Archive for July 2012

Video of the Week: Danny and Annie

July 13, 2012
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Video of the Week

Jul 13, 2012
Danny and Annie

Danny and Annie

This StoryCorps video tells the greatest love story ever. Funny, touching, and incisive, Danny and Annie are unusually thoughtful and candid in expressing their affection — from their very first date to the time of Danny’s death.
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Vanishing Voices: The World’s Endangered Languages

July 13, 2012
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July 13, 2012

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Vanishing Voices: The World's Endangered Languages

A different language is a different vision of life.

– Federico Fellini –

Vanishing Voices: The World’s Endangered Languages

“One language dies every 14 days. By the next century nearly half of the roughly 7,000 languages spoken on Earth will likely disappear, as communities abandon native tongues in favor of English, Mandarin, or Spanish. What is lost when a language goes silent?” This in-depth National Geographic feature probes the beauty, significance, richness and fragility of the world’s vanishing tongues. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn some of these 21 untranslatable words from the TED Blog, including the Italian word “fattapposta” 🙂 { more }

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Kindness Daily: The Gift Of A Bathroom

July 12, 2012
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The Gift Of A Bathroom July 12, 2012 – Posted by rajaratnamjones
They were a family of nine; the father, mother, two boys, and five girls. The father worked as kitchen cleaner at a local school and the rest of the family help supplement his income by cleaning people’s yards. They were a very poor family.

Then the father lost his job at the school!

He asked that I take him on to clean our yard. Realizing his situation, I offered him the job. He and his family came to our house three times a week to clean the yard.

Early one morning the father suffered a stroke and died in the hospital. The poor family had lost their main bread-winner. The oldest boy had just completed school and was getting ready to go to college. The others were just little kids.

We stepped up and did all our best to help make sure the family got their education, and provided some daily needs, like clothes, and so on.

I visited this family once and came to understand that they did not have a toilet in their home. Imagine! A mother, a fifteen year old girl, and four smaller children without a toilet or bathroom!

One of my friends came to my house and I told him I wanted to do something about this. He provided some money and, together, we built a bathroom and a toilet for this family.

This random act of kindness brought a lot of smiles and happiness to the family.

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Learning from the Wisdom of the Body

July 12, 2012
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DailyGood News That Inspires

July 12, 2012

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Learning from the Wisdom of the Body

Good for the body is the work of the body, good for the soul the work of the soul, and good for either the work of the other.

– Henry David Thoreau –

Learning from the Wisdom of the Body

“It’s amazing that our interpretation of experiences can generate intense visceral responses. The fact that we get goosebumps when we are inspired or afraid is one of many everyday indicators of just how deeply and intricately connected our minds and bodies are. In fact, the mind and body are an intertwined whole — and there is great wisdom in the totality of our mind-body experience. There are sparks of this recognition even in the world of technology. An increasing number of tools leverage something called “feedback loops.” Some of these are bio-feedback devices that work by helping us become more aware of the body, giving us real-time feedback about physiological functions so that we can learn to consciously change them. They’ve been effective in improving many conditions, including stress, depression and even pain. But there are even more powerful feedback loops at work within ourselves….” { read more }

Be The Change

As you go through your day, pay special attention to the relationship between mind and body.

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Google’s Jolly Good Fellow on Inner Peace

July 11, 2012
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July 11, 2012

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Google's Jolly Good Fellow on Inner Peace

Looking for peace is like looking for a turtle with a mustache: You won’t be able to find it. But when your heart is ready, peace will come looking for you.

– Ajahn Chah –

Google’s Jolly Good Fellow on Inner Peace

Chade-Meng Tan (widely known as Meng) was among the earliest engineers to be hired at Google. When Google allowed engineers to spend 20% of their time pursuing their passion, Meng decided to spend his time on a cause dear to his heart: Launching a conspiracy to bring about world peace. Meng believes that world peace can be achieved — but only if people cultivate the conditions for inner peace within themselves. Working with Zen masters, meditation teachers, psychologists and even a CEO, Meng created a seven-week personal growth program called — Search Inside Yourself (SIY). In this Knowledge@Wharton interview the man who was dubbed Google’s Jolly Good Fellow shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

“The life of peace is like an international flight permitting only one handbag. You’ll have to leave behind some of your cherished shoes and appliances.” { more }

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Kindness Daily: Man in the Rain

July 10, 2012
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Man in the Rain July 10, 2012 – Posted by djorn
One rainy night I was driving along a lonely highway. Ahead of me, I saw a man, shoulders hunched, walking rapidly along the side of the road. It was pouring rain and I slowed down to avoid splashing him as I went by.

He misunderstood, thought I was offering a ride, and ran towards my car. He was very tall, had a full beard, and he scared me. I stepped on the gas pedal to leave quickly, and I saw the look of total dispair in his eyes.

Suddenly, all fear was gone and I backed up and unlocked my car door, praying this was not the biggest mistake in my life but somehow knowing it would be okay.

The man was a plumber. His truck had got stuck in the mud. He had been walking for miles. No one would pick him up and his wife was in the hospital in labor with their first child!!

He had cried at the thought he might not be there.

We arrived at the hospital moments before his son was born!

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Starting A Slow Story Movement

July 10, 2012
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July 10, 2012

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Starting A Slow Story Movement

There is more to life than increasing its speed.

