Archive for June 2012

The Opposite of Poverty is Justice

June 20, 2012
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June 20, 2012

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The Opposite of Poverty is Justice

There is no Them. There are only facets of Us.

– John Green –

The Opposite of Poverty is Justice

Bryan Stevenson, a lawyer who spends most of his time in jails, prisons, on death row and in low-income communities, shares some hard truths about America’s criminal justice system, starting with a massive imbalance along racial lines: a third of young black men between the ages of 18 and 30 has been incarcerated at some point in their lives. In this video Bryan urges the TED audience to think about our identity as a nation. When we don’t think or care about the poor, we diminish the positive in our lives. “We cannot be full, evolved human beings until we care about basic human rights and dignity,” said Bryan at the end of his talk, stirring the audience to a standing ovation. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on one of Bryan Stevenson’s simple truths: “Each of us is more than the worst thing we’ve ever done.”

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InnerNet Weekly: The Spirit of Gift

June 19, 2012
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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
The Spirit of Gift
by Satish Kumar

[Listen to Audio!]

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We have learned much from the native Americans, the Australian Aboriginals, the indigenous people of India (adivasis) and the Bushmen of Africa. We have been guided by Jesus Christ, the Buddha, Mohammed and Mahavir. We have been inspired by Valmiki, Shakespeare, Tolstoy, Jane Austen and many other writers. We have benefited from the lives of Mahatma Gandhi, Mother Teresa and Martin Luther King.

They were not motivated by fame, fortune or power. Buddha claimed no copyright on his teachings, and Shakespeare received no royalty cheques. We have been enchanted by music, paintings, architecture and crafts of many cultures, from time immemorial. We have received a treasure house of traditions as a free gift. In return we offer our work, our creativity, our arts and crafts, our agriculture and architecture as gifts to society to present and future generations.

When we are motivated by this spirit then work is not a burden. It is not a duty. It is not a responsibility. We are not even the doers of our work. Work flows through us and not from us. We do not own our intellect, our creativity, or our skills. We have received them as a gift and grace. We pass them on as a gift and grace; it is like a river which keeps flowing. All the tributaries make the river great. We are the tributaries adding to the great river of time and culture; the river of humanity.

If tributaries stop flowing into the river, if they become individualistic and egotistical, if they put terms and conditions before they join the rivers, they
will dry and the rivers will dry too. To keep the rivers flowing all tributaries have to join in with joy and without conditions. In the same way, all individual arts, crafts and other creative activities make up the river of humanity. We need not hold back, we need not block the flow. This is unconditional union. This is the great principle of ‘dana’ (offering). This is how society and civilizations are replenished.

When we write a poem we make a gift. When we paint a picture or build a
beautiful house we make a gift. When we grow flowers and cook food we make a gift. When all these activities are performed as sacred acts, they nourish society. When we are unselfconscious, unacquisitive, and act without desire for recognition or reward, when our work emerges from a pure heart like that of a child, our actions become a gift.

–Satish Kumar, in You Are, Therefore I am

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The Spirit of Gift
What does the “spirit of a gift” mean to you? Can you share a story of gifts that you’ve received that make your heart swell and want to overflow? How do we develop our heart to be pure so gifting becomes effortless?
Conrad P Pritscher wrote: Thanks for the opportunity to respond. Satish must be a great person. My heart overflowed and became swollen when a poor man in a big city gave me the gift of allowing me to notice his loo…
David Doane wrote: The spirit of a gift is that it is a gift, not earned or deserved. As I see it, the process of the spirit of a gift starts with being true to myself, listening to my inner truth (which is …
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Some Good News

How to Speak More Wisely
Five Letters of Fatherly Advice
Rickshaw Puller Starts Clinic for the Poor

Video of the Week

The Opposite Of Poverty Is Justice

Kindness Stories

Best Day Of My Life
The Traffic Warden’s Toes
Dessert On The House

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On Seeking Stillness in Business

June 19, 2012
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June 19, 2012

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On Seeking Stillness in Business

Being still does not mean don’t move. It means move in peace.

– E’yen A. Gardner –

On Seeking Stillness in Business

Pico Iyer — essayist, author, travel writer and thinker — has a unique perspective on many things. His physical domain ranges from California (where he lived as a child) and England (where he studied) to Cuba, North Korea and Ethiopia (which he visited) and Japan (where he resides). His mental domain knows no limiting boundaries. In this interview with Knowledge@Wharton, Iyer spoke on an unusual topic — the value of silence and stillness amid the rush of business. If we spend too much time in the MTV rhythm, says Iyer, we won’t be able to cultivate the parts of us that need more slowness. { read more }

Be The Change

“Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence.” A beautiful, short passage by Max Ehrmann. { more }

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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 37

June 19, 2012
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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 37:
Transforming the Ego

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Kindness Daily: More than Lunch and a Bowl of Soup

June 18, 2012
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More than Lunch and a Bowl of Soup June 18, 2012 – Posted by wayfarer
Last year I bought lunch for a guy who had scraped his pennies together for a cup of tea. He rewarded me by telling me a little about his life, how he had lost the battle with drink but how faith had turned his life around. Now, when most men his age would be enjoying their retirement, he lived in a hostel and spent his time distributing religious tracts to shops, offices and strangers in the street.

