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Why Multigenerational Households are Making a Comeback

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 4, 2024

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Why Multigenerational Households are Making a Comeback

Multigenerational living is a growing trend because it offers a host of benefits. Not only does it provide financial advantages, but it also fosters stronger family bonds, enhances emotional support, and creates a sense of community within the home.

– Susan Newman –

Why Multigenerational Households are Making a Comeback

Are you aware that multigenerational living is regaining popularity? As the second decade of the 21st century concludes, we’re witnessing a resurgence in multigenerational households — a trend that has taken many researchers by surprise. The socioeconomic factors from the mid-20th century that altered the nuclear family structure now seem to revert to a pre-1950s model. The disheartening climb in housing unaffordability, reported being at its worst in four decades, is an alarming cause. The data clearly reveals that nearly half of young adults aged between 18 and 29, despite the job market’s robustness, have chosen or been compelled to live with their parents. Yet perhaps that’s not the full picture. Jennifer Molinsky at Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies believes that multi-generational communities have become attractive again in recent years, because “there are a lot of people who want to be surrounded by people of all ages and have those daily interactions.” With this development, there arises an intriguing question: Is the decline in housing affordability rekindling the multigenerational flame? { read more }

Be The Change

Consider hosting an intergenerational event or discussion in your community. Bring together people of different ages to share their experiences, perspectives, and wisdom. This could take the form of a panel discussion, a storytelling event, or a workshop where participants can engage in meaningful conversations and learn from each other. The aim is to promote understanding, empathy, and mutual respect across generations.

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Breaking Silence

This week’s inspiring video: Breaking Silence
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

May 02, 2024
Breaking Silence

Breaking Silence

Walker Estes ia a prison chaplain and advocate for Deaf people who are incarcerated, helping them to understand their rights, overcome communication barriers, and establish stable lives after their release. He became involved with this advocacy work after visiting his daughter in prison and realizing that Deaf people face additional challenges. As his daughter says, "He is always looking to improve the lives of others."
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How Patience Can Help You Find Your Purpose

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DailyGood News That Inspires

May 1, 2024

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How Patience Can Help You Find Your Purpose

Patience is being at peace with the process of life.

– Louise Hay –

How Patience Can Help You Find Your Purpose

A two-year study on the search for life’s purpose revealed some interesting observations around the search itself. It can “be a source of stress and anxiety, especially when it feels like everyone else has it all figured out. (Rest assured, others are likely still working it out, too!)” Their study suggests that “practicing patience may be a critical and often overlooked element of a productive and fulfilling search for purpose.” They outline five key findings on how patience may nurture the search that include seeing the big picture, bolstering resilience, creating greater or more thoughtful aims, personal growth and enjoying and being present for the search. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the ways patience has served you in the blossoming of your life’s purpose.

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Conversation with Peacemaking Mystic, Orland Bishop

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 30, 2024

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Conversation with Peacemaking Mystic, Orland Bishop

I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins. My soul has grown deep like the rivers.

– Langston Hughes –

Conversation with Peacemaking Mystic, Orland Bishop

“What are the questions being asked of me?” and “Why would I do something my heart is telling me not to do?” Orland Bishop addresses these two questions in his interview with Berry Liberman, spanning from his emigration to the United States to his social healing work. Bishop discusses how what is happening in the world today due to the collective unconscious reflects the unconscious of individuals, and impacts the ability to answer these questions. Yet the answers will not come from rational, scientific, evidence-based activities, the mode of the last 400 years: Bishop, through personal experience knows that each individual must “learn how language [of the heart] is structured from a feeling [found] in relationship to another human being and the truth we could share.” Between the seemingly paradoxical idealism of purpose and meaning attached to pain and suffering and the pragmatism of diminishing and relieving real pain and suffering, Bishop advocates for a middle way: “Prepare every day to communicate with [my inner awareness] then allow teachers in the invisible realm to guide me through the rest of the day [toward action].” This approach is radical according to Bishop: “Healing is becoming more radical because it will transform what we have inherited.” { read more }

Be The Change

What are the questions being asked of me from the agents outside myself? What are the questions being asked of me from within? Where am I conducting action that my heart is telling me not to do? Contemplate these answers remembering to extend grace for the gap that emerges between them. What gratitude is available for the increased awareness you were gifted today?

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From Me To We: True Love Is A Process Of Humility

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Apr 29, 2024

From Me To We: True Love Is A Process Of Humility

–Thich Nhat Hanh

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2685.jpgA community of people walking together on a spiritual path has a great deal of strength; its members are able to protect each other, to help each other in every aspect of the practice, and to build the strength of the community. There are many things that are very difficult for us to do on our own, but when we live together as community, they become easy and natural. We do them without growing tired or making a strenuous effort. The community has a collective energy. Without this energy, the practice of individual transformation is not easy.

When we live together in community it becomes a body, and each one of us is a cell in that body. If we are not part of the community body, we will be isolated, hungry, and needy, and we will not have a suitable environment for practice. We can visualize the community body as a forest. Each member of the community is a tree standing beautifully alongside the others. Each tree has its own shape, height, and unique qualities, but all are contributing to the harmonious growth of the forest. Looking at the trees standing steadily alongside each other like that, you can sense the beauty, solidity, and power of a sacred forest.

Our community body is going forward on the path of practice and its eyes are able to direct us. The eyes of the community are able to see the strong points as well as the weak points of every member of the community. By Community Eyes, we mean the insight and vision of the collective body of the community, which includes the vision and insight of all of its members from the youngest to the eldest. Although the contribution of everyone’s insight is necessary for the community insight to be clear, it is not just a simple adding up of individual insights. The collective insight has a strength, a wisdom, and a vitality of its own, which surpasses any individual insight. […]

The energy of the community body has the capacity to protect and transform us. As a member of the community, all we have to do is to make our contribution to that energy. This is called community building. It is the most precious work a monk, nun or layperson can do.

