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Why Meeting Another’s Gaze Is So Powerful

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January 9, 2024

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Why Meeting Another's Gaze Is So Powerful

Sight is a function of the eyes, but vision is a function of the heart.

– Myles Munroe –

Why Meeting Another’s Gaze Is So Powerful

You’ve done it at a job interview. When giving a presentation. While tucking in children at night. Or when sharing a meal with a loved one. The power of eye contact stretches far beyond cinematic romance. A growing body of research from psychologists and neuroscientists find that when we make eye contact with someone, our brains unconsciously kick into overdrive. During this seemingly simple human interaction, our eyes commandeer our attention making us less aware of everything else, BBC Future reports. Direct gaze dives into brain functionality recognizing psychological, emotional and social consciousness in the process. It triggers aspects of social cognition. Even, one might argue, it’s a momentary melding of the self and the other. “You’ve doubtless had the experience when, across a noisy, crowded room, you lock gazes with another person. It’s almost like a scene out of the movies,” writes Christian Jarrett. Apparently, when we meet another’s gaze, there’s quite literally a lot more to it than what meets the eye. { read more }

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Notice when you do or don’t make eye contact, and how that influences your exchange or communication with others.

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An Awe Walk

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jan 8, 2024

An Awe Walk

–Dacher Keltner

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2598.jpgWhat gives you a sense of awe? That word, awe—the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your understanding of the world—is often associated with the extraordinary. You might imagine standing next to a 350-foot-tall tree or on a wide-open plain with a storm approaching, or hearing an electric guitar fill the space of an arena, or holding the tiny finger of a newborn baby. Awe blows us away: It reminds us that there are forces bigger than ourselves, and it reveals that our current knowledge is not up to the task of making sense of what we have encountered.

But you don’t need remarkable circumstances to encounter awe. When my colleagues and I asked research participants to track experiences of awe in a daily diary, we found, to our surprise, that people felt it a bit more than two times a week on average. And they found it in the ordinary: a friend’s generosity, a leafy tree’s play of light and shadow on a sidewalk, a song that transported them back to a first love.

We need that everyday awe, even when it’s discovered in the humblest places. A survey of relevant studies suggest that a brief dose of awe can reduce stress, decrease inflammation, and benefit the cardiovascular system. Luckily, we don’t need to wait until we stumble upon it; we can seek it out. Awe is all around us. We just need to know where to look for it.

Along with Virginia Sturm, a UC San Francisco neuroscientist, I studied the effects of an “awe walk.” One group of subjects took a weekly walk for eight weeks; the other group did the same but with some instructions: Tap into your childlike sense of wonder, imagining you’re seeing everything for the first time. Take a moment during each walk to notice the vastness of things—when looking at a panoramic view, for example, or at the detail of a flower. And go somewhere new, or try to recognize new features of the same old place. All of the participants reported on their happiness, anxiety, and depression and took selfies during their walks.

We found that the awe-walkers felt more awe with each passing week. You might have thought that their capacity for awe would start to decrease: This is known as the law of hedonic adaptation, that certain pleasures or accomplishments—a new job, a bigger apartment—start to lose some of their thrill over time. But the more we practice awe, it seems, the richer it gets.

We also found evidence that the self can extend into the environment. In the awe-walk condition, people’s selfies increasingly included less of the self. Over time, the subjects drifted off to the side, showing more of the outside environment—a street corner in San Francisco, the trees, the rocks around the Pacific Ocean. Over the course of our study, awe-walkers reported feeling less daily distress and more prosocial emotions such as compassion and amusement.

Nearly three years into a pandemic that’s made many of us feel powerless and small, seeking out the immense and mysterious might not seem appealing. But often, engaging with what’s overwhelming can put things in perspective. Staring up at a starry sky; looking at a sculpture that makes you shudder; listening to a medley of instruments joining into one complex, spine-tingling melody—those experiences remind us that we’re part of something that will exist long after us. We are well served by opening ourselves to awe wherever we can find it, even if only for a moment or two.

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3 Steps to a Purposeful Year

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January 8, 2024

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3 Steps to a Purposeful Year

The great solution to all human problems is individual inner transformation.

