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Archive for 2014

From Silos To Solution EcoSystem

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 27, 2014

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From Silos To Solution EcoSystem

I believe that if you show people the problems and you show them the solutions they will be moved to act.

– Bill Gates –

From Silos To Solution EcoSystem

Through the ongoing progression of the internet and social media, the conventional and long-established way of doing business is starting to see a huge shift in how things are getting done. In William Eggers and Paul Macmillan’s book, ‘The Solution Revolution,’ they describe a new dynamic in which various groups can move toward their goal much more productively than if each group pursued it separately. From problems like environmental issues, revolutionizing higher education and even tackling malaria in Africa, the book examines how public and private sectors are converging to form a ‘solution economy.’ { read more }

Be The Change

To get more connected on how you might be able to help generate and create change in the world, visit Dowser, a website that tell stories about people who are creatively attacking social problems. { more }

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16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

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Jane Goodall On How To Reach Our Highest Potential

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 26, 2014

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Jane Goodall On How To Reach Our Highest Potential

The will to win, the desire to succeed, the urge to reach your full potential… these are the keys that will unlock the door to personal excellence.

– Confucius –

Jane Goodall On How To Reach Our Highest Potential

Enjoy this wonderful video from NOVA’s series “The Secret Life of Scientists and Engineers,” where Dr. Jane Goodall, the world-famous primatologist, talks about what she feels is one of life’s most important aspects — empathy. Not only does she believe empathy plays a key role in her studies of chimpanzees, but she also feels strongly that having empathy for other beings in turn brings us closer to our own highest human potential. { read more }

Be The Change

To learn more about this amazing woman and her incredible journey visit her website – The Jane Goodall Institute. { more }

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16 Habits of Exuberant Human Beings

6 Habits of Highly Grateful People

Maya Angelou On Resilience and Children

The Generosity Paradox

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Eight Keys To End Bullying

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 25, 2014

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Eight Keys To End Bullying

No one is born hating another person…People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.

– Nelson Mandela –

Eight Keys To End Bullying

“I am hopeful. I believe we have an opportunity to change the culture of bullying among young people and I think the answer begins with those who live and work with young people every day. It is not complicated policies or grandiose programs that make the most difference, but rather consistent, daily, nurturing acts of reaching out to both children who bully and those who are are the receiving end of cruelty that bring about the most meaningful and lasting change.” Licensed social worker, school counselor, and national educator Signe Whitson outlines eight key steps to end bullying. { read more }

Be The Change

Help a child in your life develop compassion by practicing small acts of kindness. This site offers some great resources. { more }

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Alan Watts On The Art of Timing

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 24, 2014

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Alan Watts On The Art of Timing

The prevalent sensation of oneself as a separate ego enclosed in a bag of skin is a hallucination which accords neither with Western science nor with the experimental philosophy-religions of the East

– Alan Watts –

Alan Watts On The Art of Timing

Alan Watts had a singular way of dispersing our illusory convictions about pairings, such as belief vs. faith or money vs. wealth or productivity vs. presence or ego vs. true self or stimulation vs. wisdom or profit vs. purpose. In Does It Matter? Essays on Man’s Relation to Materiality, he considers another such infinitely important duality — the notions of hurrying and timing. Learn more about it here… { read more }

Be The Change

Check in to yourself, be present what’s going on inside as you go into your day or relate to others…

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Maya Angelou On Resilience and Children

The Generosity Paradox

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The Healing Power of JOY!

This week’s inspiring video: The Healing Power of JOY!
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Video of the Week

Oct 23, 2014
The Healing Power of JOY!

The Healing Power of JOY!

Laughter is a natural medicine – it lifts our spirits and makes us feel happy. Laughter is contagious. It brings people together and helps us feel more alive and empowered. Laughter therapy aims to use the natural physiological process of laughter to help relieve physical or emotional stresses or discomfort. There are over 70 organizations committed to the healing power of laughter around the world. Watch as Care Clowns, Clown Doctors, and Joy activists in countries across the globe delight sick children and their care givers with giggles, bubbles, love, and joy.
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Bridging the Clothing Divide

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 23, 2014

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Bridging the Clothing Divide

Whenever you are in doubt or when the self becomes too much with you…recall the face of the poorest and the weakest man whom you may have seen and ask yourself if the step you contemplate is going to be of any use to him.

– Mahatma Gandhi –

Bridging the Clothing Divide

Developmental organizations typically work on food, education, health care, and economic opportunity, but very few address the need for clothing. For materially poor people, however, clothing is shelter. Anshu Gupta shares, “In earthquakes, the shake kills people; in a tsunami, the water kills people; but in winter, the cold does not kill people. It’s the lack of proper clothing. Why don’t we consider lack of clothing a disaster?” Gupta and his wife Meenakshi founded “Goonj”, a non-profit organization that is using an intricate sharing network to address what the Guptas consider a non-natural, perpetual disaster. Read on to learn more about the everyday couple that is saving lives using a model built on empathy and respect. { read more }

Be The Change

Go through your home to gather clothes and blankets that you can spare and donate them to your local shelter. Just think how many people your clothes and blankets can help keep safe and warm!

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A Healing Poem From Haiti

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DailyGood News That Inspires

October 22, 2014

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A Healing Poem From Haiti

An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

– Ben Franklin –

A Healing Poem From Haiti

Nobody should die from diseases we know how to treat, but over 50,000 people die daily from them. Two UCSF Physicians have started a project called HEAL(www.healinitiative.org) that aims to address health workforce in resource poor communities, from Navajo Nation in New Mexico to Liberia and Haiti and India. They attempt to improve the quality of care, support and train local health professionals. This article and moving poem share more. { read more }

Be The Change

We are sometimes help-blind. This week use your eyes and heart to see where help is needed and respond to the need.

