Let us be about active compassion.
Let us be about active compassion.
:- Doug.
Let us be about active compassion.
:- Doug.
We do not want access to health care: we want health.
:- Doug.
I can’t tell you what I do—because I don’t do it. I can tell you about people leaning in, people making plans to do. I can tell you about people reflecting…deeply…. I can tell you about laughter and banter and tears and silence. I can tell you about people rushing to capture it all on flip charts as it spills out of people. I can tell you about people saying “I’ll commit to doing X.” I can tell you about the world turning to rights just a notch in an afternoon.
:- Doug.
Are we truly outside of each other?
What if we admitted to some overlap?
Some enfolding within each other?
Just a little?
How would we be enfolded?
How are we enfolded?
How again?
Are there other dimensions of enfolding?
:- Doug.
Pay me, pay me: who will pay me to do this work? Our whole economy is based upon insecurity—the insecurity of rugged individualism that might not be rugged enough, without pay, to support us, to provide food, clothing, shelter, transportation and conversation to us. Could we conceive among us a more open passage of good and help?
:- Doug.