• The Fault of Time Mar 9-- Erica Berry takes us on a journey from predictability to uncertainty recalling a visit with her grandparents after horrific Montana wildfires and charred ponderosa pines. “To love the trees, to live among them, is to reconcile myself not only to my impermanence, but to theirs.” Then in a visit to Oregon, where a massive Cascadia earthquake eruption is overdue, she ...

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  • Dear Sunday: Play Mar 7-- Writer Lindsey Wayland invites us to examine our thinking around play. Some may think play is something only children do, and many of us forget how to play as we age, “reinforced by a culture that measures worth through productivity.” Afraid of embarrassment or feeling foolish, we lose our freedom – “freedom to fail, freedom to change our minds, freedom ...

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  • How to Move Beyond Outrage Toward Understanding Mar 5-- "Many of us are outraged today. We dig in our heels around our beliefs on abortion, vaccines, immigration, or gender. We believe we are morally right and the other side is wrong. And the other side also believes they are morally right and we are wrong," writes journalist Sahar Habib Ghazi. She interviews Kurt Gray, who for 20 years, has ...

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  • Charles Bigger: On Philosophy Feb 28-- "Our contemporary tradition has made the ego so central. And it solidifies itself with the whole idea that knowledge is power. Essentially, this means that our relation to the world is a technological relation. That's just the opposite of an earlier vision. Knowledge was what allowed one to participate in the life of God. I went into philosophy because it ...

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  • One Experience Away from Discovering Feb 25-- The Honored Podcast shines a light on life-changing teachers across the country. This one features Kurk Watson, a drama teacher from Philadelphia, who also founded “OPEX Park, which stands for opportunities and experience that are mixed together.” Using creative methods, Kurk helps students step out of their comfort zones, and “provides a pathway for students to uncover interests they might ...

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  • Picking Up Leaves Feb 21-- Charles P. Gibbs, having visited Hiroshima and attended conferences about the threat of nuclear war, felt depressed and powerless by the “human capacity to instantly destroy 80,000 lives,” and other unimaginable horrors. When he arrived home from a conference, he watched his toddler shuffle through a huge pile of leaves, and pick up one leaf and place it in a ...

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Mark Twain's Top 9 Tips For Living An Awesome Life Samuel Langhorne Clemens, the man better known as Mark Twain ... 602334 Reads

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Think occasionally of the suffering of which you spare yourself the sight.
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