Search Results

A Whole New Mind
"The scales are tipping away from what it used to take for people to get ahead -- logical, linear, left-brain, and spreadsheet-type abilities -- in favor of abilities like artistry, empathy, and big-picture thinking, which are becoming more valuable. Left-brain skills are still absolutely necessary in our complex world. They're just not sufficient anymore." In this fascinating interview, author Da... posted on May 26, 5339 reads

A Promise To A Fourth-Grade Class
A nine-year journey ended Tuesday for about 50 high school students who, as fourth-graders at Wallace Elementary, were promised college scholarships if they completed high school. For Kelso High School senior Katrina Hobbs, the I Have A Dream program and its volunteer mentors helped her become the first high school graduate in her family. "I couldn't have done that without this program," said Katr... posted on May 27, 2280 reads

The Compassion of Dogs
For centuries, humans have imagined that they are the only animals with morals. But humans are not alone in the moral arena, a new breed of behavior experts says. Natural historian Jake Page said some scientists are acknowledging what pet owners have told their canines all along: "Good dog." Dogs are full of natural goodness and have rich emotional lives, said animal behaviorist Marc Bekoff, profe... posted on Jun 23, 6304 reads

Art From The Soul
World renown sand artist Ilana Yahav uses only her fingers to make magnificent sand drawings on glass. This piece's theme is "You are not alone. You've got a friend, who will help you through your pains and sorrow and will always be at your side." Watch as she seamlessly flows from one picture to the next, creating a beautiful world from the effortless movement of her fingertips.... posted on Jun 25, 9794 reads

How To Do A Million Good Deeds
Three student entrepreneurs at the University of Michigan think they can use their phones to make the world a better place, one download at a time. Three weeks since its launch at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference, the application, DoGood, has recruited more than 15,000 individuals to be part of a growing network of users who want to change the world, at least a little. Subscribers to the fr... posted on Jul 7, 4396 reads

The Difference Makers
Are you a Difference Maker? What is it that you possess -- beyond the material -- that you can give to the world? Time? Energy? Art? Love? Inspiration? Happiness? Jason Miller and Mathew Boggs have launched a global campaign called The Difference Makers, with a mission to unify, edify, and magnify world-shapers' talents for the highest global good.... posted on Jul 16, 3833 reads

Telling Stories in our Organizations
"This firm had developed a reputation for being a terrible place to work. When I met with the head of the firm, he illustrated the problem with a personal example. Just recently, he told me, a client meeting had been scheduled on the day one of his employees was getting married. 'I told her she needed to be there. That the meeting was early enough and she could still get to her wedding on time.' H... posted on Jul 17, 5293 reads

Can Twitter Help Us Save Energy?
There's a house that tweets all of its energy usage. And that's just the beginning of the information it dumps onto Twitter every day. Even the mousetraps are plugged in! Real-time monitoring of energy usage, subsidizing more efficient energy consumption, personal conservation, and automation are four trends that are addressing the 20% of residential energy consumption in the US.... posted on Oct 17, 2707 reads

Alan Watts on Life & Music
Philosopher Alan Watts reflects that "in music, one does not make the end of the composition, the point of the composition." This lively and comical animation compares our journey through life with music, and comes to a very thought-provoking conclusion.... posted on Aug 6, 3977 reads

A Walk In The Park
It might be more important than you think to take that stroll in the park: A recent study suggests that walking in nature might actually benefit your brain. The study, published in Psychological Science and conducted by University of Michigan researchers, found that when people spent time in nature, as opposed to an urban environment, their attention and memory improved. ... posted on Aug 7, 5318 reads

The Lost Generation
Using only narration and text, this inspiring 2-minute video uses a clever trick to make its point about being alive in this generation. While the original concept of this video came from an Argentinean commercial, "Lost Generation" won a prize at an AARP contest and has since attracted millions of viewers online. It is certainly a creative way to deliver an important point!... posted on Aug 9, 8102 reads

