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Be-The-Change Corporations

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 16, 2024

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Be-The-Change Corporations

It is better to strive in one’s own genuine truth than to succeed in the truth of another. Nothing is ever lost in following one’s own genuine truth.

– Bhagavad Gita –

Be-The-Change Corporations

Jay Coen Gilbert explores leadership questions of the heart during his address at Gandhi 3.0 in January 2024, sharing his own story about the friction he experienced when he found himself “tethered and constrained” to “somebody else’s dharma” and how that led to exploration with like-minded leaders. Gilbert confronts the systemic beliefs prevalent today including a “system and culture of shareholder primacy” and how “wealthy persons matter more than others.” Gilbert offers an alternative model for change in response. The current system’s genetically hardwired source code propping up these beliefs are malleable and can be changed: “Until and unless we change” them, “nothing else is going to change on top of that, other than perhaps marginally. One model for change, the B Corp Movement, launched 17 years ago by Gilbert, includes a tribe of business leaders who sign a Declaration of Interdependence committed to “[1] design for interdependence, [2] investing for justice, and [3] accounting for all stakeholders in a world that fundamentally is not designed for these aims.” This shift to a more “sacred ecosystem” invites current leaders and power brokers toward more impactful, whole stewardship: “By helping them see their role, as stewards, that can help preserve the system, that can create the conditions in which we can then make better, balanced decisions in the interest of all stakeholders.” When this happens, “we shift our culture and systems so that they value not this invisible hand of the markets, but its visible heart.” { read more }

Be The Change

What are the declarations of your own Truth (dharma)? Where do they come from and how are they manifesting today? Find a new way to express your Truth today with a co-worker, friend, colleague, or service provider.

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Longer Ladders Don’t Get You To The Moon

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Apr 15, 2024

Longer Ladders Don’t Get You To The Moon

–Michael Gordon

Listen to Audio Translations RSVP for Awakin Circle
2687.jpgSundials came into being over 3,000 years ago, telling time-based on shadows cast by the sun. But they were thrown off by variations in the length of days and by differences in latitude. Geometry was used only partially successfully to fix these problems, and of course sundials were useless at night.

Clocks based on gravity (instead of shadows) attempted to fix these problems. Water clocks — water dripping through a narrow opening — could be used whatever the season or latitude. But they were fragile, not easily transportable (necessary for navigation), and difficult to use and to produce precisely enough to tell good time. Hourglasses, still based on gravity (but now using sand instead of water), solved some of these problems, but still weren’t particularly accurate or easy to standardize.

At least not compared to the next generation of clocks, which relied on springs and gears.

Fast forward to today and there are atomic clocks, that are incredibly accurate and reliable, which work by counting electrons moving back and forth nearly 10 billion times per second.

Notice that each advance is not only more accurate and useful, it’s also based on an entirely different principle than its successors: the rotation of the earth; gravity; mechanics (physics); and the oscillation of atoms.

And this is how non-incremental changes in technology occur: applying new principles.

You can’t keep tweaking a technology and get better and better results. Eventually a principle must change. Longer and longer ladders don’t get you to the moon.

The economy, though it’s gigantic, is itself is a technology. […] And maybe it needs new principles. Different principles by which the economy might operate so that it benefits more people and respects that we are a part of, not apart from, nature.

What might those look like?

What’s in it for me? underlies most economic thinking. Economists dating back to Adam Smith have argued that acting from self-interest will produce a vibrant economy for all. Perhaps we should be asking What’s in it for us? to bring things into balance.

It’s not personal, it’s strictly business: As uttered by Michael Corleone in the Godfather, this principle explains how to keep score: by results and outcomes. Perhaps better guidance is to focus on relationships and what is personal in how we operate and let results flow from there.

Survival of the fittest: This one’s about power, and it’s both advice (get strong yourself) and a threat (so as not to be overrun by those stronger than you).

Likely, this principle is the one that most ensnares us. Because there is always someone (or some thing) with more might, more money, more influence, or behaving more aggressively than we are. Which can convince us that we — and the systems we create — need to become more powerful, too. Our continual striving, one-upping, our need to perform and be rewarded, to outshine, to reap the rewards — these patterns seep into our lives and undergird the systems we build and live by.

Yet no matter how high up the ladder of power we climb, we never reach a safe spot at the top. Until, finally, we recognize the ladder is leaning against a wall there’s no getting past.

