What Changes the Room The Dalai Lama asked a question. Thirty years of neuroscience answered it. | | | Before the Nashville lunch counter sit-ins, before anyone walked through that door, Rev. James Lawson — the man John Lewis called “the architect of the nonviolence movement” — handed each volunteer a small card. The first instruction wasn’t strategy. It was this: walk the block around the store. Pray. Meditate on what you are about to do. Generate love. The inner moment before the outer act. Lawson understood something that most organizing still ignores: what changes the room is who you’ve become before you enter it. A generation later, a neuroscientist named Richard Davidson traveled to Dharamsala. The Dalai Lama listened to his research on depression and anxiety, then asked a question so simple it was almost radical: “Why can’t you use those same tools to study kindness and compassion?” Richie didn’t have a good answer. He later called it “a total wake-up call.” That question became his life’s work. Over three decades, Richie and his colleague Cortland Dahl — a scientist who spent a decade in Tibetan refugee settlements before earning the first-ever PhD in contemplative science — arrived at a finding that is both obvious and radical: flourishing is a trainable skill. Not a personality type. Not a privilege. A skill. But here's the thing: when you strengthen these capacities in yourself, the effects don’t stay private. They ripple outward. Not as metaphor. As measurable change. Next week, we’re exploring what that means — together: | Pod • Starts April 12 • Seven Days Flourish Pod Here’s something that surprised even the researchers. When large-scale studies tried teaching mindfulness directly to children in schools, the results were disappointing. In some cases, at-risk kids got worse. So they flipped the approach: instead of starting with the children, they trained the teachers. A few minutes of practice a day. The teachers changed — and then the classrooms changed with them. Nobody taught the kids a curriculum. The flourishing was simply contagious. Over 600 peer-reviewed studies later, Richie and Cort have distilled the science into four trainable capacities — Awareness, Connection, Insight, and Purpose — and a seven-day pod drawn from their new book, Born to Flourish. Each day: a short practice, a perspective from science and wisdom, one experiment to run in your actual life — then dialogue with fellow podmates. That dialogue is the living heart. Pod hosted by Richie and Cort themselves, alongside many volunteers. Join us to explore your own inner life and learn in community. | Awakin Call • April 10 • 7AM Pacific A Conversation with Cortland Dahl The pod informally begins with a deep dive into Cortland’s remarkable journey — from struggling with anxiety as a college student, to a decade of solitary retreat in the Himalayan foothills translating ancient Tibetan meditation manuals, to designing a free meditation app now reaching users in over 140 countries. A glimpse of how he thinks: early in his research career, Cortland volunteered as a subject in a pain study — repeated burns just below the threshold of skin damage, for hours. The meditators and non-meditators reported the same intensity of pain. But the meditators rated the unpleasantness dramatically lower. There was a hidden variable most of us never notice: we can’t always control what happens to us, but we can transform our relationship to it. Periods of adversity become catalysts for growth. That’s the kind of mind you’ll be in conversation with. | | At Harvard last month, we learned that one of their most beloved professors — Clay Christensen — used to spend thirty seconds in silent prayer before every class. Just one line: May students feel that they are loved. No one taught his students a curriculum about being changed. The room simply changed. Lawson knew it. The researchers confirmed it. We keep discovering it in pods: we don’t broadcast transformation. We practice it, quietly, and then something shifts around us. What changes the room? Maybe just — who you’ve become before you enter it. 🙏 | | Seeds in the Soil Experiments, offerings, and quiet happenings across the ecosystem | | LET’S TURN THE WORLD INTO A POD Georgetown professor in a poetic clip after his 21-day Laddership Pod: “We are a ladder, but we’re also a lattice — a mesh-like structure where each pixel encapsulates something of the whole, but together it tells a story larger than any one of us.” Soon after, Nipun contrasting his Harvard trip with Laddership: Counter Curriculum → | | | SEEDS ACROSS BORDERS Last month, ServiceSpace stories reached Athens — where Moisis, who runs Greece’s largest platform for alternative ideas, is exploring a Karma Kitchen this summer. Separately, in dialogue with Victor and Chen, a pilgrim’s guide emerged — an 18-month arc for growing a living field in a local community, starting not with a message but with listening. | | | TENDERNESS UNDERNEATH At a grocery store, Melinda realized her four-year-old had vanished. She found Saachi near the registers — hands deep in a stranger's pockets, beaming. To Saachi, who was diagnosed with autism at 16 months, shorts were just shorts and she was obsessed with their pockets. That they were on a stranger was irrelevant. Stories via Melinda's Awakin Call: Watch Clips → | | | METTA CIRCLES Fifty podmates participated in the first round of 18 Metta Circles, powered by the Circle Agent but rooted in heart-to-heart connections. Early word from Michael, Birju, Song, and Jen: let's keep going! |
| | THE SOUND OF THE GENUINE At a recent gathering, Stephen Lewis delivered a spontaneous, fully memorized rendition of Howard Thurman’s “The Sound of the Genuine” that silenced the room — followed by a teenager overcoming her fear of public singing to offer a luminous Dedication of Merit. Finding your voice, sharing your sound. | | | | ServiceSpace incubates volunteer-run projects that nurture a culture of generosity and uplift the spiritual commons. Such small acts of service unlock an inner transformation that sustains external impact. | | |
Comments
Post a Comment