Best Online Psychology Tests
Want to know what's really going on in your own head? This NY Times post offers a list of the best online psychology tests, some of which are used to collect data for research experiments, while others are skill tests or quizzes that offer personal insights. A few of the best include a fun test that measures how fast and flexible a thinker you are by using color-coded words and an "I Just Get Myse... posted on Aug 10, 8586 reads

The 'Putpocketers' of London
Visitors to London always have to be on the look out for pickpockets, but now there's another, more positive phenomenon on the loose -- putpockets. Aware that people are suffering in the economic crisis, 20 former pickpockets have turned over a new leaf and are now trawling London's tourist sites slipping money back into unsuspecting pockets. Anything from 5 pounds ($8) to 20 pound notes is being ... posted on Aug 24, 2913 reads

An 8-Year-Old's Compassion
It's no "Harry Potter," but 8-year-old Joshua Bayer's book about monsters is getting much attention around his hometown of La Plata. Joshua wrote and illustrated "M-M-M-Monster!!!" to raise money for animal rescue efforts. Two stores are selling the self-published book (courtesy of his mother) to help his cause, and his parents have set up a Web site to assist with the aspiring author's debut. "He... posted on Aug 25, 4393 reads

Survival of the Kindest
He may well be the psychotherapist with the simplest recipe: kindness. According to Piero Ferrucci, freedom starts with being kind. To others. And yourself. This Ode article shares a thought-provoking glimpse of Ferrucci's thinking on kindness and its relationship to forgiveness.... posted on Sep 2, 8179 reads

Do-Gooders with Spreadsheets
"The World Economic Forum here in Davos is the kind of place where if you let yourself get distracted while walking by a European prime minister on your left, you could end up tripping over a famous gazillionaire -- and then spilling your coffee onto the king on your right. But perhaps the most remarkable people to attend aren't the world leaders or other bigwigs. Rather, they are the social entre... posted on Sep 3, 2449 reads

Finding Perfection in the Unexpected
"On a recent afternoon, I went to a pottery shop outside of Tokyo and happened to meet the head potter who had stopped by to check on her staff. After looking around the shop, I asked the potter if she had a few minutes to chat and explain her work to me. The first thing she talked about was how a potter never knew what was going to wind up coming out of the kiln. "Each kiln opening," she said, "w... posted on Oct 25, 4169 reads

Wired To Wonder
Our brains are hardwired for worry -- and there's good reason why. Our hunter-gatherer ancestors had to keep an eye out for danger at every turn: If I eat those plants, will I get sick? Yet it was only when our ancestors ventured off beyond the boundaries of what was known that they could add to their knowledge and skills. They had to discover absolutely everything for themselves. In other words, ... posted on Nov 12, 4427 reads

Arts And Smarts
For years, arts advocates have been pleas, stressing the intangible benefits of the arts at a time when many Americans are preoccupied with a market-driven culture of entertainment, and schools are consumed with meeting federal standards. Art brings joy, these advocates say, or it evokes our humanity, or, in the words of my 10-year-old daughter, "It cools kids down after all the other hard stuff t... posted on Oct 31, 4932 reads

The Biology of Leadership
"The salient discovery is that certain things leaders do -- specifically, exhibit empathy and become attuned to others' moods -- literally affect both their own brain chemistry and that of their followers. Indeed, researchers have found that the leader-follower dynamic is not a case of two (or more) independent brains reacting consciously or unconsciously to each other. Rather, the individual mind... posted on Nov 10, 6073 reads

Happiness Without Getting What You Want
Who says we'll be miserable if we don't get what we want? According to Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert, our "psychological immune system" lets us feel real, enduring happiness even when things don't go as planned. This kind of happiness -- "synthetic happiness," Gilbert calls it -- is "every bit as real and enduring as the kind of happiness you stumble upon when you get exactly what you were aimi... posted on Sep 22, 5600 reads

