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January 2008

January 29, 2008

Shift happens: possibilities abound

Liz is off writing this week for a living, and I am editorially unsupervised. Consider yourselves warned for the week. Last week I found this video that, even if you saw it last year when it got a gazillion hits, is worth visiting again. It's amazing, alarming, intimidating, and exciting all at the same time. It also has that favorite quote of mine by Einstein.

There's a more updated, powerful presentation of facts here (but I like the music in the first one best). Also, you can read the wiki by the teachers who created it. The video inspires me because I can see the possibilities for becoming a global community to solve those problems Einstein was talking about in a new way of thinking.

This is why we blog.

Continue reading "Shift happens: possibilities abound" »

January 25, 2008

WSF Global Day of Action Jan 26: Take a Step

Wsfworld_2

While clicking around adding to my "topics" list (so many cool things to write about--we can hardly wait) I found the social entrpreneurial answer to the World Economic Forum--the World Social Forum. And, I found them just in time, because tomorrow, January 26 is Global Day of Action.

Continue reading "WSF Global Day of Action Jan 26: Take a Step" »

January 24, 2008

Take Scot, for example

Whenever there's a debate about "man's innate nature" and whether it's possible or impossible for our species to turn from conflict and violence into care and benevolence, you can guess which side I'm on in the discussion. I have hope. But until the internet, I didn't see "how". I often tell my clients, "If you hold the vision--the 'what'--steady, the 'how' will appear." And, voila, a few years ago when I noticed that my kids were communicating with other kids all over the world, I saw the "how" for creating a different world: our newest evolutionary tool--instant global communications.
Wsfworld_2
Saturday, January 26, is the World Social Forum's Global Action Day 2008 (it takes a minute for the map to load), a confluence of hundreds if not thousands of groups, organizations, and people looking to act on their longing for a different world--and they're all connected on the WSF site, working locally, connected globally for their tagline: "another world is possible".

Continue reading "Take Scot, for example" »

January 21, 2008

Make a way out of no way

It's Martin Luther King Day.

"When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds of despair, and when our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a creative force in this universe, working to pull down the gigantic mountains of evil, a power that is able to make a way out of no way and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows. Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice. --Martin Luther King. Jr., Address to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, 8/16/67

403pxmlk_leaning

I accept this award today with an abiding faith in America and an audacious faith in the future of mankind. I refuse to accept despair as the final response to the ambiguities of history. I refuse to accept the idea that the "isness" of man's present nature makes him morally incapable of reaching up for the eternal "oughtness" that forever confronts him. I refuse to accept the idea that man is mere flotsam and jetsam in the river of life, unable to influence the unfolding events which surround him. I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality. I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of thermonuclear destruction. I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right, temporarily defeated, is stronger than evil triumphant.-- Martin Luther King, Jr., Nobel Prize Acceptance, 1964

Continue reading "Make a way out of no way" »

January 19, 2008

Cool combinations, jaunty juxtapositions, and rippling care-versations

I love unpredictable combinations. I like to have three or four ideas in my head and see how they come together into something new. I'm still pretty jazzed about the cool combination that is Rocky Road ice cream -- chocolate, marshmallows, and almonds -- now we take it for granted, but in 1929 it was a jaunty juxtaposition of flavors, a bold idea soon to become a standard.

According to the German philosopher Martin Heidegger, "language is the house of being." When we humans create some cool new combination with language, we have a new house to be in, a new possibility. Though Rocky Road ice cream is right up there as far as cool combinations go, some other recent combos are: Internet cafe, eco(ological)-tourism, carbon footprint, and social entrepreneur -- all new language houses opening up new possibilities for individuals and for humankind.

After a week of looking at the possibilities for a whole world fit for kids, I've been searching for conscious, simple acts we can each do, right here, right now to create such a world. As if by magic, three ingredients bubbled out of my personal and electronic interactions, and by the end of the week, presto! I had a combination nearly as interesting -- but possibly not as delicious -- as chocolate, marshmallows, and nuts. Here's what happened:

Continue reading "Cool combinations, jaunty juxtapositions, and rippling care-versations" »

January 16, 2008

What if we decided? Creating a world fit for kids

Watch the video first -- I'll wait ;)

I'm willing to bet there isn't anyone on the planet who wouldn't want to jump out and do something for children somewhere, any way they could after watching this video. In fact, I'm fairly confident that even without watching the video, there aren't many people who wouldn't love to see a world fit for children. As I realized while I was stripping wallpaper last weekend, you can't talk about orphans for long without including them in the greater context of vulnerable children everywhere. No single NGO, government, or group has more experience looking out for the children of the world than UNICEF.

