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The Art of Being Creatures

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 20, 2020

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The Art of Being Creatures

Whether we or our politicians know it or not, Nature is party to all our deals and decisions, and she has more votes, a longer memory, and a sterner sense of justice than we do.

– Wendell Berry –

The Art of Being Creatures

In this intimate conversation between Krista and one of her beloved teachers, we ponder the world and our place in it, through sacred text, with fresh eyes. Were accompanied by the meditative and prophetic poetry of Wendell Berry, read for us from his home in Kentucky: Stay away from anything / that obscures the place it is in. / There are no unsacred places; / there are only sacred places / and desecrated places. / Accept what comes of silence. { read more }

Be The Change

Browse On Being’s collection of podcasts, poetry, meditations and reflections: “A Listening Care Package for Uncertain Times.” { more }

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Three Methods for Working with Chaos

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 19, 2020

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Three Methods for Working with Chaos

Sticking with that uncertainty, getting the knack of relaxing in the midst of chaos, learning not to panic — this is the spiritual path.

– Pema Chodron –

Three Methods for Working with Chaos

“Times of chaos and challenge can be the most spiritually powerful… if we are brave enough to rest in their space of uncertainty. Pema Chodron describes three ways to use our problems as the path to awakening and joy: go to the places that scare you, use poison as medicine, and regard what arises as awakened energy.” { read more }

Be The Change

What are your methods for working with chaos? Which of the approaches in the article, if any, resonates most deeply for you. Which one, if any do you feel called to experiment with? For more inspiration, check out this passage on “Cool Loneliness” by Pema Chodron. { more }

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How to Lead a More Courageous Life

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 18, 2020

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How to Lead a More Courageous Life

Courage is not the towering oak that sees storms come and go; it is the fragile blossom that opens in the snow.

– Alice Mackenzie Swaim –

How to Lead a More Courageous Life

When confronted with fear, the brain will seek relief in the form of old coping habits if left to its own devices. However, there are things we can do to help it change course. If we set the stage for courage, our awareness of what happens to us becomes our greatest ally. “The more you interrupt the old fear-based habits and replace fear-based responses with responses to boost courage, the more you create a ‘courage habit.’ By living your life with courage, you’ll be more likely to make the changes that will lead to greater fulfillment — whether that’s embarking on a new relationship or job, or helping to save the world.” In this article from Greater Good, five tips for changes in your life that will make you aware of how you experience fear, and { read more }

Be The Change

Notice how you experience fear in the body. Try practicing with one or more of the suggestions in the article.

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Powered by Love — an Emerging Worldview

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 17, 2020

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Powered by Love --- an Emerging Worldview

Let the good in me connect with the good in others, until all the world is transformed through the compelling power of love.

– Nachman of Breslov –

Powered by Love — an Emerging Worldview

“There is a worldview that has come to dominate every aspect of global reality affecting human civilization, the natural world and planetary climate conditions. It can be summarized as the quantitative worldview. The quantitative worldview is in a crisis so deep it is leading, in an interconnected and interdependent world, to deep systemic disruptions, chaotic conditions and signs of complete failure. If this worldview were a patient receiving care it would be in intensive care on life support.There is another emerging worldview that is, from a whole world-whole systems perspective, in the natal unit being born into the world exactly as the quantitative worldview is on life support: this worldview, constituting a universal paradigm shift, can be summarized as the qualitative worldview.” James O’Dea shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, read this piece on “How to Live a More Courageous Life.” Put one or more of its suggestions into action this week. { more }

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Lost World

This week’s inspiring video: Lost World
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Video of the Week

Apr 16, 2020
Lost World

Lost World

For over a decade, the government of Cambodia has granted several private companies concessions to mine mangrove forests for sand. Each year, millions of metric tons of sand are shipped to Singapore to enlarge this island nation’s land mass, while Cambodia destroys its only natural protection against erosion, rising sea levels, tsunamis, and hurricanes and lays waste to a vital and fragile ecosystem that thousands of families depend on for their livelihood. Yet the people of Koh Sralau are resilient, as long as the land remains.
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Charles Eisenstein: The Coronation

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 16, 2020

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Charles Eisenstein: The Coronation

The awakening of consciousness is the next step for mankind.

– Eckhart Tolle –

Charles Eisenstein: The Coronation

“For years, normality has been stretched nearly to its breaking point, a rope pulled tighter and tighter, waiting for a nip of the black swans beak to snap it in two. Now that the rope has snapped, do we tie its ends back together, or shall we undo its dangling braids still further, to see what we might weave from them? Covid-19 is showing us that when humanity is united in common cause, phenomenally rapid change is possible. None of the world’s problems are technically difficult to solve; they originate in human disagreement. In coherency, humanity’s creative powers are boundless. A few months ago, a proposal to halt commercial air travel would have seemed preposterous. Likewise for the radical changes we are making in our social behavior, economy, and the role of government in our lives. Covid demonstrates the power of our collective will when we agree on what is important. What else might we achieve, in coherency? What do we want to achieve, and what world shall we create? That is always the next question when anyone awakens to their power.” Charles Eisenstein shares more in this in-depth essay. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration check out Charles Eisenstein’s podcast series, “A New and Ancient Story.” { more }

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Phil Chan on Art, Civilization & Empathy

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April 15, 2020

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Phil Chan on Art, Civilization & Empathy

Look back along the endless corridors of time and you will see that four things have built civilization: the spirit of religion, the spirit of creative art, the spirit of research and the spirit of business enterprise.

