas about reality that differ from your own rather than denying them (as you do in the case of downloading). Object-focused or factual listening is the basic mode of good science. You ask questions and you carefully observe the responses that nature (data) gives to you.

“Oh, yes, I know how you feel.” The third and deeper level of listening is empathic listening. When we are engaged in real dialogue, we can, when paying attention, become aware of a profound shift in the place from which our listening originates. As long as we operate from the first two types of listening, our listening originates from within the boundaries of our own mental-cognitive organization. But when we listen empathically, our perception shifts from our own organization into the field, to the other, to the place from which the other person is speaking. When moving into that mode of listening we have to activate our empathy by connecting directly, heart to heart, to the other person. If that happens, we feel a profound switch; we forget about our own agenda and begin to see how the world unfolds through someone else’s eyes. When operating in this mode, we usually feel what another person wants to say before the words take form. And then we may recognize whether a person chooses the right word or the wrong one to express something. That judgment is only possible when we have a direct sense of what someone wants to say before we analyze what she actually says. Empathic listening is a skill that can be cultivated and developed, just like any other skill in human relations. It’s a skill that requires us to activate a different source of intelligence-the intelligence of the heart.

“I can’t express what I experience in words. My whole being has slowed down. I feel more quiet, present and more my real self. I am connected to something larger than myself.” This is the fourth level of listening. It moves beyond the current field and connects to a still deeper realm of emergence. I call this level of listening generative listening, or listening from the emerging field of the future. This level of listening requires us to access our open heart and open will — our capacity to connect to the highest future possibility that wants to emerge. On this level our work focuses on getting our (old) self out of the way in order to open a space, a clearing that allows for a different sense of presence to manifest. We no longer look for something outside. We no longer empathize with someone in front of us. We are in an altered state — maybe communion or grace is the word that comes closest to the texture of this experience that refuses to be dragged onto the surface of words.

You’ll notice that this fourth level of listening differs in texture and outcomes from the others. You know that you have been operating on the fourth level when you realize that, at the end of the conversation, you are no longer the same person you were when you started the conversation. You have gone through a subtle but profound change. You have connected to a deeper source — to the source of who you really are and to a sense of why you are here — a connection that links you with a profound field of coming-into-being, with your emerging authentic Self.

About the Author: Otto Scharmer is a professor at MIT, founder of Presencing Institute, and a pioneer of GAIA University. The excerpt above is from his ground-breaking book, Theory U: Learning from the Future as it Emerges.

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Four Types Of Listening
How do you relate to the four levels of listening? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to activate generative listening? What helps you consciously choose your level of listening?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: Otto Scharmer’sarticle on Four Types of Listening makes me reflect on how do I listen, what’s my listening style. "Ya, I know that already." When I readsomething or listen tosomethin…
David Doane wrote: I learned that communication is head to head, heart to heart, or soul to soul. For me, Scharmer’s first two levels, downloading and object-focused listening, are head to head. I think his third le…
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