– Mohandas K. Gandhi –

Starting A Slow Story Movement

“It is said that we become the stories that we tell among ourselves. This might have been true before we became salespersons. For a few decades now, I think we have become numb to the stories that we tell among ourselves. So stories have become shorter and crisper to the length of a tweet. We are so committed to telling a story to the point that finally what remains is a dimensionless point. There is no point in concentrating on a single point. The meaning of a point arises from meandering between the point and its natural circumference. It is within that arena, somewhere, my story becomes yours. ” This thought-provoking article explores the need in today’s world for a Slow Story Movement. { read more }

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Tell an old friend, family member, colleague or even a stranger a slow story today.

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InnerNet Weekly: A Walk in the Rain

July 10, 2012
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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
A Walk in the Rain
by Paul Foster

[Listen to Audio!]

807.jpgAs the story goes, I was walking through the rain on a cold Autumn evening in Oxford. The sky was getting dark; I was wrapped up warm in my new coat. And suddenly and without warning, the search for something more apparently fell away, and with it all separation and loneliness.

And with the death of separation, I was everything that arose: I was the darkening sky, I was the middle aged man walking his golden retriever, I was the little old lady hobbling along in her waterproofs. I was the ducks, the swans, the geese, the funny looking bird with the red streak on its forehead. I was the trees in all their autumnal glory, I was the sludge sticking to my feet, I was my body, all of it, arms and legs and torso and face and hands and feet and neck and hair and genitals, the whole damn lot. I was the raindrops falling on my head (although it was not my head, I did not own it, but it was undeniably there, and so to call it "my head" is as good as anything). I was the splish-splash of water on the ground, I was the water collecting into puddles, I was the water swelling the pond until it looked fit to burst its banks, I was the trees soaked by water, I was my coat soaked by water, I was the water soaking everything, I was everything being soaked, I was the water soaking itself.

And everything that for so long had seemed so ordinary had suddenly become so extraordinary, and I wondered if, in fact, it hadn’t been this way all along: that perhaps for my whole life it had been this way, so utterly alive, so clear, so vibrant. Perhaps in my lifelong quest to reach the spectacular and the dramatic, I had missed the ordinary, and with it, and through it, and in it, the utterly extraordinary.

And the utterly extraordinary on this day was awash with rain, and I was not separate from any of it, that is to say, I was not there at all. As the old Zen master had said upon hearing the sound of the bell ringing, "there was no I, and no bell, just the ringing", so it was on this day: there was no "I" experiencing this clarity, there was only the clarity, only the utterly obvious presenting itself in each and every moment.

Of course, I had no way of knowing any of this at the time. At the time, thought was not there to claim any of this as an “experience”. There was just what was happening, but no way of knowing it. The words came later.

And there was an all-pervading feeling that everything was okay with the world, there was an equanimity and a sense of peace which seemed to underlie everything there was; it was as though everything was simply a manifestation of this peace, as if nothing existed apart from peace, in its infinite guises. And I was the peace, and the duck over there was it too, and the wrinkly old lady still waddling along was the peace, and the peace was all around, everything just vibrated with it, this grace, this presence that was utterly unconditional and free, this overwhelming love that seemed to be the very essence of the world, the very reason for it, the Alpha and the Omega of it all.

–Paul Foster, in ‘Beyond Awakening

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A Walk in the Rain
What shifts occur(or have already occurred) in your worldview if you accept the author’s premise – there is a sense of peace that underlies everything that is? Have you had an experience of coming in touch with “an all-pervading feeling that everything was okay with the world”? What does “grace” and “presence that was utterly unconditional and free” mean to you?
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Paul Foster is a wonderful writer. I have difficulty adding anything more. When one is one, the way that can be said is not the way. Desiring nothing can be peaceful. As Gandhi said:…
JPSingh wrote: It is a most difficult state for anyone to achieve. Still more difficult to comprehend There is no desire for reaching, arriving or seeking. There is no goal. The player,goal-post,goal kee…
Ricky wrote: When you change your language, your choice of words, your focus, you are able to articulate the ideas that arise in this article. As we change our view of our presence here from ‘it’…
Thierry wrote: What a wonderful happening and what a paradox. But to walk around with the desire to have such an "experience" is precisely desiring the ‘more’. That ca…
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Year of Dancing with Life – Week 40

July 10, 2012
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Dharma Wisdom: An integral approach to practicing the Buddha's teachings in daily life.
Week 40:
The Way to End Your Suffering

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Quote of the Week | Taking Care of Others

July 9, 2012

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Dharma Quote of the Week
July 9, 2012

TAKING CARE OF OTHERS

Taking care of others can be done with two very different motivations. WIth one, we care for others in an unhealthy way, seemingly sacrificing ourselves, but really acting out of fear or attachment. People who are attached to praise, reputation, relationships, and so forth and who fear losing these may seemingly neglect their own needs to take care of others. But in fact, they are protecting themselves in an unproductive way. Their care comes not from genuine love, but from a self-centered attempt to be happy that is actually making them more unhappy.

The other way of taking care of others is motivated by genuine affection, and this is what the Buddha encouraged. This kind of affection and respect for others doesn’t seek or expect something in return. It is rooted in the knowledge that all other beings want to be happy and to avoid pain just as much as we do.

EXCERPTED FROM

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Buddhism for Beginners by Thubten Chodron, page 32.

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