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Archive for 2011

Video of the Week: Chewing Gum Art (from the Heart)

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Feb 18, 2011
2165.jpg Chewing Gum Art (from the Heart)
Artist Ben Wilson produces amazing pieces of art that are free and accessible to the public…using old chewing gum litter on the sidewalk as his canvas. The work is laborious, painstaking, and intricate. It is a true labor of love and a selfless gift to his community. Ben hopes that neighbors noticing his work will develop a sense of belonging and responsibility to the community, which hopefully will reduce tendencies to litter. At the very least, it’s a very unique way to brighten someone’s day!

“Everything has beauty but not everyone sees it.” — Confucius

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DailyGood: London’s Cycle Superhighways Hailed as a Success

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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Get a bicycle. You will not regret it. –Mark Twain

Good News of the Day:
4428.jpgTransport for London say the two new Superhighways have been a big success, with an average usage increase of 70%. The traffic on these Superhighways, which connect parts of London to the financial City, is bicycles. Mayor of London’s transport advisor, Kulveer Ranger, said: “This research shows that people do believe the routes are of value, make them feel safer, and are allowing them to take direct and continuous routes into central London.” Two more cycling routes will open this summer. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Ride your bike instead of using the car one full day this week.

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Residential Retreat October 5 – 10, 2011 with Thich Nhat Hanh

Residential Retreat October 5 – 10, 2011 with Thich Nhat Hanh

Title: Stepping Into Freedom, Savoring Life (click here for more information)

Description: A retreat with Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh and the monks and nuns of the international Plum Village delegation. This retreat offers us the opportunity to gather for silent meditation, dharma talks, walking meditation, silent meals, and sharing our experiences of the practice in small groups. There will be opportunities for artistic expression, as well as times for noble silence. The retreat is open to all, including beginners, those who have previously attended retreats, and families with teens and children. For more information please read the invitation letter and registration form.

Financial aid: Scholarship / Financial aid: Limited funds are available for those in need; please email at info@tnhtour.org fax us at 845-733-4300 or call at 845-733-4959 for an application form and to register for the retreat.

* from https://registrar.tnhtour.org/BCM/

Jenny will be driving down and has tent enough for anyone who would like to participate.

DailyGood: A Neighbor’s Kind Act

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In contentment and joy are found the height and perfection of all love towards our neighbor. –William Ames

Good News of the Day:
3874.jpgThey lived across the street from each other for years, but didn’t know each other well. James Bronson was a fixture in Adams Morgan, a retired barber who’d been greeting passerby from his front stoop for more than 3 decades. John O’Leary was 25 years younger, a sound engineer who’d bought his six-bedroom townhouse just as the neighborhood was beginning to gentrify. Not the likeliest of roommates. But when Mr. Bronson lost his home and had nowhere to go, O’Leary took him in rent-free. It was a split-second decision that would profoundly change both their lives. [ more ]

Submitted by: Lonnie F.

Be The Change:
Do something kind for a neighbor today.

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DailyGood: The 3 A’s of Awesome

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Optimist: Person who travels on nothing from nowhere to happiness. –Mark Twain

Tip of the Day:
4456.jpgIt’s the little things in life. The waitress who notices your empty glass, and refills it without asking. Grabbing hold of a tissue, right before a sudden sneeze. The sound of snow falling. Freshly laundered clothes… An observer of life’s smiling snapshots, Neil Pasricha reveals 3 secrets (all starting with A) to leading a life that’s truly awesome. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Take a moment to witness something small that makes life worth living. For tips, see [ more ]

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DailyGood: Over Ten Thousand People Attend His Funeral

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To build toilets is easy, but to shift people’s mind and hearts is the real work. Software is more important than hardware. –Ishwar Patel

Inspiration of the Day:
4439.jpgGovernment officials shut down the streets. As everyone silently stood in line to pay the final respects, the magic of Ishwar-kaka was evident — the richest men in the country stood next to human-waste scavengers next to powerful politicians next to reknowned Gandhians next to vegetable sellers next to his next-door neighbors next to kids who had merely read about him. A humble man who built over 200,000 toilets and helped launched 118 organizations that would elevate the work of sanitation across India. Wise men say that you die the way you have lived. For a vast cross section of society, Ishwar Patel was a hero. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Do a task that requires humility. Wash extra dishes, sweep the floor, or clean a toilet.

