Archive for August 2011

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

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4707

Dharma Quote from Snow Lion Publications

August 11, 2011
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Dharma Quote of the Week

Is Anger Beneficial?
We generally consider something beneficial if it promotes happiness. But when we ask ourselves, “Am I happy when I’m angry?” the answer is undoubtedly no. We may feel a surge of physical energy due to physiological reasons, but emotionally we feel miserable. Thus, from our own experience, we can see that anger does not promote happiness.

In addition, we don’t communicate well when we’re angry. We may speak loudly as if the other person were hard of hearing or repeat what we say as if he had a bad memory, but this is not communication. Good communication involves expressing ourselves in a way that the other person understands. It is not simply dumping our feelings on the other. Good communication also includes expressing our feelings and thoughts with words, gestures, and examples that make sense to the other person. Under the sway of anger, however, we neither express ourselves as calmly nor think as clearly as usual.

Under the influence of anger, we also say and do things that we later regret. Years of trust built with great effort can be quickly damaged by a few moments of uncontrolled anger…. If we could tame our anger, such painful consequences could be avoided.(p.23)

–from Working with Anger by Thubten Chodron, published by Snow Lion Publications

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(Good until August 19th).

7 Ways to Have More by Owning Less

August 11, 2011

Complete possession is proved only by giving. All you are unable to give possesses you. — Andre Gide

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Good News of the Day:
Stuff. We invariably accumulate it and often times develop a certain emotional attachment to it. To some extent, it’s the effect of increased marketing, but it is also our own conditioning. Fortunately, new digital platforms and cloud-based tools are making it increasingly easy to have many of the things we want without actually owning them. Because, as Wired founder and notable futurist Kevin Kelly once put it, “access is better than ownership.” Here are seven services that help shrink our carbon footprint, lighten our economic load and generally free us from the shackles of stuff — all through the power of sharing. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4706

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Be The Change:
Start a virtuous sharing cycle among friends, offering some things or services you have access to.

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4706

Secrets to Longevity

August 10, 2011

And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years. — Abraham Lincoln

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Tip of the Day:
They say that the key to a long life is eating well, exercising regularly and reducing stress. Now an eight-decade study indicates that this is only part of the equation. The Longevity Project tracked the lives of 1,500 boys and girls to explain how factors such as social connections, personality and marriage affect long-term health. The results flipped traditional logic on it’s head. “Take disposition, for example. Cheerful and optimistic children are actually less likely to live long lives, they found.” According to this NPR article, the findings clearly revealed that the best childhood personality predictor of longevity was conscientiousness. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4694

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Be The Change:
Take the longevity self-assessment at the bottom of the article. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4694a

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4694

The 3 Stages of Generosity

August 9, 2011

When you begin to touch your heart or let your heart be touched, you begin to discover that it’s bottomless. — Pema Chodron

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Good News of the Day:
How do you think about generosity? In this recent TEDx Talk, Nipun Mehta shares his experiences with generosity, broken down into three stages: Give, Receive, and Dance! When you give, you find that the compassion felt around you is contagious and it, in turn, creates a community. When you receive, you discover abundance, you realize generosity exists in so many different ways. And finally, when you dance, you give and receive with a natural rhythm, helping to create communities where generosity becomes the organizing principle. Then, giving becomes contagious. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4698

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Be The Change:
Give, Receive, Dance!

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4698

Going Beyond Profit

August 8, 2011

When you let go of trying to get more of what you don’t really need, it frees up oceans of energy to make a difference with what you have. — Lynne Twist

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Tip of the Day:
The simple for-profit model that has guided business practice in the past appears to be shifting towards a new paradigm. Profitability is important, but only when it serves the more fundamental goal of creating value for others through our gifts. And when a company’s strategy loses touch with this key principle, the potential for true value-creation is also lost. In this article, Decision Analyst Somik Raha also shifts the plane of inquiry to the personal level: “Are profits what motivate us to share our gifts?” The response he receives, “No! More and more, I find that those of us who wish to create value are already in the beyond-profit mindset, driven by a strong motivation of service through a channeling of our greatest creative gifts.” http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4683

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Be The Change:
Author Lynne Twist explores the soul of money in this short passage. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4683a

**Share A Reflection**
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Sister Cyril’s Compassionate Vision

August 7, 2011

Are you here to produce agents of human change among your children? Are you here to change the mental set of people? So even if you do it with a small number it spreads. After all, Mahatma Gandhi was only one man. — Sister Cyril Mooney

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Good News of the Day:
As principal of Loreto School in Calcutta, Irish Catholic nun Sister Cyril has worked some real-world miracles. Her school serves 1500 female students, of which 721 are so poor that they need food, medicines, 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. “The ripple effect” she’s demonstrating — founded on the belief that everyone receives to give — has helped to transform the school into a center for community development, one that is diverse academically, financially, culturally and even religiously. In 2007, Sister Cyril was awarded the Padmashri, one of India’s most prestigious awards, for having served over 450,000 street children. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4705

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Be The Change:
Consider the ways in which you have received from others, and then reach out to help someone in need today.

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4705

The ‘Before I Die’ Project

August 6, 2011

Do not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive. — Elbert Hubbard

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Tip of the Day:
Artist Candy Chang had an idea to turn an abandoned property in New Orleans into a sort of collective performance art piece in which all are invited to participate, simply by declaring what is important to them. Participants are invited to complete the sentence “Before I die I want to …” Chang has provided chalk, a large-scale blackboard, and the necessary permits. A thought-provoking piece of public art. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4695

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Be The Change:
One thing worth taking seriously is the question: Before I die I want to … ? Reflect with others here. http://www.dailygood.org/more.php?n=4695a

**Share A Reflection**
http://www.dailygood.org/view.php?qid=4695

Dalai Lama Quote from Snow Lion Publications

August 5, 2011
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Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

In Dzogchen, while thoughts are active, rigpa permeates them all, so that even at the very moment when powerful thoughts like attachment and aversion are arising, there remains a pervasive quality of clear light rigpa. Dodrupchen says, “in Dzogchen, since the clear light’s natural way of being is like the sun and its rays, inseparable, if you are able, through this, to bring out the radiance of genuine mind, you will be able to maintain the experience of clear light in meditation, without it fluctuating, or coming and going.”

Longchen Rabjam speaks of self-arising wisdom, which is in fact rigpa: “Self-arising wisdom is rigpa that is empty, clear and free from all elaboration, like an immaculate sphere of crystal. Its very being is such that it never explores objects of the senses.”

This “self-arising wisdom” is rigpa, which in essence is primordially pure. Longchenpa describes it as “empty and clear”. To call it empty is to refer to its essence, primordially pure. To call it clear is to speak of its nature, spontaneously present. As such, it is “free from all elaboration”, and free from the elaborations of adventitious phenomena. So it is like a flawless crystal sphere, and truly “its very being is such that it never explores objects of the senses”. (p.180-5)

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(Good until August 12th).

Video of the Week: Becoming Someone

August 5, 2011
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Video of the Week

Aug 05, 2011
Becoming Someone

Becoming Someone

“…so you’re looking for answers but you’re not entirely sure about the questions. But you know you have to become someone. A SOMEONE.” That’s how this short, whimsical film opens. With fabulous music by Stephane Wrembel and creative out-takes from book stores (including a cameo by the filmmaker’s dog!), this is a journey about becoming someone, no one, and paying attention.
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