Synagogue a Mosque During Ramadan
On Friday afternoons, the people coming to pray at this building take off their shoes, unfurl rugs to kneel on and pray in Arabic. The ones that come Friday evenings put on yarmulkes, light candles and pray in Hebrew. The building is a synagogue on a tree-lined street in suburban Virginia, but for the past few weeks -- during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan -- it has also been doubling daily as a... posted on Sep 20, 4732 reads

Chuck Close Alchemy: Using Adversity to Create Magic
If you're an artist in the 21st century, chances are you've heard of master-colorist and brush-wielder extraordinaire, Chuck Close. Considered one of the most influential artists of our time, he is quite frankly, unstoppable. Recognizing his thirst to paint at a very young age, he has not allowed anything to stand in his way, maneuvering every challenge into an opportunity. At age 48, after an awa... posted on Sep 21, 4241 reads

Smashing Stereotypes of Old Age
Jack Borden has found the fountain of youth. It's in his office. Borden has been practicing law for more than seven decades. At 101, he was recently honored as America's "Outstanding Oldest Worker" by the nonprofit group Experience Works. Will Miles Clark, D.D.S., on the other hand, is a spry 105-year-old who has gladly spent about half a century in retirement from his former profession, dentistry... posted on Sep 24, 4594 reads

The Man Behind 'Joy of Giving'
All his possessions fit in two suitcases. He doesn't earn much, he doesn't spend much. Most of his life is focused on birthing a culture of giving. In 2000, when he found out that formal giving was 0.2% of the GDP in India (compared to 1.8% in the US), he started an effort called 'GiveIndia', to promote good causes and to make their finances transparent. Millions of rupees were donated on that... posted on Oct 3, 3826 reads

The New Orleans Musician's Clinic
Eleven years ago, Bethany and her husband, Johann Bultman, decided the best way to keep the music alive was to keep the musicians healthy. "The reason we chose to target musicians in New Orleans is because they represent a pure American cultural form, jazz music," said Johann. Thanks to the Clinic's volunteer doctors, a grant from the federal government, and various charitable donations, the non-p... posted on Nov 3, 1963 reads

Angels in the Dust
In South Africa's Pilanesberg National Park, the longtime government practice of culling -- killing adult elephants to control herd sizes -- tore apart the complex social fabric of elephant culture, a fabric that is not unlike that of the traditionally close-knit African village. As a result, orphaned elephants grew up exhibiting unusually violent behavior, such as attacking and goring rhinos. But... posted on Oct 10, 2502 reads

Notes Left Behind by A Five-Year-Old
After 5-year-old Elena Desserich was diagnosed with an inoperable kind of cancer, she managed to spread a message of hope and healing. Elena knew that every coming day would be a gift, not to be wasted, so she created a to-do list of sorts -- swim with dolphins, drive a car and more. During her nine-month battle with cancer, Elena was planning an even greater gift for her family. She was hiding no... posted on Nov 6, 7411 reads

Taking In The Good
Much as your body is built from the foods you eat, your mind is built from the experiences you have. The flow of experience gradually sculpts your brain, thus shaping your mind. Some of the results can be explicitly recalled: This is what I did last summer; that is how I felt when I was in love. But most of them remain forever unconscious. This is called implicit memory, and it helps form your exp... posted on Nov 7, 7498 reads

Triumph Of A Dreamer
"Of all the people earning university degrees this year, perhaps the most remarkable story belongs to Tererai (pronounced TEH-reh-rye), a middle-aged woman who is one of my heroes. She is celebrating a personal triumph, but she's also a monument to the aid organizations and individuals who helped her. When you hear that foreign-aid groups just squander money or build dependency, remember that by a... posted on Nov 17, 3721 reads

Leadership Without a Secret Code
Being a leader anywhere can be a difficult job. In this interview, Drew Gilpin Faust discusses what her life has been like as the leader of one of the most prestigious universities in the world, Harvard. Read how Faust uses simple tools like communication and team-building to create a cohesive atmosphere. Learn how hectic and rewarding a position of leadership can be.... posted on Dec 5, 3942 reads

