Archive for March 2012

3 Little Monks and a Moment of Truth

March 13, 2012

This is the miracle that happens every time to those who really love; the more they give, the more they possess. — Rainer Maria Rilke

~~~~
Inspiration of the Day:
“This is Ankur,” our host Sachi had said, with the catching enthusiasm she’s known and loved for, “He’s an amazing photographer and has recently gone totally ‘gift economy’.” Meaning that he offers his photography unconditionally as a gift, inviting recipients to ‘pay it forward.’ I look over at the young man seated in front of me. An unguarded face lit now by a smile both shy and warm. “What’s your experience been like so far?” I ask him. “Beautiful,” he says, “I love gifting people my work and having them let their heart decide how much to give.” “But what made you decide to work in this way?” I ask him. “Three eight-year-old monks stood on a cliff edge and saved my life,” responds Ankur, his voice bland and friendly, as if the occurrence he speaks of was the most natural thing in the world.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8DAE:C3009629A010612C8EE7B6D37164BEA7B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Write Ankur a note of appreciation and support.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8DAF:C3009629A010612C8EE7B6D37164BEA7B4B847859706E37D&

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8DB0:C3009629A010612C8EE7B6D37164BEA7B4B847859706E37D&

InnerNet Weekly: Nothing Left to Fight Against

March 13, 2012
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from CharityFocus.org
Nothing Left to Fight Against
by Zenkei Blanche Hartman

[Listen to Audio!]

789.jpg

During the Vietnam War, I was a political activist. I fought for peace. There was some contradiction. There wasn’t any peace in me. I hated the people who disagreed with me. That was a kind of war within myself. In 1968, I was just beginning to look at the way in which I was vigorously clinging to my opinions about things and denigrating others who had different opinions, when there was a strike at San Francisco State University.

The police came with their masks and clubs, started poking people. And without thinking, I ducked under the hands of people to get between the police and students. I met this riot squad policemen face-to-face with his mask on and everything. He was close enough to touch. I met this policeman’s eyes straight on, and I had this overwhelming experience of identification, of shared identity. "This was the most transformative moment of my life — having this experience of shared identity with the riot squad policeman. It was a gift. Nothing had prepared me for it. I didn’t have any conceptual basis for understanding it. The total experience was real and incontrovertible.

My life as a political activist ended with that encounter, because there was no longer anything to fight against. The way I described it to my friends was the policeman was trying to protect what he thought was right and good from all of the other people who were trying to destroy it — and I was doing the same thing. "Since I had no basis for understanding the experience of shared identity with someone whom I had considered complete "other" (i.e., the riot squad policeman), and because the experience had been so real and so powerful, I began to search for someone who would understand it. How could a riot squad policemen and I be identical? In my search I met Suzuki Roshi. The way he looked at me, I knew he understood. That’s how I got here [as an ordained monastic.]

–Zenkei Blanche Hartman, former abbess of the San Francisco Zen Center

Share the Wisdom:
Email Twitter FaceBook
Latest Community Insights New!
Nothing Left to Fight Against
Conrad P Pritscher wrote: Zenkei’s story is very touching. Thanks for sending it. My fights with my self are still ongoing. As I age and become wiser, the fights are less frequent and less fierce. I…
MomentofLearning wrote: I used to have arguments with peopl when I felt they were not following what is correct and value-oriented. This was a common ground for my being angry and expressing it too on few people. This was co…
David Doane wrote: It’s crucially important to have the experience/awareness/realization of shared identity, however it happens, whatever precipitates it. It’s important to get to the point of lookin…
Share/Read Reflections >>
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.

RSVP For Wednesday

Audio Reflections

From last week’s Bay-Area circle on Making Friends with the Present Moment

Some Good News

The Power of Introverts
9 Essential Skills Kids Should Learn
Five Tips For Making Travel Meaningful

Video of the Week

Charlie Chaplin: Let Us Free the World

Kindness Stories

Flowers For A Stranger

About
Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, CharityFocus blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start a Wednesday style meditation gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

Forward to a Friend

InnerNet Weekly is an email service that delivers a little bit of wisdom to 70,628 subscribers each week. We never spam nor do we host any advertising. Archives, from the last 10+ years, are freely available online.

You can unsubscribe anytime, within seconds.

A Gift Economy offering of CharityFocus.org (2008)

Year of Dancing with Life – Week 23

March 13, 2012
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 23:
Abandoning Attachment to Desire

To receive Phillip’s weekly teaching,
click here:
http://www.lifebalanceinstitute.com/
dharmawisdom/dancing-with-life/
teaching/abandoning-attachment-desire

May your study of this material deepen
your meditation practice and inspire
your dance with life.

If you are interested in studying Dancing with Life
in more depth, sign up to receive your on-line
study guide and other supplemental materials.

Office Workers Raise 5 Day Old Kitten

March 12, 2012

To know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived. This is to have succeeded — Ralph Waldo Emerson

~~~~
Good News of the Day:
“He was all soaking wet. The house had been power washed earlier but no one knew there was a baby kitty over in the bushes or that he had gotten wet. I cleaned him off with paper towels in case he had offensive tasting soap on him and put him back down and went back inside so the mama could get her baby. After much sitting there watching him cry, she walked away and didn’t come back. I ran over to Wal-Mart, got a kitten bottle and kitten replacement milk and took the baby home. I got up throughout the night to feed him and help him with his toilet needs and he slept in my drawer. That night, I thought, I will sneak him into the office in a shoe box on Friday morning.”
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8ADE:C3009629A010612C18D4F1DC0717BBC5B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Reach out with an act of kindness that might help make “one life breathe easier” today.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8ADF:C3009629A010612C18D4F1DC0717BBC5B4B847859706E37D&

