Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Via Daily Dharma: Internalizing Unity

To understand that others are much like oneself creates a different perspective, a startlingly changed worldview. When this is internalized, you are not confronting another over a divide, but meeting someone with whom you have so much in common.

—Jeffrey Hopkins, “Equality”

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Monday, June 22, 2020

Via Daily Dharma: Revealing and Clarifying Our Minds

We have two faces: our intrinsic nature and our reactive patterns—the bad habits of the psyche. Effective practice mirrors both, gradually revealing our nature, while at the same time, clarifying what obstructs it. 

—Interview with Anne C. Klein by Donna Lynn Brown,“Across the Expanse”

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Redwood Meditation with CC





Sunday, June 21, 2020

Via Budismo e Sociedade // Um Guia Budista para “sobreviver” ao Apocalipse



O mundo passa por um momento delicado. Deterioração do meio ambiente, pandemia, tensões sociais e raciais. Como budistas, nos perguntamos como “sobreviver” ao Fim do Mundo? Bhante Akaliko nos recorda que o Buda já fez essa pergunta séculos atrás ao Rei Pasenadi e o diálogo entre os dois serve como ensinamento para os dias de hoje.

Make the jump here to read more


Via Ram Dass - Love Serve Remember Foundation // Words of Wisdom - June 21, 2020 💌

You and I are not only here in terms of the work we’re doing on ourselves. We are here in terms of the role we’re playing within the systems of which we are a part, if you look at the way change affects people that are unconscious.

Change generates fear, fear generates contractions, contraction generates prejudice, bigotry, and ultimately violence. You can watch the whole thing happen, and you can see it happen in society after society after society.

The antidote for that is a consciousness that does not respond to change with fear. That’s as close to the beginning of that sequence as I can get.

 - Ram Dass -

Via Daily Dharma: You Are Deserving of Love

Not only are we buddhas (or at least in the process of becoming buddhas), we are somehow, remarkably, deserving of being loved.

—Taylor Plimpton, “Who My Dog Thinks I Am”

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RACISMO, COISA DE BRANCO

HISTÓRIAS CRUÉIS DEMAIS PARA SEREM IGNORADAS | Bianca DellaFancy


Friday, June 19, 2020

Via The Atlantic // The Coronavirus Prayer


Via Daily Dharma: The Benefits of Gratitude

It’s very difficult to be caught up in lots of distracting thoughts when there is a strong sense of appreciation in your life.

—Andy Puddicombe, “10 Tips for Living More Mindfully”

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Via NPR // Juneteenth

https://www.npr.org/2020/06/19/880754393/celebrating-juneteenth-a-reading-of-the-emancipation-proclamation
The Emancipation Proclamation at the National Archives in Washington, January 16, 2006.
Brooks Kraft/Corbis via Getty Images 
 
Juneteenth is getting unusually widespread attention this year, as Americans protest police brutality and racism.
But some Americans have, for years, celebrated it as the day that marks our ancestors' emancipation.

June 19, 1865 was the day U.S. Army troops landed in Galveston, Texas. It was the aftermath of the Civil War. The troops informed some of the last enslaved Americans that they were forever free. They enforced President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, which took effect on January 1, 1863.
The proclamation declared freedom for the slaves of rebels in the South. It came after almost two years of war, and it took more years of war to enforce it. The order did not free every slave, and the document specified places it did not apply.

Frederick Douglass, the activist who'd been enslaved himself, said Lincoln was slow, even "slothful" in making this "obvious" move. But Douglass celebrated that "the dictation of humanity and justice have at last prevailed."

Make the jump here to listen to it read

Via FB // Samsara


Thursday, June 18, 2020

Infinite Potential Trailer: The Life and Ideas of David Bohm

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Via Tricycle // Infinite Potential: The Life & Ideas of David Bohm

A message from the Fetzer Memorial Trust: 
In Honor of His Holiness’s 85th Birthday,
Join Us For a Special Event:

An exclusive screening of the film Infinite Potential: The Life & Ideas of David Bohm
His Holiness the Dalai Lama referred to him as his "science guru." Albert Einstein called him his "spiritual son." So why is it that so few of us are familiar with the groundbreaking work of maverick physicist David Bohm?

Bohm's fascinating journey and profound discoveries about the fundamental interconnectedness of the universe are explored in the new film Infinite Potential: The Life and Ideas of David Bohm.

In honor of His Holiness the Dalai Lama's 85th birthday, The Fetzer Memorial Trust will present a special screening of the film.

Online Screening: Infinite Potential: The Life and Ideas of David Bohm

Date: July 5, 2020

Time: 5:30 PT (6AM July 6 in India)

Free Ticket: Please click here

The event will include a panel discussion with Tibet House founder Robert Thurman, longtime English translator of His Holiness's writings, Thupten Jinpa, and Nicky Vreeland, the first Westerner to be ordained by the Dalai Lama as an Abbott. The Q&A will be moderated by Sandra de Castro Buffington, Founder of StoryAction and UCLA’s Global Media Center for Social Impact.

See the trailer and register for your free ticket here.

Bohm's lifelong friendship with Indian philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti inspired him to introduce the idea of Consciousness into quantum theory, which was controversial, to say the least, and caused the scientific orthodoxy to dismiss his radical thinking. But Bohm's idea of the Quantum Potential, a field underlying reality, is now being reexamined in studies at University College London and the University of Toronto.

If Bohm’s theory of Quantum Potential is proven to be true, it could have radical implications of how we live life on this planet and coexist with one another.
Register here »

Via Querty // Gay dads triumph over Trump administration in groundbreaking case