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Archive for March, 2011

DailyGood: The Technology of Compassion

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Compassion is a piece of vocabulary that could change us if we truly let it sink into the standards by which we hold ourselves and others. –Krista Tippett

Inspiration of the Day:
4499.jpgThe term “compassion” — typically reserved for the saintly or the sappy — has fallen out of touch with reality. Journalist Krista Tippett deconstructs the meaning of compassion as she traces the word through secular and spiritual icons like Mother Theresa, Gandhi, and Einstein, as well as everyday heroes like Matthew, a paraplegic yoga teacher. Through her stories, Tippett proposes a new, more attainable definition for the word in modern day: compassion as the latest technology. [ more ]

Be The Change:
What would the world look like if we used compassion as often as a computer? Practice the technology of compassion today.

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DailyGood: Recycled Cell Phones Save Lives

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Goods are called good because they can be used for good. –Clement of Alexandria

Good News of the Day:
4503.jpg“It’s your trash, but it turns into value, it turns into lives saved really quickly.” Josh Nesbit says excitedly. Four years ago, Nesbit noticed that health workers in Malawi often lost important information during their strenuous trips to patients in isolated villages. Instead of walking for hours on end, doctors and patients could instantly text each other if they just had the right technology, he thought. With the help of the 500,000 cell phones found in trash cans each day, Nesbit set up a network that allowed health workers to turn paper records into text messages, saving time, resources, and lives. His small project has spread across 11 countries and helped 3.5 million patients. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Recycle your old cell phone with a rural medical clinic. [ more ]

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DailyGood: Sleep Helps Us Remember What We Need To

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The best bridge between despair and hope is a good night’s sleep. –E. Joseph Cossman

Fact of the Day:
4494.jpgYou may have heard it before. While we sleep, our brains replay and store the days events into our long-term memories. But it can’t keep everything. Of the deluge of information that pass through us each day, how do our minds “decide” what to keep and what to dump? Why can we replay the disagreement with a spouse or the promising job interview, but forget what we ate for breakfast or where we put that old sweater? A recent study says that the brain evaluates information based on future expectations. When we sleep, our subconscious sorts through our priorities and remember key points that will be useful in the future. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Make an effort to get a good night’s rest this week.

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Smile Newsletter: Compassion in the Midst of Fear

HelpOthers.org
Mar 20, 2011
“Forget injuries; never forget kindness.”

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Sunday, March 20, 2011

More Miracles in Japan

Inline Image Amid the silence, a baby cried out. And Japan met its tiniest miracle. Last week, soliders made their way to a pile of earthquake debris, gently cleared away the fallen items, and then they saw her: a 4-month-old baby in her pink woolen bear suit. Three days earlier, a tidal wave had literally swept her from her parents arms. Now a source of hope and renewed diligence among search crews, the baby rests snug among her overjoyed parents. Her incredible story is not the only one. Read More >>

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Saturday, March 19, 2011

Museums Without Walls

Inline Image Walk through Philadelphia and you’ll see public art poised throughout the city. “Museum Without Walls: AUDIO” brings these sculptures to life with audio stories, told by people from all walks of life and somehow connected to the sculpture by knowledge, experience or affiliation. Nearly 100 “voices” at 35 stops explore 51 sculptures. These stories can be discovered while touring the city or sitting on your living room couch. Read More >>

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Friday, March 18, 2011

Football and Meditation with Running Back, Ricky Williams

Inline Image Picture one of the NFL’s most spellbinding figures sitting serenely in a room, meditating. Every Wednesday, Miami Dolphins running back Ricky Williams leads an open meditation session in a quiet college classroom where he’s working on his degree. Williams meditates every morning, before practices, and before he heads into the stadium on game day. “For me, [meditation] is like food. It’s spiritual food, and I need to be fed… I just go into the game very clear, with that balance between focus and relaxation.” And with that inner clarity, he can’t help but share with others: “The act of giving is a very healing thing.” Read More >>

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Thursday, March 17, 2011

New Way to Watch your Blood Pressure

Inline Image Researchers have developed a device to measure pressure in the largest artery in the body. More accurate than the arm cuff, the technology works by a sensor in the watch recording the pulse wave of the artery, which is then fed into a computer together with a traditional blood pressure reading from a cuff. Scientists are then able to read the pressure close to the heart, from the aorta. Professor Bryan Williams from the University of Leicester says, “Unless we measure the pressure in the aorta we are not getting an appreciation of the risks or benefits of treatment. This device could change the way blood pressure has been monitored for more than a century.” Read More >>

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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Human Spirit Rises to Meet Japan’s Tsunami

Inline Image Snapshots from Japan: A woman opens up her home and bathrooms to weary travelers walking hours home. A baker gives out free bread. Customers at the supermarket pick up fallen items and quietly stand in line to buy food. An old man at the evacuation shelter asks, “What’s going to happen now?” And a young high school boy nearby responds, “Don’t worry! When we grow up, we will promise to fix it back!” Among the tremendous ripples of Japan’s tsunami are some of the most strikingly powerful yet simple moments of human grace. Read More >>

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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Costumed Crusaders Taking it to the Streets

