Archive for November 2012

Transforming Bullies — with Babies

November 10, 2012
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November 10, 2012

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Transforming Bullies -- with Babies

Every child begins the world again.

– Henry David Thoreau –

Transforming Bullies — with Babies

“Teacher Raya patrols a group of giggly kindergarten students, looking each so deeply in the eye that many squirm and bashfully reach for her toes. Her father carries her in his arms. Raya is not quite five months old. She’s teaching them about being kind and how to talk about their feelings so that later, they don’t terrorize each other. Teacher Raya, as they call her, is a “volunteer” with Roots of Empathy, the country’s oldest and largest anti-bullying program.” { read more }

Be The Change

The next time you run into someone you find hard to get along with, try kindling empathy by imagining (or remembering) what they were like as an infant.

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Kindness Daily: Some People Do Survive

November 9, 2012
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Some People Do Survive November 9, 2012 – Posted by dutchie
Inspired by this site, I let the woman behind me in the line at the check-out go first because she looked sick. She then told me she had been diagnosed with a brain tumor that very morning!

We talked a bit. I told her to stay strong and that some people do survive a brain tumor. I didn’t tell her my mom just past away from the same thing. Then I paid for her groceries.

She teared up and gave me a big hug. Even the cashier and other people in the line had tears in their eyes. I felt it was the least I could do for her.

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Quote of the Week | Sincere Human Beings

November 9, 2012

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Dalai Lama Quote of the Week

Learn More | Books and Audio | The Office of His Holiness
November 9, 2012

SINCERE HUMAN BEINGS

We Buddhists are supposed to save all sentient beings, but practically speaking, this may be too broad a notion for most people. In any case, we must at least think in terms of helping all human beings. This is very important. Even if we cannot think in terms of sentient beings inhabiting different worlds, we should nonetheless think in terms of the human beings on our own planet. To do this is to take a practical approach to the problem. It is necessary to help others, not only in our prayers, but in our daily lives. If we find we cannot help another, the least we can do is to desist from harming them. We must not cheat others or lie to them. We must be honest human beings, sincere human beings.

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Video of the Week: Hanging in the Balance: The Future of a Forest

November 9, 2012
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Video of the Week

Nov 09, 2012
Hanging in the Balance: The Future of a Forest

Hanging in the Balance: The Future of a Forest

Scientists believe that we are at a tipping point of deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest, the largest contiguous tropical forest in the world. If we lose much more, the damage may be irreversible. The Amazon is a vast storehouse of biodiversity and plays a critical role in regulating global climate. Today, nearly one fifth of the Amazon has been cleared. This video describes some of the extraordinary efforts being undertaken by social entrepreneurs and stewards of the rainforest that have made a considerable difference to reducing deforestation. Over the last 5 years, Brazil has managed to reduce the rate of deforestation by 80%. However, new regulations threaten to reverse this trend.
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Is Time Really Money?

November 9, 2012
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November 9, 2012

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Is Time Really Money?

Time is too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice, but for those who love, time is eternity.

– Henry Van Dyke –

Is Time Really Money?

“Time is money in the West. Workers are paid by the hour, lawyers charge by the minute, and advertising is sold by the second ($117,000 per second at this year’s Super Bowl). Think about this: The civilized mind has reduced time, the most obscure and amorphous of all intangibles, to the most objective of all quantities — money. With time and things on the same value scale, I can tell you how many of my working hours equal the price of the computer I am typing on. Can I really?” Robert Levine shares more in this thought-provoking piece. { read more }

Be The Change

“It doesn’t interest me what you do for a living. I want to know what you ache for, and if you dare to dream of meeting your heart’s longing.” A poem by Oriah Mountain Dreamer: { more }

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98-Year-Old Woman Earns Judo’s Highest Honor

November 8, 2012
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November 8, 2012

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98-Year-Old Woman Earns Judo's Highest Honor

You cannot dream yourself into a character: you must hammer and forge yourself into one.

– Henry David Thoreau –

98-Year-Old Woman Earns Judo’s Highest Honor

“Is earning a black belt on your life list? Then this elderly woman in San Francisco just might be your ultimate hero. Just two years before her 100th birthday, Sensei Keiko Fukuda has become the first woman to achieve a tenth-degree black belt-the highest rank in the martial art and combat sport Judo. Fukuda is now one of only four living people who’ve earned the tenth-degree (or dan) black belt. To put the accomplishment into better perspective, throughout history, only sixteen people have ever achieved this honor…Fukodo said she approached Judo and her life with the intent to “be gentle, kind and beautiful, yet firm and strong, both mentally and physically.” { read more }

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Have a dream that’s been gathering dust on the shelf? Take a step towards it today.

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Generation We: The Movement Begins

November 7, 2012
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November 7, 2012

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Generation We: The Movement Begins

Your thoughts, words and deeds are painting the world around you.

– Jewel Diamond Taylor –

Generation We: The Movement Begins

“We, the youth of the United States, believe our birthright has been betrayed,” declares the Millennial Generation, the largest generation in American history, to date. They inherit a country in decline and a broken political system. Still, America’s young people declares a manifesto of hope — to restore the American dream. This short film shares more. { read more }

Be The Change

Learn more about how the Millenials are emerging as a powerful political and social force. { more }

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Kindness Daily: A Customer’s Gift

November 6, 2012
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A Customer’s Gift November 6, 2012 – Posted by s.cheetham
I recently returned to work after taking time off to recover from an operation on my elbow.

