Not Without My Daughters
Pharmacologist and medical researcher Vimala Seshadri lives with 10 girls between the ages of 4 and 20 who come from underprivileged backgrounds. “We’re an all-women household,” says Vimala, who has brought up the girls as her own daughters in a small home in India for the past nine years. The girls live with her through the year and visit their parents during holidays. “We go back for a while, but this is home too,” says Divya, who’s paraplegic, completed class 12 at a special school, and is planning to start her own business. Vimala set up the Nivedita Centre for Learning in 1998 as an organization that not only focused on education but on making girls financially independent. “With a little money, you can do a lot,” she says. “You just have to be ready to give each person one-on-one attention.” Read More >>
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Fairness Driven By Culture, Not Genes
Human behaviors are often explained as hard-wired evolutionary leftovers of life on the savannah or during the Stone Age. But a study of one very modern behavior, fairness toward total strangers one will never meet again, suggests it evolved recently, and is rooted in culture rather than biology. In a series of behavioral tests given to 2,100 people in societies around the world (from hunter-gatherers to wage laborers), an innate sense of fairness dovetailed with participation in markets and major religions. “You can’t get the effects we’re seeing from genes,” notes evolutionary psychologist Joe Henrich. “These are things you learn as a consequence of growing up in a particular place.” Read More >>
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Building Green Houses from Garbage
Texas home builder Dan Phillips transforms trash into artful treasures, creating intricate floor mosaics with wood scraps, kitchen counters from ivory-colored bones and roofs out of license plates. The fantastical houses which spring from his imagination cost as little as $10,000 and are made almost entirely with materials which would otherwise have ended up in a garbage dump. Read More >>
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The Blanket of Laughter Cure
About two years ago, LuAnn Kessi started a group called Living Well with Cancer and Healing Through Quilting. The Harlan resident has three aunts who are cancer survivors, and all had been making things to sell to raise money for cancer research. But she felt moved to do more. “You knew that you were doing something good, but we just wanted to help in a more personal way,” she said. So she decided to start a quilting class for those who have cancer. It quickly took off, already making over 100 quilts. But exhibitions aren’t what it’s all about. “Most of the time, we’re just in love with whatever we’re teaching,” explains one instructor. That spills over to the students, and then the curious customers in the front store who hear the laugher. Read More >>
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Being the Change In Bihar
In an under-construction school building in India’s Bihar village, children are learning algebra, chemistry, Newton’s laws of motion. There’s no teacher in the classroom, no blackboard. The teacher is hundreds of miles away, and he is teaching via Skype. In this very unsual school, teachers mark their attendance using a biometric fingerprinter, and students log their attendance in a computer. The school is even more unusual because Chamanpura has no electricity yet! Read More >>
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An Academic Sparks Giving to Charity
Toby Orb is a researcher at Oxford University who lives off little more than 300 pounds a month. Yet he’s inspiring a movement of charity-giving that’s even more impressive than Zuckerberg, Gates, and Buffett. In the past year, Ord has given more than a third of his earnings to charities working in the poorest countries. Why? For Ord, the question is: why not? “If you only have a certain amount of money then the real question is how much you can do with it… I realised that by donating a large part of my future income to the most efficient charities, I really could save thousands of people’s lives.” Read More >>
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The Best Place for a Break
In the age of multi-tasking, constant communication, and overwhelming stimuli, studies show that a 20 minute walk helps refocus our minds and revive our spirits. Researchers explain, “Nature engages your attention in relaxed fashion- leaves rustling, patterns of clouds, sunsets, a bird, the shape of an old tree. It captures our attention in subtle, bottom-up ways and allows our top-down attention abilities a chance to regenerate. Attention, therefore, is “restored” by exposure to natural environments. Read More >>
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In This Issue
Also This Week
Wisdom Reading
iJourney.org excerpts of wise words: Making a New Start, by Patty De Llosa
Inspiring Video
KarmaTube.org video with be-the-change actions: Story of Electronics
Kindness Story
HelpOthers.org story submitted by readers: Learning Kindness From A Neighbor
Community
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