Archive for August 12, 2011

Dalai Lama Quote from Snow Lion Publications

August 12, 2011
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Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

There is an Indian saying: if you are struck by a poisonous arrow, it is important first to pull it out, there is no time to ask who shot it, what sort of poison it is and so on. First handle the immediate problem, and later we can investigate. Similarly, when we encounter human suffering, it is important to respond with compassion rather than question the politics of those we help. Instead of asking whether their country is enemy or friend, we must think, “These are human beings, they are suffering, and they have a right to happiness equal to our own.”

Our attitude towards suffering is very important because it can affect how we cope with it when it arises. Our usual attitude consists of an intense aversion and intolerance of our own pain and suffering. However, if we can transform our attitude, adopt an attitude that allows us greater tolerance of it, this can do much to help counteract feelings of mental unhappiness, dissatisfaction and discontent. (p.92)

–from The Pocket Dalai Lama by the Dalai Lama, compiled and edited by Mary Craig

The Pocket Dalai Lama • Now at 2O% off
(Good until August 19th).

Video of the Week: Sister Cyril of Calcutta

August 12, 2011
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Video of the Week

Aug 12, 2011
Sister Cyril of Calcutta

Sister Cyril of Calcutta

As principal of Loreto School in Calcutta, Irish Catholic nun Sister Cyril has worked some real-world miracles. Her school serves 1,500 female students, of which 721 are so poor that they need food, medicine, and even money to meet the rent. By bringing children together like this, she is showing a way for middle class schools to integrate the poor living around them into their educational mainstream, to their mutual benefit. When Sister Cyril was awarded the Padmashri, India’s highest civilian award, for having served over 450,000 street children, she was asked about her message to people. She immediately responded: “Give what you have received freely and the reward is hundred-fold.”
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The Pay-It-Forward Little Libraries

August 12, 2011

A library outranks any other one thing a community can do to benefit its people. It is a never failing spring in the desert. — Andrew Carnegie

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Good News of the Day:
Bigger than a breadbox, homier than a newspaper box and more surprising than a bookmobile, the Little Library is popping up all over town. On bike paths. Outside coffee shops. In the front yards of private homes. Stocked with books ranging from academic texts to children’s classics, music instruction and gardening magazines, each two-by-two-foot Little Library bears the same simple message: “Take a book. Leave a book.” The brainchild of Rick Brooks of Madison and Todd Bol of Hudson, the Little Library has found a home in more than 20 spots in Wisconsin since last summer and is spreading to communities in states from Minnesota to New York. In an era of laptop screens and eBooks, happening upon a Little Library can have its own special magic. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4707

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Be The Change:
Check out the “Build a Library” section of the Little Libraries website. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4707a

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