How Food Shapes Our Cities
Ten thousand years ago, humans began settling in cities, moving away from the hunter-gatherer lifestyle. Since then, food has shaped our cities. In her speech, Carolyn Steel discusses how food has dictated so much of human activity, and more specifically, city growth. Steel gives a realistic appraisal of our current consumption, and what our food patterns mean for the future of humanity. Learn... posted on Nov 30, 3462 reads

Jose Bright's Saturday School
When Jose Bright arrived in South Africa in 1994, he felt daunted by the task ahead. After all, as director for regional affairs for the mayor of Washington, D.C., he had been asked by South Africa to help transform its schools, designed to benefit the white minority of 4 million, into a system to educate the 40 million black majority as well. Nobody would have blamed him if he'd simply declared v... posted on Nov 21, 2871 reads

The Henry Ford of Heart Surgery
Dr. Shetty entered the limelight in the early 1990s as Mother Teresa's cardiac surgeon. Today he offers cutting-edge medical care in India at a fraction of what it costs elsewhere in the world. His flagship heart hospital charges $2,000, on average, for open-heart surgery, compared with hospitals in the U.S. that are paid between $20,000 and $100,000, depending on the complexity of the surgery. Th... posted on Jan 6, 3136 reads

11 Myths of Decluttering
With the coming New Year, many people make a resolution to become more organized, and to tie up sundry loose ends in their lives. But taking on the task of decluttering your home or workplace can often be daunting. In this article, Gretchen Rubin offers some time-tested and helpful advice for figuring out what stays by pointing out what she calls, "the 11 myths of Decluttering"... posted on Dec 28, 16092 reads

Greenest School in America
Spending a day sorting through trash is not how most high school students use their free time. However, students at Irvington High SChool in Fremont, CA, do exactly that. This school's environmental club was recently voted the Greenest School in America. Watch how the school earned this title by sorting through all the school's trash, looking for recyclables and things to be composted. These s... posted on Dec 3, 3099 reads

A School That Serves As A Lifeline
Principal Sherrie Gahn said she was shocked when she first came to Whitney Elementary School seven years ago."The kids were eating ketchup packets," Gahn said. "I said to one of my teachers, 'What on Earth are they doing?' and she said, 'That's their dinner.' " Whitney Elementary is in a dusty, rundown neighborhood of Las Vegas. Families here live at the edge of financial disaster. Gahn estimates ... posted on Dec 10, 3578 reads

Africa's Schindler
Today, Congo is still reeling from the fallout of the world's worst conflict since the second World War. Although the Congo combat officially ended in 2002, an estimated 1,500 people are still dying every day. While hope is often a scarce commodity in this poor African nation, people like Henri Bura Ladyi are working hard to find a way to peace. A modern-day African version of Oskar Schindler, t... posted on Dec 30, 2269 reads

A Payment, 38 Years Later
A woman who wanted to clear her conscience after she bought three blankets but was only charged for one -- 38 years ago -- returned to the shop and paid it back, with interest. Unable to believe that someone would do this, the shopkeeper pinched himself and then paid it forward!... posted on Feb 6, 6722 reads

Help Portrait: A Worldwide Photo Shoot
"Jeremy Cowart is a professional artist in Nashville, Tennessee, who has photographed rock stars such as Sting and Britney Spears. But on Saturday, he turned his lens on people unlikely to be recognized by anyone but family. Cowart staged a one-day, worldwide photo shoot called Help Portrait. "We just want to show people that they are beautiful, that they are valued," Cowart told CNN. Cowart used ... posted on Dec 18, 4514 reads