How Language Enabled Innovation and Evolution

March 11, 2012

A different language is a different vision of life. — Federico Fellini

~~~~
Good News of the Day:
“How did ‘culture’ develop, exactly? Language, says evolutionary biologist Mark Pagel, was instrumental in enabling social learning — our ability to acquire evolutionarily beneficial new behaviors by watching and imitating others, which in turn accelerated our species on a trajectory of what anthropologists call ‘cumulative cultural evolution,’ a bustling of ideas successively building and improving on others. It might seem, then, that protecting our ideas would have been the best evolutionary strategy. Yet that’s not what happened — instead, we embraced this ‘theft,’ a cornerstone of remix culture, and propelled ourselves into a collaboratively crafted future of exponential innovation.”
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8AC3:C3009629A010612C7E2B874841F31A31B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Use language to enable innovation and collective evolution: share your best ideas freely today.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8AC4:C3009629A010612C7E2B874841F31A31B4B847859706E37D&

9 Essential Skills Kids Should Learn

March 10, 2012

He who learns teaches, he who teaches learns. — African proverb

~~~~
Tip of the Day:
“Unfortunately, I was educated in a school system that believed the world in which it existed would remain essentially the same, with minor changes in fashion. We had no idea what the world had in store for us. And here’s the thing: we still don’t. We never do. We have never been good at predicting the future, and so raising and educating our kids as if we have any idea what the future will hold is not the smartest notion. How then to prepare our kids for a world that is unpredictable, unknown? By teaching them to adapt, to deal with change, to be prepared for anything by not preparing them for anything specific. This requires an entirely different approach to child-rearing and education. It means leaving our old ideas at the door, and reinventing everything.” Author Leo Babauta shares further.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8936:C3009629A010612C33C84AF4CAF8E9D5B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Learn twice: teach a child in your life some life skills.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8937:C3009629A010612C33C84AF4CAF8E9D5B4B847859706E37D&

Video of the Week: Charlie Chaplin: Let Us Free the World

March 9, 2012
You’re receiving this newsletter because you are a KarmaTube subscriber.
Having trouble reading this mail? View it in your browser. Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe
KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 09, 2012
Charlie Chaplin: Let Us Free the World

Charlie Chaplin: Let Us Free the World

Some call it the greatest speech ever made. This remix puts Charlie Chaplin’s climactic address from “The Great Dictator” (1940) into present-day context, showing how the spirit of liberty, brotherhood, and equality that defeated fascism seven decades ago must be urgently reclaimed.
Watch Video Now Share: Email Twitter FaceBook

Related KarmaTube Videos

Smile Big
Meditate
Live It Up
Serve All

Magic of Free Parking

365 Grateful

Barrio De Paz: Peace Town

Shift –The Movie

About KarmaTube:
KarmaTube is a collection of inspiring videos accompanied by simple actions every viewer can take. We invite you to get involved.
Other ServiceSpace Projects:

DailyGood // Conversations // iJourney // HelpOthers

MovedByLove // CF Sites // Karma Kitchen // More

Thank you for helping us spread the good. This newsletter now reaches 41,884 subscribers.

The Suitcase That’s Saving Lives

March 9, 2012

Dare to reach out your hand into the darkness, to pull another hand into the light. — Norman B. Rice

~~~~
Good News of the Day:
What if your carry-on suitcase could save a woman’s life? In the fight against maternal mortality in the developing world, a rugged, portable “Solar Suitcase” is providing reliable electricity to clinics in 17 countries where healthcare workers previously struggled to provide emergency obstetric care by the light of candles, flashlights and mobile phones. The Solar Suitcase powers medical LED lights, headlamps, mobile phones, computers and medical devices. In this National Geographic article, obstetrician Laura Stachel, Co-Founder of the non-profit WE CARE Solar, talks about the impact of a simple solar solution on emergency obstetrics.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A874E:C3009629A010612C9F91698445DF5E81B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Read more about the impact We Care Solar’s work has had in different parts of the world.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A874F:C3009629A010612C9F91698445DF5E81B4B847859706E37D&

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8750:C3009629A010612C9F91698445DF5E81B4B847859706E37D&

The Kindness Boomerang

March 8, 2012

There is no greater joy nor greater reward than to make a fundamental difference in someone’s life. — Sr. Mary Rose McGeady

~~~~
Good News of the Day:
What goes around comes around. This charming short film depicts the ripple-effect of kind acts — the way in which receiving an unexpected moment of generosity from a stranger can cause us to become more aware of the needs of those around us and to take action to become a vector of goodness.
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8627:C3009629A010612C0D78AECB2D166FF1B4B847859706E37D&

~~~~
Be The Change:
Set ripples in motion by doing a small act of kindess for a stranger today.

**Share A Reflection**
http://premiere.whatcounts.com/t?ctl=16A8628:C3009629A010612C0D78AECB2D166FF1B4B847859706E37D&

Dalai Lama Quote from Snow Lion Publications

March 7, 2012
Snow Lion Publications

Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

Nature’s law dictates that, in order to survive, bees must work together. As a result, they instinctively possess a sense of social responsibility. They have no constitution, no law, no police, no religion or moral training, but because of their nature, they labor faithfully together. Occasionally, they may fight, but in general, based on cooperation, the whole colony survives.

We human beings have a constitution, laws and a police force. We have religion, remarkable intelligence and a heart with a great capacity for love. We have many extraordinary qualities, but in actual practice, I think we are lagging behind those small insects. In some respects I feel we are poorer than the bees.

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