On my first day back, I was the cashier in the basket-only line, as I was unable to assist with packing goods into bags due to my elbow.

However, it got busy and a lady came to my line with a full cart. I didn’t complain, and gave her some bags so that she could pack her goods. Towards the end of the sale, the lady suddenly exploded, shouting at me for not helping with her packing and calling the manager over to complain about me.

My manager started to help with the packing, and she explained that it was my first day back after being in hospital. But the woman continued to shout that it was no excuse.

Once she had gone, I tried to continue serving. But I was so shaken that I burst into tears during the next customer. My manager took over and sent me for a cup of tea.

Afterwards, when I returned to the shop floor, I found that the next customer in the queue had made a point of telling the manager I had done nothing wrong. He then had gone out and come back with a huge bunch of flowers to cheer me up!

It went from the worst moment at work to the nicest, and I completed the rest of my shift with a massive smile on my face. 🙂

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Calf Trapped In Mud Rescued

November 6, 2012
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DailyGood News That Inspires

November 6, 2012

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Calf Trapped In Mud Rescued

Love is the first ingredient in the relief of suffering.

– Padre Pio –

Calf Trapped In Mud Rescued

“Recently, photographer Sam Beam and his buddy Josh Brinkin were out in a remote area outside of Albuquerque, New Mexico when they spotted some ravens and vultures near a known watering hole. They rode in for a closer look and were jolted by the sight of a bull calf, barely alive…”This little guy had his mouth, eyes and ears shut from struggling for days, but those birds never touched him,” Sam said. After pulling the calf from the mud, the two men knew they had to act quickly.”… { read more }

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The next time you come across a being in a stressful or difficult situation take a moment to do something to help.

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InnerNet Weekly: Planetary Birth

November 6, 2012
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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Planetary Birth
by Barbara Marx Hubbard

[Listen to Audio!]

914.jpgFrom the vantage point of our birth as a universal humanity, we are not dying; rather we are in a dangerous but natural condition, Just post-birth, not yet awake, yet become aware that if we do not shift our behavior from over-populating, polluting and fighting we will self destruct. We can see that we are naturally hitting a limit to one form of consciousness and of growth in the womb of Earth. We are naturally running out of non-renewable energy. We are naturally beginning to limit our population growth. We are naturally struggling to coordinate ourselves at a planetary scale, to manage a planetary ecology, to get food to all members of our planetary body, to handle our own waste, to stop the extinction of other species, etc.

These "problems" are no more a mistake than a baby’s growth in the womb at the ninth month is a mistake. The very pain caused by these conditions is vital to our birth. Without the pressure of this pain, we would never wake up to our full potential. Our crises are leading to our evolution. They are signs of the next stage of our evolutionary life. They are forcing us towards conscious evolution, or devolution and self-destruction. It makes a huge difference as to what memetic code we choose to evaluate our current condition.

The metaphor of a birth is revealing here.

A baby will die if it stays in the womb when it is time for it to be born. It is outgrowing the womb. … If a mother did not know about birth, she would think that she is dying. And when she saw the new–born she might be horrified! But since she knows about birth, she understands the meaning of the pain, and she is hormonally programmed to love the unknown child. Her breasts fill and she experiences unconditional love for the infant, naturally. Not because it will grow up to be a lawyer or doctor, but because it IS value, it IS life!â¨

However, since we have never seen another planet go through its crises of a "planetary birth," many people do believe we are dying or that we are guilty and a failure as a species. When we see our potential for life, we will not fail. But we need a new memetic code to guide us, or as Teilhard de Chardin said, we might fall out of love with our species, losing our attraction for our future.â¨

Opening our collective eyes we discover that we already have the capacity to solve every problem and realize unimaginable new capacities.â¨

In fact, we are already beginning to do so.

â¨Humanity is thus at a crossroads. Either we can come together consciously in collaboration with Earth systems, or we can continue to follow unconscious patterns of conflict and consumption. If we collectively choose conscious collaboration, we will experience the "gentle path," a positive vision of the future in which humanity understands its purpose and its power, and makes a relatively smooth transition into the next stage of its evolution.

–Barbara Marx Hubbard

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Planetary Birth
How do you relate to the author’s use of the birth metaphor to describe the present human condition? The author implies the need to hold and nurture that which is being born, bearing all the pain that comes with such a holding, and at the right moment, let it separate naturally without holding on to it – how can we bring such an attitude to all that we are creating? Can you relate a personal experience where you felt that you were giving birth to something sacred?
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: I do not experience it at the feeling level but I think I am born and I die each moment. When we notice our present experience, we become more conscious. When one is open one has a g…
david doane wrote: Birth typically is messy, scary, exciting, and painful. After a long period of pregnancy, an enormous, critically important, life changing event occurs in a very short period of time.&nbsp…
Conrad P. Pritscher wrote: Sorry again. The 4th line of my response below should read "sat to meditate" instead of "sent it to meditate"…
Amy wrote: Every time we love someone/something . . . every time we give someone/something a "second look". . . every time we take the time to read something (and then reread "tha…
Narendra wrote: How do you relate to the author’s use of the birth metaphor to describe the present human condition? Birth, life and death apply to all aspects of nature including cultures, planet and stars…
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