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DailyGood: Mind vs. Machine

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As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to remake the world – that is the myth of the atomic age – as in being able to remake ourselves. –Gandhi

Inspiration of the Day:
4447.jpgIn the race to build computers that can think like humans, the proving ground is the Turing Test-an annual battle between the world’s most advanced artificial-intelligence programs and ordinary people. The objective? To find out whether a computer can act “more human” than a person. In his own quest to beat the machines, the author discovers that the march of technology isn’t just changing how we live, it’s raising new questions about what it means to be human. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Come back to your humanity: Reflect on what makes you come alive, and create space for it in your week.

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Smile Newsletter: A Tiny Gesture

HelpOthers.org
Feb 13, 2011
“Three things in human life are important. The first is to be kind. The second is to be kind. The third is to be kind.” — Henry James
Idea of the Week
119.jpg“I have bought a few little gifts from ebay: tiny fridge magnets, friendship bracelets and dried lavender to make potpourri – and have stored them away in a big ‘gift’ bag. I’ve also bought some envelopes, glue and cards and I’ve made some smiley faces. When I read about someone who is lonely or facing illness or is need of a little cheer for any other reason: I make a card, write an encouraging note, stick on the smiley and send them some little gifts from the ‘gift’ bag. Some people are so happy when they receive them. It really does make a difference. I will have to find one hour a week extra work so I can make up the money. But it will be worth it, it makes me feel so happy. to spread a little cheer.” — twinkle

[ share your story >> ]

Stories of the Week
You can also contribute comments on each story!
A Spin Cycle of Kindness >>
Smile Cards are a ‘Super Cool’ Thing >>
A Tiny Gesture At A Local Fair >>
More Stories >>
Comment of the Week
“Groups like this motivate me to be kind! I am here because of an act of kindness done unto me! Several months ago, I found a SMILE card in a gas station bathroom. I had had a particularly rough day, and I found a card that said, “Only Kindness Matters.” Ive never been the same again. One small act changes lives in a major way.” — 1smile2day
What is a “smile card”? It’s a game of kindness — do something nice for someone and leave a card behind asking them to pay it forward. To date, 885,738 cards have been shipped without any charge.

The ‘Smiles’ newsletter is emailed to 78,976 subscribers with the intent of spreading more smiles in the world. You can unsubscribe anytime.

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DailyGood, Weekend Edition

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Sunday, February 13, 2011

7-Month-Old Babies Can ‘Read Minds’

Inline Image Babies as young as 7 months old may be able to take into account the thoughts and beliefs of other people, a younger age than previously demonstrated. 7-month-olds have little experience with conversation, which has long been thought to play a key role in acquiring this capacity. As a result, this study is thought to be significant in building new theories about how this capacity develops. In the study, a Smurf-like character watches a ball roll through a number of scenes. Infants looked longer at those scenes where the character left too soon to see the ball’s final position. Because babies are thought to look longer at unexpected situations or events, the researchers interpret this to mean that they were surprised at the unexpected outcome because of processing the character’s viewpoint, not just their own. Despite some controversy about study design, if the results are confirmed by future studies, this would indicate that infants are sensitive to social information and to what others see. Read More >>

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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Visit the MET From Your Desk

Inline Image Google has taken its 360-degree Street View cameras into some of the most famous and acclaimed galleries, opening the world’s art collection to the internet. From the Tate Britain in London to the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, you can now browse 385 rooms in 17 galleries, and see more than 1,000 works by 486 artists. Zoom in close enough, and you can see individual brushstrokes, hairline cracks in the canvas and microscopic details that are almost invisible to the naked eye. Read More >>

