Archive for March 2012

An Indomitable Healing Spirit

March 27, 2012

As we live our truths, we will communicate across all barriers, speaking for the sources of peace. Peace that is not lack of war, but fierce and positive. — Muriel Rukeyser

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Good News of the Day:
For the past two years, James O’Dea has synthesized his remarkable life experience into what he calls “social healing”. A former Director of Amnesty International’s Washington, DC office and President of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, O’Dea’s journey has taken him through both the depths of human suffering — and it’s transcendence. Along the way he has been wrestling with profound questions: What does it take for an individual, community and a nation to heal itself? This enriching conversation with O’Dea explores the roots of this tangled question and surfaces poignant reflections on the roles of forgiveness and service in healing the wounds of our world.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16AA246:C3009629A010612C82B9F015DF09610BB4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
Heal a small wound from the inside out, starting with yourself, your family or your community.

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InnerNet Weekly: An Ego Strategy to Avoid Surrender

March 27, 2012
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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
An Ego Strategy to Avoid Surrender
by Eckhart Tolle

[Listen to Audio!]

791.jpgWhat is conventionally called “love” is an ego strategy to avoid surrender. You are looking to someone to give you that which can only come to you in the state of surrender. The ego uses that person as a substitute to avoid having to surrender. The Spanish language is the most honest in this respect. It uses the same verb, te quiero, for “I love you” and “I want you.” To the ego, loving and wanting are the same, whereas true love has no wanting in it, no desire to possess or for your partner to change.

The ego singles someone out and makes them special. It uses that person to cover up the constant underlying feeling of discontent, of “not enough,” of anger and hate, which are closely related. These are facets of an underlying deep seated feeling in human beings that is inseparable from the egoic state.When the ego singles something out and says “I love” this or that, it’s an unconscious attempt to cover up or remove the deep-seated feelings that always accompany the ego: the discontent, the unhappiness, the sense of insufficiency that is so familiar.

For a little while, the illusion actually works. Then inevitably, at some point, the person you singled out, or made special in your eyes, fails to function as a cover up for your pain, hate, discontent or unhappiness which all have their origin in that sense of insufficiency and incompleteness. Then, out comes the feeling that was covered up, and it gets projected onto the person that had been singled out and made special – who you thought would ultimately “save you.” Suddenly love turns to hate.

The ego doesn’t realize that the hatred is a projection of the universal pain that you feel inside. The ego believes that this person is causing the pain. It doesn’t realize that the pain is the universal feeling of not being connected with the deeper level of your being – not being at one with yourself.The object of love is interchangeable, as interchangeable as the object of egoic wanting. Some people go through many relationships. They fall in love and out of love many times. They love a person for a while until it doesn’t work anymore, because no person can permanently cover up that pain.Only surrender can give you what you were looking for in the object of your love.

The ego says surrender is not necessary because I love this person. It’s an unconscious process of course. The moment you accept completely what is, something inside you emerges that had been covered up by egoic wanting. It is an innate, indwelling peace, stillness, aliveness. It is the unconditioned, who you are in your essence. It is what you had been looking for in the love object. It is yourself. When that happens, a completely different kind of love is present which is not subject to love / hate. It doesn’t single out one thing or person as special.

–Eckhart Tolle

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An Ego Strategy to Avoid Surrender
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Thank you for the opportunity to respond. I have two Tollle books and three CD packages. He is wonderful and he has been a great influence in my living. I am not "pr…
A wrote: This is so precisely right-on that it’s stunning. And the timing of reading this is perfect for me. Much gratitude to those who selected this week’s reading!

Recently I’ve been musing a l…

Edit Lak wrote: So true, so true… Indeed, so true.. I have spent my life in failed relationships, because from an early age were taught to ‘fall in love with people, right; But no one taught or teaches us…
Manisha wrote: Although Eckhart Tolle uses the word "someone" throughout the text, what I found revealing is the last sentence where he uses "thing or person" almost synonymously, to suggest that…
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Wednesday Meditation:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and later became “Wednesdays”, which now ripple out to living rooms around the world. To join, RSVP online.

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Audio Reflections

From last week’s Bay-Area circle on Living Lessons of Biomimicry

Some Good News

An Ordinary Magical Life
The Dash Between The Years
Meditation: A Compass and a Path

Video of the Week

Find No Enemy

Kindness Stories

Using My Hobby To Help The Homeless
A Little ‘Game of Good’
Breakfast For A Tired Mom

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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 25

March 27, 2012
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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 25:
How to Abandon Clinging

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The Dash Between The Years

March 26, 2012

Nobody can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today and make a new ending. — Maria Robinson

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Good News of the Day:
“While busy with work and deadlines and feeling somewhat under pressure, I was sent an advertisement for some inspirational books, one of which included the poem below. When I first glanced at the title, I assumed it was a poem about the race and rush of life, but as I read on it stopped me dead in my tracks and brought tears to my eyes. I had just snapped at a family member and didn’t take notice when she tried to get my attention. I stopped what I was doing and went over to give a hug to the person I talked to so sharply, and sat down to talk with her. Not only did it clear the air between us and made her feel a whole lot better, but my own mood also brightened.” A real-world story and a poem about life.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9F64:C3009629A010612C786A1EED8ACD5F59B4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
Live this day with a heightened awareness of how precious it really is.