– Vernon Howard –

3 Steps to a Purposeful Year

The beginning of the year often marks the possibility of fresh beginnings. We make resolutions to help things to change for the better. It may sound something like: “I don’t love my job or where I live, so I’m going to make some changes.” “As a coach, I’m happy when my people are ready for change,” writes author Christine Carter. “But the best first move usually isn’t an outer change to our circumstances to a new job or city, for example. Pursuing achievements that improve our social status and bring us wealth or fame can be tempting but people who prioritize those things tend to have lower well-being. Instead, the best first move is almost always inner work. It’s identifying a vision for the coming year that animates our best selves. When we align our aspirations with our intrinsic interests and values, we tend to increase our well-being and the odds of achieving our goals. But that task can feel daunting!” Carter goes on to outline three ways to get started: Begin from your strengths rather than your weaknesses, Think about what makes you feel at peace, and set an aspiration for how you’d like to live. { read more }

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Try one of the article’s tips as you embark into the new year: start with a strength, reflect on what brings you peace, or take a step back and consider who you truly aspire to be.

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Songs of Trees

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January 7, 2024

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Songs of Trees

The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.

– Marcel Proust –

Songs of Trees

Just how much is in one tiny patch of forest? Biologist and author David George Haskell found himself visiting the same square meter of forest again and again over the course of a year, and then many years since. “When we walk into a forest, we’re not walking into a place that is full of separate interacting individuals … We’re walking into a living network, a place where every creature exists only through relationships with others … Every leaf on a tree has hundreds of species of bacteria and fungi living within its leaves. Without those other species, the leaf cannot function; it gets overrun by pathogens … What is true for a tree is also true for an individual human. Our bodies are made of dozens and dozens of interacting species — not just human cells, but bacterial and fungal cells and viruses and microbial components and so forth, and without the interconnections among all those members of the community, our bodies don’t function. But it’s also true at the level of culture. Culture is an extension of that network. So most of the ideas in our heads, and everything from the fundamentals of language to very sophisticated intellectual ideas, emerge from connections with other people. So our brain is a temporary locus, a temporary manifestation of a broader phenomenon, and that phenomenon is culture that connects across space and time.” { read more }

Be The Change

Carve out time to sit and observe a little area of your neighborhood. What do you notice that you did not see before?

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It Turns Out We Were Born To Groove

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January 5, 2024

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It Turns Out We Were Born To Groove

If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music.

– Albert Einstein –

It Turns Out We Were Born To Groove

Newborns are naturally jamming to their own beat, according to a groundbreaking research first conducted in 2009, which revealed that newborns can discern a beat in music. This musicality, far from being merely cultural, finds its roots deep within our biology and evolutionary history. However, the initial results sparked some skepticism, prompting the research group to revisit the study in 2015. The findings provided solid evidence supporting the distinction between beat perception and statistical learning. This fascinating connection between music and our brains stands at the forefront of international research, embracing the complexities of our inherent musicality with promising possibilities. As the author and researcher Henkjan Honing concludes, “Music is not solely a cultural phenomenon but also possesses deep biological roots, apparently offering an evolutionary advantage to our species.” So next time you catch your foot tapping along to the rhythm, know that it’s more than just a catchy tune — it’s a part of who you are. { read more }

Be The Change

Share a meaningful piece of music with someone today.

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The Secret to Living Longer May Be Your Social Life

This week’s inspiring video: The Secret to Living Longer May Be Your Social Life
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Video of the Week

Jan 04, 2024
The Secret to Living Longer May Be Your Social Life

The Secret to Living Longer May Be Your Social Life

The Italian island of Sardinia has more than six times as many centenarians as the mainland and ten times as many as North America. Why? According to psychologist Susan Pinker, it’s not a sunny disposition or a low-fat, gluten-free diet that keeps the islanders alive so long – it’s their emphasis on close personal relationships and face-to-face interactions. Learn more about super longevity as Pinker explains what it takes to live to 100 and beyond. What are your regular practices for happy, healthy living and better aging?
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Life’s Present: Visits with my Mother and Demenita

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January 3, 2024

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Life's Present: Visits with my Mother and Demenita

You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment.