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How do you relate to the notion that community building is the most precious work a monk, nun or layperson can do? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to appreciate the insight and vision of the collective body of the community? What helps you build awareness that you are a cell in the community body?

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Many moons ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. The ripples of that simple practice have now spread to millions over 20+ years, through local circles, weekly podcasts and more.

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The Scientists Learning to Speak Whale

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 29, 2024

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The Scientists Learning to Speak Whale

There’s a time for words and a time for silence. If you’re listening, you’ll hear the difference.

– Yasmin Mogahed –

The Scientists Learning to Speak Whale

Two research initiatives — Cetacean Translation Initiative (CETI) and the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) — are exploring not only what it means to collect data on how whales communicate, but to listen and understand what they are saying. Listening to whales ends up reflecting much more about humans, than anticipated: it highlights our relationship not only to another species, but to technology including the technology of our own language. While we have intentions of using the technology for good, including inviting better stewardship of our shared planet, the opportunity to use the technology to hunt with greater efficiency tempers the researchers’ hubris. “We should probably do more listening, and less talking,” is one way to responsibly use the technology says Samantha Blakeman, a marine data manager for the National Oceanography Centre. More listening, less talking is a prevailing theme across both initiatives, and the nature of their work a testament to what is available when listening is practiced: “This is such a unique, gentle creature, and there’s just so much going on. Each time we look, we find deeper complexity and structure in their communication.” This complexity allows whales to ‘see’ their world in a way research is just beginning to understand. { read more }

Be The Change

Find 15 minutes. Close your eyes (or even wear a mask). Attune your ears. Note the sounds around you. Move from those closest to you, toward your body, your breath. Now use your ears to reach for those farthest away. Release the concentration on the sounds themselves, and let the sound waves blend together into a symphony of vibration.

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Behind One Mother’s Whimsical Fairy Forest

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 28, 2024

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Behind One Mother's Whimsical Fairy Forest

Some things have to be believed to be seen.

– Ralph Hodgson –

Behind One Mother’s Whimsical Fairy Forest

Therese Ojibway wanted to be able to “find things” with her son, who has autism, in their walks on a local forest trail in Millburn, New Jersey. She built and placed tiny fairy homes in the nooks and crannies they could “discover” together. As time went on and she added more and more homes, it became known as the Fairy Trail and loved by locals. “She thought this was a dynamic way of getting little children into nature, getting them to use their imaginations, getting them to tap into their creativity and stimulate both early childhood and special needs children.” The local conservancy thought it was great, too. When Therese and her son moved away, the conservancy recruited Beth Kelly and Julie Gould, called “Keepers and Makers,” to help. Along with volunteers, they continued the tradition and there are now nearly 100 eco-friendly fairy homes. Beth and Julie are among the lucky ones who have seen the fairies “ride the backs of chipmunks” and “swing on leaves.” Some children also report seeing the fairies. While not everyone sees them, what everyone does see is the sparkle in the eyes of the children as they explore the magical wonders of the forest. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a nature walk through the eyes of a child. What kind of “fairy trail” would you create, even if only in your imagination, that would bring the magic to light?

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Design Behind a Ten Thousand Year Clock

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 27, 2024

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Design Behind a Ten Thousand Year Clock

I am convinced that we humans are just at the beginning of our journey, on our way to becoming something more wonderful than we can imagine.

– Danny Hillis –

Design Behind a Ten Thousand Year Clock

Danny Hillis, a pioneer in super computing, shifted from high-speed tech to contemplating time on a larger scale. He initiated the Clock of the Long Now project, to build a clock that will last 10,000 years, to challenge how we think about our relationship with time. { read more }

Be The Change

What area of your life would you design differently if you were going to live for the next 10,000 years? What is one step you could take to move in that direction?

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Luminous Darkness: A Journey Through Suffering

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 26, 2024

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Luminous Darkness: A Journey Through Suffering

I was taught by landslides, and caught by the woman I became, during them.

– Lucy Grace –

Luminous Darkness: A Journey Through Suffering

Mystic-poet Lucy Grace shares her profound insights around human suffering and its transformative potential. Recalling a pivotal insight at school, the day after a frightening encounter with a gang at the age of eight, she describes, “I looked at my thumb and I said to myself, ‘Lucy, don’t worry, it’s really hard now, but this thumb is part of your future. This thumb exists on the adult that you are gonna be when you make your life better for yourself.’ And so I held that thumb and I felt like, here’s a piece of my life when it’s good. It’s not good now, but it will be. I used to hold my thumb often.” From that childhood insight, she delivers a strong, broad message: suffering is a part of our existence that has the power to ‘break us open’, revealing the ‘light of existence’. This isn’t something we own, but something we channel while grappling with our own sorrows. Discomfort, it turns out, can be a catalyst for a deeper opening of our hearts. { read more }

Be The Change

Join an Awakin Call conversation this weekend with Lucy Grace. Details and RSVP here: { more }

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Ousmane

This week’s inspiring video: Ousmane
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Apr 25, 2024
Ousmane

Ousmane

After learning of his neighbor Edith’s dire living conditions, Ousmane, a homesick African immigrant living in Montreal, opens his heart and his life to her. He and Edith, who is living with dementia, have both lost a sense of who they are. Ousmane and his family offer compassion to Edith and together they find a way out of feeling lost, becoming family for each other.
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