– Neil Carothers –

Phil Chan on Art, Civilization & Empathy

“It is no accident that all civilizations possess art. This is so because art is not simply a by-product of civilization; art is its necessary precondition. Without art mankind would less likely have developed the capacity for empathy, and without the capacity for empathy, individual lives would remain brutish. A collection of brutes cannot possibly come together to lay the groundwork for a civil society.” In a time when civil society has entered a period of profound uncertainty, Phil Chan’s words in this piece emphasize the imperatives of art. { read more }

Be The Change

Don’t short-change yourself when you’re invited to connect with someone you don’t know. There’s wisdom in the saying: strangers are just friends we haven’t met.

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Spotlight On Kindness: Alone Together

Most of us have not lived through a time where much of our world is brought to a standstill. Even as we adapt to being at least six feet apart, the camaraderie of all of us being in this together is bringing out the best in people. The flood of stories of kindness and the way people are showing up for each other in these times is a testament to humanity. We may be alone, but we are alone together.

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Editor’s Note: Most of us have not lived through a time where much of our world is brought to a standstill. Even as we adapt to being at least six feet apart, the camaraderie of all of us being in this together is bringing out the best in people. The flood of stories of kindness and the way people are showing up for each other in these times is a testament to humanity. We may be alone, but we are alone together.
Kindness Rocks
Kindness In the News
In Michigan, resident Allen Marshall took to the streets, using $900 of his savings to buy gas for Detroit nurses during the coronavirus pandemic.
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Kindness is Contagious.
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“In my family, we are meeting the craziness of the world with kindness. We helped a panicked family get some toilet paper and water. We are still caring for our homeless friends…”
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Palpable Dark & Light: Parenting in the COVID Era

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 14, 2020

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Palpable Dark & Light: Parenting in the COVID Era

Darkness is your candle.
Your boundaries are your quest.
You must have shadow and light source both.
Listen, and lay your head under the tree of awe.

– Rumi –

Palpable Dark & Light: Parenting in the COVID Era

“A harsh light has illuminated the cobwebs that cloud my spirit. Subtle expectations, the drive to produce, a persistent need for external validation, a victim mentality, a relentless checklist of logistical calculations (Kids lunch? Check. Dinner prepped for tomorrow? Check.Time for a quick run in between meetings? Check. Check. Check. Check. Oops, missed that one. Check again.)” During a rare stretch of quietude on a recent afternoon, a mother of two young ones sat down to pen some reflections on her experience of parenting in the midst of a global pandemic. { read more }

Be The Change

How are you experiencing the light and dark in this moment? Take a moment to capture your reflections. For more inspiration, here is a platform that offers a multitude of resources for families during this period. { more }

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Awakin Weekly: Turning Ourselves Toward Stability And Hospitality

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Turning Ourselves Toward Stability And Hospitality
by David Mckee

[Listen to Audio!]

2416.jpgThe Benedictine-Camaldolese monk, Bruno Barnhart says it very well: “We humans prefer a manageable complexity to an unmanageable simplicity.”

A complex instability is our typical default setting. Restless with where and how and who we are, we think we need to be somewhere else, or live some other way, or be someone else. We dream up all sorts of alternative versions of our lives and of our selves, and pursue them, without paying real attention to where and how and who we actually are. We expend great effort in trying to get “there,” while what we most need to work at is trying to get “here”…feeling safe and secure in the simple, unmanageable, groundless depths of our own hearts.

And then there is that complex inhospitality that we so often busy ourselves with. In our efforts to control our experience, we put up all manner of complicated walls, visible and invisible shields, subtle barriers and defenses, all in the effort to guard ourselves; to protect ourselves against the unpredictable, ever-changing flow of life, both within and without. Instead of relaxing and welcoming the ceaseless stream of unexpected opportunities that flows around and through us every moment, we exhaust ourselves in vain efforts to bring the stream under our control; we try to make life predictable, manageable, controllable. As a contemporary Zen teacher puts it with wonderful concreteness: we stand in the shower under an open umbrella!

The puzzling thing about all this is that we know it. We all know that things are never anything other than what they are; that how we wish things to be is not how they are. We all know that we are never anyone other than who we are. Also, we all know that our life, our experience, is beyond our control; that rarely do we make good things happen the way we plan, and we almost never are successful in preventing bad things from happening. The umbrella leaks, no matter what we do. We pretty much know all of this to be true, but, alas, we forget it. Carried away by our desires, our fears, our ignorance, we forget these simple truths and press on with our programs for improvement and control. What would help us remember? The perennial answer is prayer and good works. Sounds pretty simple and pretty wise to me. I see no reason to depart from an answer that has been voiced for millennia by our Christian ancestors and by the ancestors in all the great world religions.

The answer is, in other words, PRACTICE. Like a basketball player every day practicing free-throws, or a musician every day practicing scales, over and over, we try to act consciously and mindfully, usually against the grain of our desires and fears. Returning to this intention, over and over, we gradually, little by little, turn ourselves naturally toward stability and hospitality. Yes, we inevitably fall asleep in forgetting, but we also eventually wake up to moments of loving awareness of ourselves and others. Our humility (another key Benedictine value) is in accepting this reality and continuing, however imperfectly. When they were asked what they did all day out there in the desert, the desert fathers and mothers used to say: Well, we fall down and get up…we fall down and get up. In the end, there is nothing special about it.

About the Author: Excerpt from benedictinewomen.org.

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Turning Ourselves Toward Stability And Hospitality
What does turning ourselves naturally toward stability and hospitality mean to you? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to relax and welcome the ceaseless stream of unexpected opportunities around and through you? What helps you practice acting consciously and mindfully?
Jagdish P Dave wrote: The ideas of stability and hospitality are very important as we are going through times of uncertainty, fear and anxiety. We all are facing new challenges. How to make our life stable and relate to th…
David Doane wrote: After citing Barnhart’s profound statement that "We humans prefer a manageable complexity to an unmanageable simplicity," David McKee seems to say what we humans really go after is compl…
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