Unless we change a fundamental principle. Unless we move away from our belief that with enough power, things will get better. And toward what spiritual leaders might call love or compassion.

Does this seem crazy? (It would have to me a few years back). If so, here’s food for thought (attributed to the 10th century German philosopher Nietzsche): “And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.”

Let’s listen.

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How do you relate to the need for new principles for evolving our economic thinking? Can you share a personal story of a time you discovered new principles to make a non-incremental leap in your endeavor? What helps you listen deeply to discover new principles?

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Madhu Anziani: Healing Power of Sound

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 15, 2024

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Madhu Anziani: Healing Power of Sound

The whole universe is vibration. So when we make vibrations, we are communicating with the whole universe.

– Madhu Anziani –

Madhu Anziani: Healing Power of Sound

“Losing all of the basic functions of being a human being was the greatest teacher,” says Madhu Anziani. “It was an opportunity to go fully into the teachings I had received around energy, sound, and vibration.” At 23, a serious accident left him paralyzed from the neck down, incontinet, and unable to breathe on his own. Left to face the flurry of emotions in his mind, the musician was forced to discover the gaps between his thoughts, and the healing potential of his own voice. He began to apply sound practices from his hospital bed day and night. Two and a half months later, he walked out of the hospital on his own two legs. “The primary purpose of a voice is to create vibration,” he describes, “We have this beautiful gift, and we can either create harmony or disharmony.” Today, the musician-composer-healer-lecturer-ceremonialist lives in service to a grander harmony within himself, his ancestors and community at large. { read more }

Be The Change

Join an Awakin Call with Madhu Anziani this Friday, April 19th. More details and RSVP here: { more }

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Beyond the ‘Identity Machine’

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April 14, 2024

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Beyond the 'Identity Machine'

The soul is immense. And experience is immense, but in order to communicate the soul to experience, there needs to be a language of the soul.

– Zhenevere Sophia Dao –

Beyond the ‘Identity Machine’

In an intriguing conversation, Alnoor Ladha interviews Zhenevere Sophia Dao, who discusses a range of effects from the cultural preoccupation with creating and emphasizing an individual identity. Dao suggests that this preoccupation stems from systemic forces that push us to replace the primal sense of belonging with an exaggerated personal identity. “The relationship to one’s soul and to other souls is so immediate that the resume that we allow ourselves to call an identity is actually not that interesting. It disappears,” she describes. Dao further proposes the idea that social media, consumerism, and technology are “identity machines” that can magnify notions of identity and detract individuals from authentic experiences. She further challenges society’s understanding of infirmity, depression, and grief, noting their significant role in shaping one’s soul and encouraging a more profound sense of belonging. { read more }

Be The Change

Prioritize authentic interaction and mindful presence over performance or achievement this week. Observe what intangible forms of value get generated in the process.

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But We Had Music

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April 13, 2024

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But We Had Music

Let me, O let me bathe my soul in colors; let me swallow the sunset and drink the rainbow.

– Khalil Gibran –

But We Had Music

Australian musician and writer Nick Cave and Brazilian artist and filmmaker Daniel Bruson combine stunning visuals and animations to present Maria Popova’s beautiful poem, “But We Had Music.” In less than two minutes, this co-creation portrays the ongoing dance between cosmic happenings and the normalcy of daily life, between impermanence and eternity. They remind us to pay attention to the irrevocable moments of wonder that abound. { read more }

Be The Change

Take a moment to stare in appreciation at a leaf, a bird, a cloud, or any of the abundant cosmic wonders that surround us. Breathe in the awe!

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Unveiling Gifts from Uncertainty

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April 12, 2024

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Unveiling Gifts from Uncertainty

Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes.

– Lao Tzu –

Unveiling Gifts from Uncertainty

Through a poignant reflection of her father’s debilitating stroke, Christie Aschwanden explores the concept of uncertainty as not just an inevitable hazard of life, but a herald of new opportunities. When her father transitions from a robust long-distance cyclist to a wheelchair-bound invalid, she realizes that life’s sudden changes knock open a door to adjusting, learning and transforming in unexpected ways. The key lies in the ability to live in the ‘now’ and then approach uncertainty as an exciting opportunity for exploration and potential growth. As the uncertainty in her father’s post-stroke life urged him to pivot to new possibilities and redefined living; so, she conjectures, could uncertainty propel us towards a future brimming with potential. { read more }

Be The Change

Approach an uncertain situation in your life with an open mind and heart. Try to view it not as a threat, but an opportunity.