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Friday, February 11, 2011

How Meditation May Change the Brain

Inline Image “Over the holidays, my husband went on a silent meditation retreat. He said the experience was so transformational that he has committed to meditating for two hours daily, one hour in the morning and one in the evening. He’s running an experiment to determine whether and how meditation actually improves the quality of his life,” one NY Times contributor writes. Scientists say that meditators like her husband may be benefiting from changes in their brains. The researchers report that those who meditated for about 30 minutes a day for eight weeks had measurable changes in gray-matter density in parts of the brain associated with memory, sense of self, empathy and stress. Read More >>

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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Baby Reunited with Doctor Who Saved Her

Inline Image In her thoughts and prayers over the past year, Nadine Devilme has thanked God countless times for saving her baby after Haiti’s earthquake. She’s also wanted to thank the doctor who treated Jenny Alexis after the 2-month-old spent four days alone, crushed in the rubble with nothing to drink. There was one problem: Devilme never knew the doctor’s name, never knew exactly whom to thank for treating her daughter’s fractured skull and crushed chest and then arranging for her to be airlifted to a hospital in Miami. Meanwhile, the physician who saved Jenny has spent the past year wondering how the baby was doing… Read More >>

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Southern Masked Weaver

Inline Image They call it home. The delicate orb that sits on the tree branch, a woven tangle of grass and twigs all strategically placed. It’s small and inconspicuous enough that you’d probably miss it walking by. Luckily, one photographer didn’t. “It was a priceless opportunity to watch these amazing builders constructing their homes from the very beginning till the end, from the first framework made of a few grass leaves till the very last stalk…” Read More >>

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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Removing Stigma One Idli At A Time

Inline Image A small idli shop in south Tamil Nadu, India, is the talk of the town. At daybreak, people crowd around to buy idlis and dosas from two women who are HIV positive. Despite the stigma of HIV/AIDS in their town, the customers are aware of their condition and continue to patronize their shop. With community support, Vijayarani and Sumathy have overcome the devastating news, “look as healthy as any woman in our village and we have a successful business.” Read More >>

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Monday, February 7, 2011

Generous Vegetable Seller

Inline Image After the morning hustle, a lone lamp shines on a vegetable stall. With head bowed, Chen Shu-Chu is the first to arrive in the market and the last to leave. She earns marginal profits. Yet, her frugality has allowed her to donate NT$10 million (about 350,000 US $) towards various charitable causes, including schools, orphanages and poor children. The generosity of a woman with such a humble income has placed her under international spotlight, named an outstanding philanthropist by Forbes and among 2010’s top 100 most influential people by Time Magazine. Despite all the attention, she reminds us, “I have done nothing extraordinary. Everyone who wants to can do it. There are many other charitable people; we just don’t know about them.” Chen adds, “I don’t place great importance on money. When I donate to help others, I feel at peace, I’m happy, and I can sleep well at night.” Read More >>

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In This Issue

Also This Week

Wisdom Reading

iJourney.org excerpts of wise words: Believers in Small Graces, by Kent Nerbern

Inspiring Video

KarmaTube.org video with be-the-change actions: The Power of Vulnerability

Kindness Story

HelpOthers.org story submitted by readers: Coffee, Diners and Smile Cards

Community

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DailyGood: Visit the MET From Your Desk

Daily Good News: a service of CharityFocus
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Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time. –Thomas Merton

Tip of the Day:
4444.jpgGoogle has taken its 360-degree Street View cameras into some of the most famous and acclaimed galleries, opening the world’s art collection to the internet. From the Tate Britain in London to the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, you can now browse 385 rooms in 17 galleries, and see more than 1,000 works by 486 artists. Zoom in close enough, and you can see individual brushstrokes, hairline cracks in the canvas and microscopic details that are almost invisible to the naked eye. [ more ]

Be The Change:
Bring art into your day.

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