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A Chinese Living Water Garden

March 25, 2012

It’s a rare fish that knows it swims in water. — Old Adage

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Good News of the Day:
Water is art activist Betsy Damon’s passion. She was studying sacred springs in China when she began meeting individuals interested in water from a variety of angles: medicine, hydraulic engineering, spirituality. This unique collaboration led to an invitation to review a major water project in Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan. Because of her critique, the project was actually scrapped. But then Damon was asked to design a new project — which actually got built. Stretching along the Yangtze River and serving Chengdu’s roughly 10 million citizens, it’s the first municipal living water garden in the world — “Polluted river water moves through a natural, and artistic treatment system of ponds, filters and flowforms, making the process of cleaning water visible.”
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9F0A:C3009629A010612CBE3500D882E85341B4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
Check out the Living Water Garden gallery at Betsy Damon’s website:
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9F0B:C3009629A010612CBE3500D882E85341B4B847859706E37D&

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Kindness Daily: A Little ‘Game of Good’

March 24, 2012
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A Little ‘Game of Good’ March 24, 2012 – Posted by kcsmiles
For the last two and a half years I have been giving out Smile Cards whenever I find an opportunity.

I am sad to admit that my family and I are homeless, we live in a trailer which we were so kindly given by a family member. During this period, I have given out over 200 Smile Cards. I have always tried to find something kind to do, even when my husband lost his job and we were fighting to get by.

I have started giving out coupons for free food, plus money for people to get at least one meal, on me. I always put my coupon, gift and Smile Card in a envelope that says "For whoever finds this".

Once I left an envelope on someone’s work truck and got back into our trailer. I just happened to look out at the bus later and I saw the guy open my envelope and find the gift. He read the card and then he looked around to see who had done this. I just smiled to myself, without being found out. I always leave my gifts where people will find them, but never see me do it – I like it to be anonymous.

Today I saw a car on the side of the highway with the hazard lights on. Further up the road, I saw a young couple walking beside the highway. I pulled over and asked them if they needed a ride to the next exit, after a second the guy said they could really use the ride. They said "thank you" when I dropped them off at the exit. I try to help others when I can, and sometimes no smile card is needed or given.

It’s my little "game of good" and I really enjoy doing it and I hope to keep doing it!

Smiles and Blessings to all!

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The Empathic Civilization

March 24, 2012

The functions of intellect are insufficient without courage, love, friendship, compassion, and empathy. — Dean Koontz

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Good News of the Day:
We humans are soft-wired for sociability and affection, wanting to belong and to empathize. The question is “Can we extend our empathy to the entire human race and biosphere?” Bringing in recent insights from fields like neuroscience to anthropology, author and social thinker Jeremy Rifkin’s maps out a solution in a stunningly visual and cohesive way. In this ten-minute video, he defines the empathic civilization — and suggests that if we can imagine that possibility, we can save our species and our planet. “Empathy is grounded in the acknowledgment of death and the celebration of life, and rooting for each other to flourish and be … the ability to show solidarity not only with each other, but our fellow creatures.”
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9E40:C3009629A010612CE64A8F981ED85A3EB4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
As you use your intellect today, make a conscious effort to add in courage, love, friendship, compassion, and empathy.

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Dalai Lama Quote from Snow Lion Publications

March 23, 2012
Snow Lion Publications

Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

Courageous Bodhisattvas risk their lives to help others, and so, when we are in relatively better, more comfortable situations, we must certainly practice giving. Even if they are threatened, the courageous ones will not engage in improper actions. Instead, after examining the situation carefully, when they find that certain actions are correct and justified, on the basis of reason, they engage in them even at the risk of their lives. That is the way of the decent, civilized and courageous ones, who do not follow misleading paths.(p.20)

–from Generous Wisdom: Commentaries by H.H. the Dalai Lama XIV on the Jatakamala, Garland of Birth Stories by H.H. the 14th Dalai Lama, translated by Tenzin Dorjee, edited by Dexter Roberts

Generous Wisdom • Now at 4O% off!

Video of the Week: Find No Enemy

March 23, 2012
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Video of the Week

Mar 23, 2012
Find No Enemy

Find No Enemy

Akala’s lengthy hip-hop poem is somber and clear-eyed in its disappointment with race-relations, global politics, and contemporary culture. And yet it retains both hopefulness and an action-plan. “The only way you can change anything,” he slams, “is to look in the mirror and find no enemy.”
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Recovering the Heart of Medicine

March 23, 2012

Recovering the sacred is remembering something we’ve forgotten, something we may have hidden from ourselves. It is about uncovering and discovering the innate wholeness in ourselves and in the world. — Dr. Naomi Rachel Remen

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Inspiration of the Day:
“Our modern view of disease is that disease is centered in the body. The older view of disease is that it is soul loss, a loss of connection, of meaning, of purpose, of essence. If this is so, the real task of the medical system is to heal soul loss, to aid in the retrieval of the soul. What is needed is not to develop more of a spiritual practice or to go to church more. Our task is to recognize that we are always on sacred ground, that there is no split between the sacred and secular. That there is no task that is not sacred in nature and no relationship that is not sacred in nature. Life is a spiritual practice. Health care, which serves life, is a spiritual practice.” Renowned medical leader Dr. Naomi Rachel Remen shares more about recovering the heart of medicine.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9C5D:C3009629A010612C5F8543B37C45F823B4B847859706E37D&

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Be The Change:
An inspiring story of UCSF’s Dr. BJ Miller, someone whose own journey of healing led him to serving others in healing.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A9C5E:C3009629A010612C5F8543B37C45F823B4B847859706E37D&

**Share A Reflection**
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