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Why to Get Published

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 29, 2023

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Why to Get Published

There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.

– Maya Angelou –

Why to Get Published

“Anyone who publishes a book is immediately asked versions of the same question, “How do you get published?”I have been asked by everyone from colleagues and former students to healthcare providers and complete strangers. Behind the question used to be the assumption that the published author has access to some secret, insider knowledge. A former editor of mine spoke occasionally at conferences, and told me he wondered if writers believed that there might be a magic font–Garamond 12.5!–that hypnotized acquisition editors into saying yes. It’s a simple question to ask but not easy to answer. You can be glib, of course, and give an answer like the punchline to the old joke about how to get to Carnegie Hall (“Practice!”). But it’s more complicated than that. Now with so many new platforms and venues, so many new ways to make written work public, I suspect that for all the writers frustrated and disappointed because they did not publish, that there are just as many who are published, and still are, if not bitter exactly, at least not entirely happy and satisfied. Whatever they thought was going to happen didn’t happen. Well, what did they think was going to happen? It strikes me as a real and important and fascinatingly complex question. What do you think is going to happen when you publish your book? What do any of us think is going to happen?…” Author Mick Cochrane shares more in this thoughtful piece. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this special session hosted by author and writing instructor Andy Couturier,”Strategies to Actually Complete a Book.” More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Reconciliation as a Way of Life: White Women & Settler Coloniali

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 28, 2023

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Reconciliation as a Way of Life: White Women & Settler Coloniali

In the end, reconciliation is a spiritual process, which requires more than just a legal framework. It has to happen in the hearts and minds of people.

– Nelson Mandela –

Reconciliation as a Way of Life: White Women & Settler Coloniali

A descendant of White settlers of Indigenous lands, Margaret Jacobs is an award-winning author and professor of history and gender studies who has focused for over two decades on Indigenous child removal and family separation. She studies the history of the American West in a transnational and comparative context with a focus on women, children, and families. Her Bancroft Prize-winning book, White Mother to a Dark Race (2009), concerns government-enforced removal of Indigenous children from their families, and the role of White as well as Indigenous women with respect to those policies. Her most recent projects delve into truth-telling, healing, and reconciliation efforts between Indigenous peoples and settlers, including through voluntary land repatriation. “I have come to see reconciliation not as a one-time effort,” she says. but “as a practice, as a way of life, in which all of us can engage” by uncovering the history of our land and place, and through sustained, respectful relationships…” { read more }

Be The Change

Join an Awakin Call this Saturday with Margaret Jacobs. More details and RSVP info here. { more }

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Gratitude

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 27, 2023

Gratitude

–Tiruvalluvar

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2514.jpgA good turn done is a heaven-born gift you cherish
Ask ‘Will (they) repay it?’ and it’ll perish
A helpful act howsoever slight
When timely, acquires true height

To help without thinking ‘What’s in it for me?’
Is to be, for the helped one, vaster than the sea
Help, like the millet seed, may itself be small
But its spirit stands like a palmyra tree, tall

Don’t judge help by its shape or size-‘is it large or is it small?’
See how it met a need, if it has met it at all
When with ill-fortune you feel mighty sore
Just recall the pure ones who helped you in your woe

You will in all your seven lives bless
Those who’ve helped you in your distress
If you’ve been helped, don’t forget it, not for a single day
But if you’ve been wronged, you must forget it-and right away!

When the wrong done to you hurts like a sore
Recall one good the wrong-doer may’ve done and forget the woe
Forget to do good and you may find salvation yet
But forget gratitude and you’re headed for destruction’s net

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What does gratitude mean to you? Can you share a personal story of gratitude for a kindness you have received? What helps you recall the good of even those you consider a ‘wrong-doer’?

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How Rituals Support Us

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 27, 2023

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How Rituals Support Us

Rituals are the formulas by which harmony is restored.

– Terry Tempest Williams –

How Rituals Support Us

“I dont know if I could have survived seven years of my childhood without the soul-saving rituals of my Persian culture. I grew up amid the Iran-Iraq War, which killed a million people. Besides the horrors of the war, freedom of thought and expression were severely restricted in Iran after the Islamic revolution. Women bore the brunt of this as, in a matter of months, we were forced to ditch our previous lifestyle and observe a strict Islamic attire, which covered our bodies and hair. We lost the right to jog, ride a bicycle, or sing in public. Life seemed unbearable at times, but we learned to bring meaning into uncertainty and chaos by maintaining grounding practices and developing new ones…” Research demonstrates that rituals can reduce anxiety, enhance performance– and even benefit those who don’t believe in them. Ari Honorvar shares more… { read more }

Be The Change

What are the rituals embedded in your own life? Take a moment to reflect on what they are, and the meaning they hold for you.

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Personal Integrity in C.P. Cavafy’s Poetry

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 26, 2023

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Personal Integrity in C.P. Cavafy's Poetry

From my most unnoticed actions,
my most veiled writing —
from these alone will I be understood.