Inline Image Crusaders costumed in tights, capes, cowls and other accoutrements are turning up with surprising regularity in American cities to fight what they consider their biggest enemy: public apathy. They call themselves Real Life Superheroes and, with names like Dark Guardian, Red Dragon, and Viper, they might be right at home on the pages of comic books. But unlike their ink-and-paper counterparts, they can’t fly, vanish into thin air or outrun a speeding locomotive. And they usually are armed with nothing more than good intentions. Maybe a camera and cell phone, too. They bring help to the homeless, raise money for charity, or just lend an ear so someone in trouble knows they care. Read More >>

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Monday, March 14, 2011

How to Deliver the Speech of Your Life

Inline Image Sweaty palms, trembling knees, that feeling of butterflies in the pit of your stomach. Whether you’re at a job interview, standing in front of a class, or keynoting a conference, speaking in public can be intimidating. In fact, statistics have shown that people fear it more than death. But is it really that bad? Dan Pallotta used to think so. After a few years of doing it more, something changed. He turned focus and intention away from himself and towards his audience. “And then it became fun. Because it was no longer about me.” Here are 13 powerful tips that he’s picked up over the years. Read More >>

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In This Issue

Also This Week

Wisdom Reading

iJourney.org excerpts of wise words: Practically Preposterous, by Pavithra Mehta

Inspiring Video

KarmaTube.org video with be-the-change actions: JR’s TED Wish: Turn the World Inside Out with Art

Kindness Story

HelpOthers.org story submitted by readers: A Tale of Two Tags

Community

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DailyGood: Museums Without Walls

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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The universe is made of stories, not of atoms. –Muriel Rukeyser

Good News of the Day:
4446.jpgWalk through Philadelphia and you’ll see public art poised throughout the city. “Museum Without Walls: AUDIO” brings these sculptures to life with audio stories, told by people from all walks of life and somehow connected to the sculpture by knowledge, experience or affiliation. Nearly 100 “voices” at 35 stops explore 51 sculptures. These stories can be discovered while touring the city or sitting on your living room couch. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Visit Philadelphia to explore these stories. Or share, with friends or unknown strangers, a story of a work of art around you.

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Video of the Week: JR’s TED Wish: Turn the World Inside Out with Art

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Mar 18, 2011
2272.jpg JR’s TED Wish: Turn the World Inside Out with Art
Meet JR, a French street artist with global ambitions. JR travels around the world with his 28mm wide-angle lens trying to capture the unguarded, funny, soulful, and above all, REAL faces of our fellow human beings. He blows up these images and pastes them on urban surfaces for all to see and consider. Images of Parisian thugs are pasted up in bourgeois neighborhoods; photos of Israelis and Palestinians are posted together on both sides of the walls that separate them. In his own words, he wants to “create projects so huge with the community that they are forced to ask themselves questions”.

Watch This Video

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DailyGood: Football and Meditation with Running Back, Ricky Williams

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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Follow effective action with quiet reflection. From the quiet reflection will come even more effective action. –James Levin

Good News of the Day:
4500.jpgPicture one of the NFL’s most spellbinding figures sitting serenely in a room, meditating. Every Wednesday, Miami Dolphins running back Ricky Williams leads an open meditation session in a quiet college classroom where he’s working on his degree. Williams meditates every morning, before practices, and before he heads into the stadium on game day. “For me, [meditation] is like food. It’s spiritual food, and I need to be fed… I just go into the game very clear, with that balance between focus and relaxation.” And with that inner clarity, he can’t help but share with others: “The act of giving is a very healing thing.” [ more ]

Be The Change:
Find time for inner reflection today. [ more ]

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DailyGood: New Way to Watch your Blood Pressure

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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Never before in history has innovation offered promise of so much to so many in so short a time. –Bill Gates

Good News of the Day:
1.jpgResearchers have developed a device to measure pressure in the largest artery in the body. More accurate than the arm cuff, the technology works by a sensor in the watch recording the pulse wave of the artery, which is then fed into a computer together with a traditional blood pressure reading from a cuff. Scientists are then able to read the pressure close to the heart, from the aorta. Professor Bryan Williams from the University of Leicester says, “Unless we measure the pressure in the aorta we are not getting an appreciation of the risks or benefits of treatment. This device could change the way blood pressure has been monitored for more than a century.” [ more ]

Submitted by: Lavanya M.

Be The Change:
Reflect on how to wisely choose technology to improve your life, and help you improve the lives of others.

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DailyGood: Human Spirit Rises to Meet Japan’s Tsunami

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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We always talk about working together… perhaps crisis can give birth to new evolution. –Yuka Saionji

Inspiration of the Day:
4496.jpgSnapshots from Japan: A woman opens up her home and bathrooms to weary travelers walking hours home. A baker gives out free bread. Customers at the supermarket pick up fallen items and quietly stand in line to buy food. An old man at the evacuation shelter asks, “What’s going to happen now?” And a young high school boy nearby responds, “Don’t worry! When we grow up, we will promise to fix it back!” Among the tremendous ripples of Japan’s tsunami are some of the most strikingly powerful yet simple moments of human grace. [ more ]

Be The Change:
When faced with adversity, remember the potential in life’s small moments of grace.

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