Smallest acts…

Put your heart, mind, and soul into even your smallest acts. This is the secret of success. - Swami Sivananda

Make No Little Plans

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Do you know the story of Chicago’s Daniel Burnham? He was the one who rebuilt Chicago after the Great Fire of 1871 and his words above have been an inspiration to me since I was in middle school.

“Few individuals have had more impact on the American city than architect and planner Daniel Hudson Burnham. In the midst of late 19th century urban disorder, Burnham offered a powerful vision of what a civilized American city could look like. He built some of the first skyscrapers in the world; directed construction of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition that inspired the City Beautiful Movement; and created urban plans for Washington DC, Chicago, Cleveland, San Francisco and Manila—all before the profession of urban planning existed. In fact, some say that he invented it.”

Get the rest of the article here: Make No Little Plans: Daniel Burnham and the American City | PBS.

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A Road Map to Resilience

I love daffodils and I love this image...
I love daffodils and I love this image…

Resilience. A new buzzword? Or something more?

True serenity does not come when we protect ourselves from life’s challenges, but rather when we learn to find ease and strength within, no matter what life sends our way—in other words, to create an experience of heaven even in the midst of hell. Nelson Mandela modeled resilience after 27 years in prison, emerging prepared to serve his nation without rancor or bitterness. The young Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai demonstrates resilience each time she challenges the status quo, invoking the right of girls to be educated.

This resilience is available to all of us. We each have some degree of it, and we can amplify that capacity—no matter our age or circumstances—in order to move toward our best selves. Resilience is a choice we make each time we lead from our strengths, practice mindfulness, gather wisdom from our failures, and make small changes that elevate our health, happiness, and sense of inner calm.

via Savoring the Great Moment: A Road Map to Resilience Thrive: The Kripalu Blog.

Dan Millman at TEDxBerkeley

via Dan Millman at TEDxBerkeley – YouTube.

If you haven’t see the movie Peaceful Warrior, it’s available free on Netflix. I recommend it. See an excerpt here

Give a Compliment, Make Someone Happy

Here’s a thought:

When was the last time you noticed the person sitting next to you in the bus, or the train station and gave them a smile, an honest compliment, a kind word or a helping hand? When was the last time you made someone happy?

via Give a Compliment, Make Someone Happy – Purpose Fairy.

Do you find this video cool or obnoxious? I can’t decide. We can discuss in the comments…

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Not sorting things into good and bad

A person who falls to the ground gets back up by using that ground.

To try to get up without relying on that ground would be impossible.

Karl Duffy's avatarMindfulbalance

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Each day we can encounter setbacks or difficulties, or simply things may happen which we did not expect. And sometimes they can reveal a lot,  if they stir up our own mixture of unresolved issues linked to our past.  Rather than regarding them as diversions or obstacles on the path, we are encouraged to see them as where we are called to go. The “bad” situation becomes something to be skillfully worked with:

A person who falls to the ground gets back up by using that ground.

To try to get up without relying on that ground would be impossible.

Chinul, 1158–1210,

Zen Master considered to be the most significant influence on the formation of Korean Zen

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What does this video tell us?

I’d love to hear your perspective…

Können wir uns unsere Welt gut oder böse denken und reden?

Excellent post and facsinating video. Don’t speak German? Schade! There’s always Google or Bing translate…

Is Your Smartphone Making You Dumb?

Wow.

Todd Lohenry's avatarTodd's Blog

Hmmm.

Imagine that after a routine medical exam your doctor delivers some devastating news: Since your last checkup your cognitive performance has plummeted. Your ability to connect with others has eroded. And your memory for everyday events is no longer operating as it once did. As it turns out, there is a cure and it won’t cost you a penny. The treatment is simple. All that’s required is that you put away your smartphone. Few of us will have this conversation with our doctors. But perhaps we should. Over the last few years, scientists have begun studying the way cell phones affect the human experience. Early results are alarming.

via Is Your Smartphone Making You Dumb? | Psychology Today.

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Nothing really goes away

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A Focus on Distraction

This is interesting…

Todd Lohenry's avatarTodd's Blog

Stunning, actually.

As economics students know, switching involves costs. But how much? When a consumer switches banks, or a company switches suppliers, it’s relatively easy to count the added expense of the hassle of change. When your brain is switching tasks, the cost is harder to quantify.

There have been a few efforts to do so: Gloria Mark of the University of California, Irvine, found that a typical office worker gets only 11 minutes between each interruption, while it takes an average of 25 minutes to return to the original task after an interruption. But there has been scant research on the quality of work done during these periods of rapid toggling.

We decided to investigate further, and asked Alessandro Acquisti, a professor of information technology, and the psychologist Eyal Peer at Carnegie Mellon to design an experiment to measure the brain power lost when someone is interrupted.

To simulate…

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Jimmy Fallon went on the worst date of all time with Nicole Kidman

Pretty funny…

via Jimmy Fallon went on the worst date of all time with Nicole Kidman.

The Times They Are A Changin’

via Bob Dylan The Times They Are A Changin’ 1964 – YouTube.

Greatness

GoComics.com

via Wednesday, January 07, 2015.

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