– C.P. Cavafy –

Personal Integrity in C.P. Cavafy’s Poetry

“The current world situation, with war raging in the Middle East and Ukraine, presents a particular challenge to those people who wish to take a unified perspective one which goes beyond polarities and tribalism in search of justice and humanity. It is hard to know how to respond. At such a time, the gentle but insistent voice of Constantine Cavafy, the modern Greek poet, carries a welcome reminder that however extreme the external circumstances, there is always the path of keeping faith with the values and principles we know to be true. Although much of his poetry is based overtly upon the events and myths of the ancient world, editor and translator Andrew Watson, who has recently worked on a comprehensive new book about him for the Onassis Archive in Athens, explains that Cavafy’s underlying message is an eternal one, based upon a deep understanding of the human condition.” Andrew Watson pays homage to Greece’s most famous modern poet, whose message of quiet fidelity to one’s own values still has great resonance today. { read more }

Be The Change

Read a selection of Cavafy’s poems here. { more }

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A Family Reunion at the End of the World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 25, 2023

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A Family Reunion at the End of the World

Kindred spirits are not so scarce as I used to think. It’s splendid to find out there are so many of them in the world.

– Lucy Maud Montgomery –

A Family Reunion at the End of the World

“Have you ever been at a reunion or a big party, when the plates are empty and conversations wind down and you think about leaving? Then you hear peals of laughter, the clatter of dishes, and contagious giggles from behind the kitchen door. Thats where the real party is, as the aunties portion out leftovers to be taken home, scrape the dishes, and laugh with their hands in hot soapy water, snapping damp towels as they dry pots and pans. Its one thing to be invited to the party. Then you have a choice: to remain a polite guest in a distant armchair or to walk through that kitchen door and roll up your sleeves, to be washed in love and laughter…” Robin Wall Kimmerer shares more in this excerpt from “Kinship: Belonging in a World of Relations.” { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you find yourself at a large or small gathering experiment with rolling up your sleeves and walking through the kitchen door.

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Kinship is a Verb

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 24, 2023

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Kinship is a Verb

I think kinship is the opposite of alienation. I think kinship is the opposite of objectification of people, of the greater-than-human world. If we can see the moon as kin, what can’t we see as kin?

– John Hausdoerffer –

Kinship is a Verb

“In thinking about kinship, I think its important to begin with, What are the boundaries of our kin? We can go way internal and microscopic, down to the nerves that actually inform our brain more than our brain informs our bodies, right down to the microbes, not only managing our health but informing our way of being and interacting with the world. Then [we can go] all the way out, right to our own families, to the human and greater-than-human world, out to the cosmosthe fact that were made of stardust, right? Kinship reaches very far.” John Hausdoerffer, Robin Wall Kimmerer, and Gavin Van Horn, are the coeditors of the five-volume series ‘Kinship: Belonging in a World of Relations.’ More in this conversation between the trio. { read more }

Be The Change

How might you extend your circle of kinship today?

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Peace, Love and Good Food

This week’s inspiring video: Peace, Love and Good Food
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Nov 23, 2023
Peace, Love and Good Food

Peace, Love and Good Food

Ruqxana Vasanwala’s life exemplifies how cooking a good meal for someone can be an expression of love. Her cooking love is shared with friends and family and extends to her beloved cats as well. As much as Ruqxana enjoys making magic with her cooking, what brings her the most joy is serving her food and watching others relish it in a circle of shared love and enjoyment. It is not just about the food; it is about being present for each other, especially in times of need.
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Grateful: A Love Song to the World

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 23, 2023

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Grateful: A Love Song to the World

In ordinary life we hardly realize that we receive a great deal more than we give, and that it is only with gratitude that life becomes rich.

– Dietrich Bonhoeffer –

Grateful: A Love Song to the World

Musicians Nimo Patel and Daniel Nahmod brought together dozens of people from around the world to create this beautiful, heart-opening melody. Inspired by the 21-Day Gratitude Challenge, the song is a celebration of our spirit and all that is a blessing in life. For the 21 Days, over 11,000 participants from 118 countries learned that gratefulness is a habit cultivated consciously and a muscle built over time. As a famous Roman, Cicero, once said, Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others. This soul-stirring music video, created within a week by a team of volunteers, shines the light on all the small things that make up the beautiful fabric of our lives. { read more }

Be The Change

Share this video with family and friends today as a springboard to reflect collectively on all that each of you is grateful for.

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Metaphors of Movement

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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 22, 2023

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Metaphors of Movement

“Now shall I walk, or should I ride?

“Ride,” Pleasure said.

“Walk,” Joy replied.

– W.H. Davies –

Metaphors of Movement

“In his 1914 poem The Best Friend, the Welsh poet and occasional vagabond W.H. Davies pondered a timeless question: Now shall I walk, or should I ride? This seemingly simple dilemma encapsulates the modern industrial choice between slow-paced ageless wandering on foot or embracing the thrill of motorized transport, along with the attendant speed and freedom it offers, which has become such an integral part of our contemporary lifestyle. It likewise speaks volumes about us and about the nature of the choices we make daily…” { read more }

Be The Change

Make time for a walk today.

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