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Stranger at the Gate

This week’s inspiring video: Stranger at the Gate
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Video of the Week

Apr 11, 2024
Stranger at the Gate

Stranger at the Gate

Borth devastating and joyful, this film explores the darkest depths of humanity as well as the deepest joys in facing the truths hidden in our souls. This documentary carefully tells the story of a former Marine with P.T.S.D. who planned to attack Muslims at a mosque in Indiana—until an unexpected encounter with faith caused the would-be assasin to have a change of heart that was lifechanging. Josh Seftel’s documentary “Stranger at the Gate” tells the story of a man who was consumed by fear and hate and felt his only way to cope was to kill those he feared. This beautiful film has inspired many to examine their own biases to discover what it is that makes us all human and how we may reach out to those who hate us. "Stranger at the Gate" offers hope that by having compassion and becoming neighbors to one another, it is possible that we may create a better world together.
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Selfless Athlete Surrenders Spotlight

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April 11, 2024

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Selfless Athlete Surrenders Spotlight

You have not lived today until you have done something for someone who can never repay you.

– John Bunyan –

Selfless Athlete Surrenders Spotlight

Chase O’Brien, a 17-year-old athlete from the Yukon, handed over a golden opportunity to his friend. Having qualified for the Arctic Winter Games for the second time, Chase decided to let his friend, Gallagher D’Abramo, compete in his place. Not only had D’Abramo previously missed out on the games, but this was also his last chance to participate due to age restrictions. Chase notes, “I felt like our friendship was more important than the race, so I decided to just let it go.” His compassionate gesture not only brightened his friend’s life, but also reinforced the value of camaraderie over competition. { read more }

Be The Change

Prioritize a friendship over personal gain by giving up something for a friend this week. It could be as simple as giving them your place in line, or as significant as surrendering an opportunity to them.

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Knowing Our Power in Tumultuous Times

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 10, 2024

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Knowing Our Power in Tumultuous Times

Forget that this task of planet-saving is not possible in the time required. Don’t be put off by people who know what is not possible. Do what needs to be done, and check to see if it was impossible only after you are done.

– Paul Hawken –

Knowing Our Power in Tumultuous Times

Even after dealing with extremely challenging pandemic and climate disasters over the past few years, Kelly O’Shanassy, CEO of the Australian Conservation Foundation, is optimistic. “The future is not a linear extension of the past,” she says, and sets about to help shape an exciting new future. A few things that give her hope include moving from focusing on symptoms to recognizing sources, and tapping into the power of interconnectedness while honoring the “infinite ways to be an incredible co-author of our collective future” by being fully you. { read more }

Be The Change

Explore what you may need to unlearn that could be standing in the way of new ideas for our planet. What advice might you need to question and reject in order to activate new possibilities for the future?

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Feeling Anxious? A Good Deed Could Snap You Out Of It

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DailyGood News That Inspires

April 9, 2024

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Feeling Anxious? A Good Deed Could Snap You Out Of It

The only thing you have any control over is the present moment.

– Tobe Hanson –

Feeling Anxious? A Good Deed Could Snap You Out Of It

Ever been incredibly overwhelmed by stress? Clinical psychologist, Jenny Taitz, shares a simple yet effective technique called a ‘stress reset’. A stress reset involves three types – mind, body and behavior resets and offers quick ways to soothe our thoughts, body and actions allowing us space to solve problems rather than exacerbating them. Mind resets include naming your emotions, singing your thoughts, and making a pie chart of your life; body resets could be to do jumping jacks, expand your gaze, or exhale deeply; and behavior resets involve building a hope kit, doing a good deed, or taking one small step toward a goal. These resets can counteract worst-case scenario thoughts, physical signs of overwhelming stress, and unhealthy behaviors. Not only are they easily adaptable, but they can also serve as powerful building blocks to improve mental health. { read more }

Be The Change

Implement a ‘stress reset’ in your day. Take a deep breath, put your screen away and expand your gaze, send a surprise card to a friend, or strike up a conversation with a stranger on the street. { more }

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