Well, yesterday Julie and I were back in the same coffee shop. Julie looked over my shoulder and saw the same man, sitting there with a solitary cup of tea, dressed as he had been the time before despite the fact that the outside temperature was sub-zero.

We finished our bowls of piping hot soup with crusty bread then I got up and walked over. Knowing he would not remember me I sat down beside him and asked, "How’s God’s work going?"

He didn’t remember who I was but my question had told him what I was.

"God’s work is going as God’s work goes," he said. "Wonderfully."

"And how about you?"

He pursed his lips. "That doesn’t matter."

(As I write this I remember that he had told me the previous year he had some form of cancer.)

"Well, it does," I dared to suggest. "You need to be well to keep on doing the good work."

He shrugged.

"Like today," I said. "It’s freezing out there. And it takes a lot of energy to keep going on a day like this. I tell you what. My wife and I just had some of the soup and it was delicious. Really. It was so nice. Let me get you some so you can try it."

He raised a hand of protest, but I … well, I ignored him. A moment later I sat a hot bowl of soup, a bread roll, and butter in front of him.

"Enjoy!" I said, and walked back to my table before he had a chance to reply.

Julie and I finished our drinks and got our stuff together. As we walked past his table I patted the man’s shoulder and said, "Just know you are loved."

He started to say something, changed his mind and instead said, "I do know."

And we went on with our shopping. But this isn’t a story about how kind I was. The bowl of soup was the very least of it. It’s a reminder (as it was for me) that, even in these days) there are people out there, living alongside society, doing God’s work and being totally dependent on God for provision.

And for a brief time yesterday we got to be a small part of God’s provision for one of them!

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Quote of the Week | What is Prajña?

June 18, 2012

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Dharma Quote of the Week
June 18, 2012

WHAT IS PRAJÑA?

Prajña does not refer to passive knowledge, such as knowing facts from the Guiness Book of Records or knowing how to get from Seattle to New York. Rather, prajña is the active inquisitiveness of mind, its basic curiosity of wanting to know and wanting to find out how things really are. If we look at the Buddha’s own career, this is exactly how he started. He did not start with the answers or by following some religion, tradition, or code of behavior. He started with questions.

This is the hallmark of the Buddhist path—trying to find out what is really going on in every moment, what is going on in our mind, what is going on in our environment, and what is going on with other people. In this way, prajña entails basic intelligence, intelligence in its original meaning, which is deep insight and the ability to finely discriminate and distinguish things.

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Teachings excerpted from works published by Shambhala Publications and Snow Lion Publications.

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The Threshold Choir: Songs Bridging Life & Death

June 18, 2012
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June 18, 2012

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The Threshold Choir: Songs Bridging Life & Death

A song is a bridge between what we know, what we can feel, and the big mystery.

– Kate Munger –

The Threshold Choir: Songs Bridging Life & Death

“In November of 1990 I was invited to spend a day with a friend of mine who was dying of HIV Aids. He was comatose, but very agitated…I sat down by his bedside and didn’t know what to do. I waited and waited. All I knew to do, to calm myself, was to sing. So I sang one song and I sang it for two hours. I sang it over and over again. I watched his breathing slow, and he got much calmer. And I got much calmer…So as I got comfortable, he got comfortable and at the end of the experience I felt like I’d touched something very deep in myself and given a gift that was unique to me to give.” In this powerful interview Kate Munger, founder of the Threshold Choir, discusses her life’s passion. { read more }

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A short video that shows the Threshold Choir in action. { more }

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Five Letters of Fatherly Advice

June 17, 2012
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June 17, 2012

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Five Letters of Fatherly Advice

My father didn’t tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it.

– Clarence Budington Kelland –

Five Letters of Fatherly Advice

In honor of Father’s Day, celebrated blogger Maria Popova takes, “a moment to pay heed to some of the wisest, most heart-warming advice from history’s famous dads. Gathered here are five timeless favorites, further perpetuating my well-documented love of the art of letter-writing.” { read more }

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Wish a father Happy Father’s Day and ask him for his life advice.

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How to Speak More Wisely

June 16, 2012
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June 16, 2012

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How to Speak More Wisely

The words of the tongue should have three gatekeepers: Is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary?

– Arabian Proverb –

How to Speak More Wisely

“It had been three weeks since my throat started to feel sore, and it wasn’t getting better. The pain was most acute when I spoke. So I decided to spend a few days speaking as little as possible. Every time I had the urge to say something, I paused for a moment to question whether it was worth irritating my throat. This made me acutely aware of when and how I use my voice. Which led me to a surprising discovery: I spend considerable energy working against my own best interests. And if my experience listening to others is any indication, so do you.” { read more }

Be The Change

As you speak today, consider whether what you are saying is true, kind, and necessary.

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Quote of the Week | The Notion of Self

June 15, 2012

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Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

Learn More | Books and Audio | The Office of His Holiness
June 15, 2012

THE NOTION OF SELF

When we talk about the notion of self in Buddhism, it is important to bear in mind that there are different degrees or types. There are some types of sense of self which are not only to be cultivated but also to be reinforced and enhanced. For instance, in order to have a strong determination to seek buddhahood for the benefit of all sentient beings, one needs a very strong sense of confidence, which is based upon a sense of commitment and courage. This requires a strong sense of self. Unless one has that identity or sense of self, one will not be able to develop the confidence and courage to strongly seek this aim.

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