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Hairstylist For The Homeless

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October 21, 2014

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Hairstylist For The Homeless

Wherever there is a human being, there is an opportunity for kindness.

– Seneca –

Hairstylist For The Homeless

Mark Bustos is a hair stylist at an upscale salon in New York City, but not all of his clientele have to be wealthy to get a quality trim. Sometimes, they don’t need a penny. Bustos spends every Sunday — his only day off from work — venturing through the city in search of anyone in need who’d appreciate a haircut. Approaching each person with the same, simple phrase — “I want to do something nice for you today.” Meaningful, ordinary human contact and respect is the remedy to dehumanization. { read more }

Be The Change

Do something nice for someone today without expecting anything in return.

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Awakin Weekly: Conscious Simplicity

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InnerNet Weekly: Inspirations from ServiceSpace.org
Conscious Simplicity
by Duane Elgin

[Listen to Audio!]

tow3.jpgHere are three major ways that I see the idea of simplicity presented in today’s popular media:

1) Crude or Regressive Simplicity: The mainstream media often shows simplicity as a path of regress instead of progress. Simplicity is frequently presented as anti-­âtechnology and anti-­âinnovation, a backward-­âlooking way of life that seeks a romantic return to a bygone era. A regressive simplicity is often portrayed as a utopian, back-­âto-­ânature movement with families leaving the stresses of an urban life in favor of living in the woods, or on a farm, or in a recreational vehicle, or on a boat. This is a stereotypical view of a crudely simple lifestyle — a throwback to an earlier time and more primitive condition — with no indoor toilet, no phone, no computer, no television, and no car. No thanks! Seen in this way, simplicity is a cartoon lifestyle that seems naive, disconnected, and irrelevant — an approach to living that can be easily dismissed as impractical and unworkable. Regarding simplicity as regressive and primitive makes it easier to embrace a "business as usual" approach to living in the world.

2) Cosmetic or Superficial Simplicity: In recent years, a different view of simplicity has begun to appear — a cosmetic simplicity that attempts to cover over deep defects in our modern ways of living by giving the appearance of meaningful change. Shallow simplicity assumes that green technologies — such as fuel­âefficient cars, fluorescent light bulbs, and recycling — will fix our problems, give us breathing room, and allow us to continue pretty much as we have in the past without requiring that we make fundamental changes in how we live and work. Cosmetic simplicity puts green lipstick on our unsustainable lives to give them the outward appearance of health and happiness. A superficial simplicity gives a false sense of security by implying that small measures will solve great difficulties and allow us to continue along our current path of growth for decades or more.

3) Deep or Conscious Simplicity: Occasionally presented in the mass media and poorly understood by the general public is a conscious simplicity that represents a deep, graceful, and sophisticated transformation in our ways of living — the work we do, the transportation we use, the homes and neighborhoods in which we live, the food we eat, the clothes we wear, and much more. A sophisticated and graceful simplicity seeks to heal our relationship with the Earth, with one another, and with the sacred universe. Conscious simplicity is not simple. This is a life way that is growing and flowering with a garden of expressions. Deep simplicity fits aesthetically and sustainably into the real world of the twenty-­first century.

Today’s world requires far more than crude or cosmetic changes in our manner of living. If we are to maintain the integrity of the Earth as a living system, we require deep and creative changes in our overall levels and patterns of living and consuming. Simplicity is not an alternative lifestyle for a marginal few, but rather a creative choice for the mainstream majority. What does a life of conscious simplicity look like? There is no cookbook we can turn to with easy recipes for the simple life. The world is moving into new territory and we are all inventing as we go.

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Conscious Simplicity
What does conscious simplicity mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a time when you experienced conscious simplicity? What is a test that you find useful in determining the kind of simplicity you are facing?
Kristin Pedemonti wrote: Conscious simplicity is living in such a way as to do the least harm to the planet, yourself and others. Example, I was living in a home that I felt was too big for one person. When I bought it…
susan schaller wrote: Conscious anything is difficult. Recently I have been so conscious of how I am so unconscious or unable to simply be. Simple consciousness – being here and now. Being does not take stuff or out…
Jyoti wrote: I understand and agree with 1 & 2 but need a lot more to really understand 3. In my experience, I find that little children have that deep simplicity where they gravitate towards love and beauty …
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7 Ways To Exercise Your Brain & Why You Should

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October 20, 2014

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7 Ways To Exercise Your Brain & Why You Should

The brain is like a muscle. When it is in use we feel very good. Understanding is joyous.

– Carl Sagan –

7 Ways To Exercise Your Brain & Why You Should

Researchers believe that your brain performance peaks in your 50’s and then begins decreasing. The good news is that the brain is highly adaptable. Repetitive brain exercises practiced both early and later in life keeps the brain strong and helps it combat the reduced memory, thinking speed, problem solving, and reasoning that can set in later in life. Read on to learn about seven easy, scientifically proven, results-oriented brain exercises that will help keep your brain healthy today and tomorrow. { read more }

Be The Change

This week, choose a day to meet with friends or family to play chess or a board game that challenges the mind. Try to make it a regular practice. Not only will you spend quality time with loved ones, but you will give your mind a good workout as well!

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