A Child Entrepreneur Gives Back
In the home of eighth-grader Jason O'Neill, teddy bears are everywhere. They're white, black or brown. Some have bow ties and some have ribbons. They sit on chairs, tables, counter tops and the floor. Thanks to O'Neill, a young entrepreneur who started his own company at age 9, they're all going to sick children for Christmas.... posted on Dec 20, 4556 reads

The Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen
In January of 2001, Christopher McDougall asked his doctor a simple question, "How come my foot hurts?" The doctor's response to that question would change the course of his life and ultimately send him on a journey where he would find an answer -- but only, as he puts it in his own words, "after I found myself in the middle of the greatest race the world would never see." This excerpt shares more... posted on Dec 21, 4457 reads

Modest Needs: Small Gifts, Big Impact
Gary Ribble would not be able to read this story if not for people like you. Ribble, who has chronic lymphocytic leukemia in addition to severe diabetes and impaired hearing, needed new eyeglasses last spring but couldn't afford them after losing a job he'd held for more than 40 years. Then he found out about the Modest Needs Foundation. The grass-roots charity pools thousands of small donations t... posted on Dec 31, 3479 reads

A Heartwarming Work of Edifying Genius
In What Is the What, Dave Eggers chronicled the trials of one of the "lost boys of Sudan," a young man named Valentino Deng. Deng escaped the Sudan and made it to the United States, where he met Eggers, who turned his story into the award-winning book. With the funds from the book's successful run, Deng and Eggers started the Valentino Achak Deng Foundation. Deng has since returned to the Sudan to... posted on Jan 8, 2335 reads

Design Thinking for Social Innovation
Designers have traditionally focused on enhancing the look and functionality of products. Recently, they have begun using design tools to tackle more complex problems, such as finding ways to provide low-cost healthcare throughout the world. Read about how nonprofits are using "design thinking" to tackle issues such as transporting clean water to arid areas and feeding malnourished children in d... posted on Jan 31, 2235 reads

The Melody of Birds On Wire
While reading a newspaper, Jarbas Agnelli was struck by a photograph of birds on an electric wire. Their positioning on several wires made him think of a musical staff. He cut out the photograph and decided to make a song, using the bird's exact locations to determine which notes to play. "I knew it wasn't the most original idea in the universe," Agnelli says in an explanation on his website. "I w... posted on Jan 4, 7264 reads

Rooster Valentini: Getting Kids to School
The sun hangs low in a cold morning sky, blasting Russell 'Rooster' Valentini's eyes as he steers the battered red minivan he calls ''The Beast'' east into Allentown. Valentini cannot put down the visor to block the glare because 13 parking tickets will rain down on his head. So he squints as he heads to the Salvation Army Hospitality House on Seventh Street to look for students he hopes he does n... posted on Jan 26, 4358 reads

Who Wants To Be A Billionaire? I Don't.
Jeffrey Lee is not interested in the soaring price of uranium, which could make him one of the world's richest men. "This is my country. Look, it's beautiful and I fear somebody will disturb it," he says, waving his arm across a view of rocky land surrounded by Kakadu National Park, where the French energy giant Areva wants to extract 14,000 tonnes of uranium worth more than $5 billion. Mr Lee, th... posted on Jan 12, 4057 reads

Superhero Animal Stories
A retriever fights off a cougar that attacked its 11 year old owner. A pot-bellied pig blocked traffic to get attention to its heart-attack stricken owner. Planet Green recounts these and the other top uplifting stories of "superhero" animals rescuing their owners. Watch to hear some amazing stories from both traditional and non-traditional pets.... posted on Jan 28, 3902 reads

A Missed Flight & A Connection Found
On a plane bound for O'Hare International Airport, Elsie Clark felt weak, scared and utterly alone -- until she spotted a pair of shiny leather shoes across the aisle. What happened to the 79-year-old Canadian over the next 12 hours-- being embraced by a good Samaritan, escorted through O'Hare in a wheelchair and welcomed to a swanky high-rise for dinner overlooking Lake Michigan-- saved her from ... posted on Jan 4, 8251 reads


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