– Henry David Thoreau –

Life’s Present: Visits with my Mother and Demenita

In a touching reflection, Jackie Bailey shares heartwarming and intimate details about caring for her elderly mother, whose demeanor has softened with age and dementia. She muses, “It’s not that mum has simply forgotten all her old beefs. Getting older is making her brain kinder.” Citing studies on neuroimaging and the release of oxytocin, she asserts, “older people are kinder than the rest of us.” In one neuroimaging study, the brain’s reward center (i.e. the nucleus accubens) showed more activity for 75% of people aged 55 and older when they see money going to a charity, rather than to themselves, compared with less than 25% of younger people. Sprinkled with wisdom, humor, and acceptance, Bailey’s story is a lesson in patience, love and understanding. Letting go of past pains and stepping into her mother’s reality isn’t just a part of aging – it’s an opportunity for greater compassion. { read more }

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Practice accepting life’s subtle changes today.

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Perseverance: Nasa’s Mars Rover Celebrates 1,000 Days Of Science

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January 2, 2024

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Perseverance: Nasa's Mars Rover Celebrates 1,000 Days Of Science

Look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see, and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious.

– Stephen Hawking –

Perseverance: Nasa’s Mars Rover Celebrates 1,000 Days Of Science

Recently, NASA’s Perseverance rover has hit a major milestone, celebrating 1,000 Martian days of scientific exploration. In that time, it’s managed to survey an ancient crater lake and gather rock samples that could be clues to past life on Mars. But its mission is far from over, as the rover now faces the challenge of returning these invaluable samples to Earth. Perseverance has thus far collected 13 rock cores, each telling a distinct story about Mars’s history. The next phase of its journey is to explore even more ancient terrains. As Dr. Lori Glaze, NASA’s director of planetary science, puts it, “It’s a pretty incredible achievement and we’ve done an amazing amount of science.” So much has already been accomplished, and this audacious robotic mission is only just beginning. { read more }

Be The Change

Look up at the stars, and allow yourself to wonder about the greater questions of existence.

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May Your Cup Always Overflow

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Jan 1, 2024

May Your Cup Always Overflow

–John Paul Moore

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2536.jpgI’ve never made a fortune,
And I’ll never make one now
But it really doesn’t matter
‘Cause I’m happy anyhow.

As I go along my journey
I’m reaping better than I’ve sowed
I’m drinking from the saucer
‘Cause my cup has overflowed.

I don’t have a lot of riches,
And the going’s sometimes tough
But with kin and friends to love me
I think I’m rich enough.

I thank God for the blessings
That His mercy has bestowed
I’m drinking from the saucer
‘Cause my cup has overflowed.

He gives me strength and courage
When the way grows steep and rough
I’ll not ask for other blessings
For I’m already blessed enough.

May we never be too busy
To help bear another’s load
Then we’ll all be drinking from the saucer
When our cups have overflowed.

May your cup always overflow.

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66 Good News Stories You Didn’t Hear About in 2023

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January 1, 2024

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66 Good News Stories You Didn't Hear About in 2023

Bad things do happen in the world, like war, natural disasters, disease. But out of those situations always arise stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things.

– Daryn Kagan –

66 Good News Stories You Didn’t Hear About in 2023

Did you know a record number of countries eliminated diseases, from hepatitis C to malaria, this year? Or that a “staggering uptake” of wind and solar energy is making an enormous difference? The International Energy Agency (IEA) announced in October 2023 that global fossil fuel use may peak this year, two years earlier than predicted just 12 months ago. Trees are faring better, too, with 2023 deforestation rates across nine Amazonian countries at 55.8% lower than last year. In education, UNICEF reports 50 million more girls are in school today than in 2015. And around the world, access to electricity increased this year. While sensational stories in the news often informs us of all that’s going wrong in the world, Future Crunch reviewed 400 favorite stories of progress to offer up their top 66 list of things that have gone right in 2023. { read more }

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Share a story of something going right in the world.

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