Continue reading "What if we decided? Creating a world fit for kids" »

January 15, 2008

Karli's list

Art is a human activity having for its purpose the transmission to others of the highest and best feelings to which men have risen. --Leo Tolstoy

What do a fishing village in Egypt, a community in Capetown, South Africa, a school for orphans in Zimbabwe, and a village school in a Millennium village in Rwanda have in common? Artists. These are my favorite stories -- about people who just start where they are with whatever they have, using their talent and their connections to create, connect, and contribute.
Img_0088_karli_painting_2
Meet Karli, who, at only 22, is an example of why we have big hopes for the Y generation. Through a Millennium Village contact, Karli organized a project to teach art to kids at the Millennium Village in Mayange sector in Rwanda, near the epicenter of the 1994 genocide. Last summer, after graduating with honors from Parsons School of Design, she found sponsors, raised money for supplies and equipment, loaded up "a
ton of suitcases filled with supplies," and traveled to Rwanda to spend an unforgettable week teaching art to kids.

Continue reading "Karli's list" »

January 14, 2008

Six things I realized about using media to heal the world while I was stripping the walls

... and why I still have hope after an eye-opening week.

I spent most of my free time last week talking to people about the media, Africa, orphans, and children. All that thinking spilled over into my weekend in an unexpected way. My husband was out of town for his mother's birthday, and I wanted to surprise him by getting the hall painted and the wainscoting finished by the time he got home.

Saturday morning, I called him up to ask casually about a technical detail of the job, and was dismayed to realize I had forgotten about the other hallway, which has to be stripped before any painting is done. Argh. So, because my sons were out skiing that day, I took the opportunity to stay in my nightgown, crank up a "classics" station on XM radio -- which I'm never allowed to listen to when people are in the house -- and get to work.

All of this is pertinent (maybe the nightgown part was too much information) because while I was pulling tiny pieces of wallpaper off with my fingernails and a putty knife (we spent $20 on tools that turned out to be useless for the job), all the things people told me this week about orphans, healing the world, and journalism started spinning around in my head. As I stripped the wall, I realized six things about the media and healing the world:

Continue reading "Six things I realized about using media to heal the world while I was stripping the walls" »

January 11, 2008

Making a difference: One surgeon's blog in Iraq

There's this great blog I've been reading, Made a Difference for That One, by a surgeon stationed in Iraq. The blogger's name is Chris Coppola, and he's generously agreed to write a guest blog entry for us. Stay tuned for that! In the meantime, check out his blog, where he's so prolific you wonder when the man sleeps. (Forty-six posts in November!)

Chris gives you a perspective on Iraq that you're not going to get anywhere else -- not in newspapers, not on TV, not in the movies. Plus, he's the doctor you would want for yourself or a loved one if, heaven forbid, you needed a surgeon (in Iraq or anywhere). He's open, he's honest, he cares.

Continue reading "Making a difference: One surgeon's blog in Iraq" »

January 09, 2008

16 million African orphans; Braden takes 1,600

Last fall, my book club read There Is No Me Without You, Melissa Fay Greene's story of the beginning of the AIDS pandemic in Africa, and of the ensuing orphan crisis. It had the kind of impact on me that Mountains Beyond Mountains did a few years ago. Anything I thought I knew about Africa, AIDS, and orphans was challenged by Greene's account of one woman trying to do her part in the midst of a tragedy that will leave a continent reeling for decades or more. When I read it, I experienced a sense of shame: I had misunderstood what was happening there, to my fellow humans. I also felt disbelief that so many parents could die, and so many children be left alone in our world of advanced medicine, new technology, and relative wealth.

While reading "Without You," I kept hearing Bono's words, from the video in this post: "Where you live should not determine whether you live." That's when the status of children everywhere went onto the list of HumanKind topics.

Continue reading "16 million African orphans; Braden takes 1,600 " »

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