|
---|
How do we use the tools of today to bridge emergent phenomena of possibility with very ancient values? One of those ways is through AI, or artificial intelligence. AI can be an "innerscope" - and perhaps even lead us to an "interscope" to cultivate greater connection and compassion. During a Closing Celebration call for the recent Global Interfaith Compassion Challenge, we unveiled the Interfaith Bot -- which contains a corpus of 77,000 sacred documents! Here's how one person described it:
Tapan Parikh and Tulika Verma share more (view all clips here.), including examples of questions they asked the bot and the surprising yet beautiful responses they received.
Post today's call, people have been asking various questions of collective interfaith wisdom like ...
We're grateful for many kind words, across various other bots too:
|
Sharon Salzburg: A Memorable Interfaith Space + A Meditation Sharon Salzburg, renowned meditation teacher, reflects on her memorable experiences with interfaith spaces during last month's Interfaith Compassion Challenge orientation call. She shared one stunning moment, saying "suddenly we were a community in a very different way...open to and with such heartfelt testimony, from everybody, on all sides." Watch her wonderfully rich talk here: Then tune in to a meditation guided by Sharon, and to hear her response to the question: How do you balance the conviction of your path with the curiosity of something foreign to you? |
Enjoy a recent KindSpring Community Roundup :) DrJoe: Sent Another Package To My Friend In Ukraine :) |
Yuka Saionji: Story From A Hiroshima Pilgrimage On a reunion call during the recent Interfaith Compassion Challenge, Yuka Saionji Matsuura joined us to share stories of hope and forgiveness from her pilgrimage to Hiroshima. Yuka is the Deputy Chairperson of Byakko Shinko Kai, a spiritual organization dedicated to world peace and raising the consciousness of humanity During her deeply moving talk, she shared, "We believe everyone is a divine spark, and to see it from that perspective, doing something so against your divine spark, doing something so apart from the truth of who you are, causes so much pain and so much struggle." Watch her full remarks here: You can also watch a brief video about the Symphony of Peace Prayers and watch as Yuka leads a peace prayer from her tradition. |
Living into All the Honey: Embracing Grief and Joy "How the churning of opposite feelings weaves through us like an insistant breeze leads us wordlessly deeper back into ourselves ..." In a moving video, poet Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer reads from her new collection of poetry All the Honey. Watch below. |
Inner Green Deal Podcast: Transforming Act of Giving The Inner Green Deal podcast is a commercial free offering that features guests in conversation about the human dimension of sustainability. On a recent episode, podcast host Tamsin and ServiceSpace founder Nipun Mehta talk about the transformative act of kindness. Tamsin: "... acts of surprise kindness are happening all the time. They just don't get the airplay. But they are out there." Nipun: "To me, this is the solution to it. What should I do? Do a small act of kindness. And it sounds so small, but it challenges your whole existence ... and I think if you try it, it opens up a whole new field." Listen to the full conversation here. |
'It's Okay To Be Perfectly Human' by Brian J. Plachta Why do we do it? Why do we nag and criticize ourselves? Why do we launch scud missiles of negative words and thoughts against our self-images? Perfectionism is one reason. We expect ourselves to be perfect, and when we aren’t, we shame ourselves. We dig trenches of negativity that tell us we’re bad. Flawed. Broken. We commit treason against our inherent goodness. Driving ourselves to achieve, to be good, and to become better is a good thing. It allows us to set and reach goals, to pursue our dreams, and to make the world a better place. But that drive can become imbalanced when ... [Read more] Seed questions for reflection: How do we relate to the notion that affirming and accepting ourselves purposely lowers the unattainable bar of perfectionism? Can you share a personal story of a time you were able to love yourself unconditionally? What helps you accept the good, messy and teachable parts of you? |
At Forum Alpbach at the end of August, Nipun shared stories of a sparrow -- and offered heart pins to the crowd. One among them was Jojo. When he was asked by his club to share his experience at Alpbach, he invited students from around the world to come together in this beautiful way!
|
Rachelle Jeanty: Finding Spirit in Pain Rachelle recently joined us for an Awakin Call where she led us through a meditation, shared some of her music, and so much more. You can watch the call here - and catch a special performance she shared during a recent Interfaith Compassion Pod call. |
'Love Is The Highest Form Of Acceptance' by Stephen Levine Love is the highest form of acceptance. Judgment is the mechanics of non-acceptance. Some may say that without “good judgment” there would be no “discriminating wisdom” but discriminating wisdom is the process of weeding out the causes of suffering and choosing love, “the greatest good”. The mind ... [Read more] Seed questions for reflection: How do you relate to the notion that it is the momentary absence of desire that gives rise to the state of satisfaction? Can you share a personal story of a time you met desire with compassion and a satisfaction in momentary beauty? What helps you weed out the causes of suffering and choose love instead? |