Tag Archives: gratitude

Bright-Side of the Web: What Does Love Look Like To YOU?

From my favourite folks at SoulPancake, I bring you:

What Does Love Look Like To YOU?

Video credit: YouTube

Quotes That Make You Go Hmmm…

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“Dreams are illustrations
from the book
your soul is writing
about you.”

— Marsha Norman

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Positive Ponderings: Diversity or Destruction?

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Why do we enjoy a vase of fresh-cut flowers?

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Are we celebrating the beauty & diversity of nature?

OR

Are we learning to appreciate the delicacy of life
which withers too soon?

OR 

Is it a chance to understand the fragility of nature
when slaughtered by man?

…something to think about.
What do you think?

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photo credit: http://photopin.com
<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/porsche-linn/6852949774/”>porschelinn</a&gt; via <a href=”http://photopin.com”>photopin</a&gt; <a href=”http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/”>cc</a&gt;

Quotes That Make You Go Hmmm…

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“If someone shows you
their true colors,

don’t try to repaint them.”

Taina, NYC Poet

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Do You Want To Be Famous?

What do Kim Kardashian, Tom Cruise, and Mother Teresa have in common?

 

They are all famous.

But famous for what?  What classifies someone as famous?

According to the Oxford Dictionary, ‘famous’ is defined as: “known about by many people” while ‘fame’ is defined as: “the condition of being known or talked about by many people, esp. on account of notable achievements”.

Let’s start with Kim Kardashian.  What in the h-e-double-toothpicks is so special about her?  Where did she come from and how in the heck did she get to be so known about by many people?  What has she contributed to society? What are her notable achievements?

Tom Cruise – this one is a bit easier.  Jockey-shorts-dancing ’80’s teen heart-throb turned action-star turned couch-jumper turned questionable. He certainly mastered the talked about by many people portion of fame and now with his current situation the conversation continues.

Mother Teresa would appear to epitomize the Oxford definitions of both ‘famous’ and ‘fame’.  Her name known by all, both pre and posthumously, she embodied goodness and faith in humanity. Her notable achievements are innumerable.  Her effect on society continues beyond her life. A legacy of hope, love, compassion and fortitude.

So, the next time someone asks: Do you want to be famous? Before answering, define what fame means to you.

For me, if famous means that I have attained my fame based on achievements that leave a legacy for the benefit of mankind; that I have contributed to society in a positive and lasting way; and that I am known about by many people because of those acts, then the answer is a resounding ‘Yes!’.

Do you want to be famous? What does fame mean for you?
Share below.

Photo credits: http://photopin.com
Kim: flickr.com/photos/shankbone/3482389782/
Tom: flickr.com/photos/lewishamdreamer/135017580/
Mother Theresa: flickr.com/photos/grrrl/2311748945/

Positive Ponderings: Image

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What image do you want to portray to the world?

Do you?

What is one thing you can do today
to set you on that course?

photo credit: http://photopin.com
<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/ranopamas/537687775/”>Panoramas</a&gt; via <a href=”http://photopin.com”>photopin</a&gt; <a href=”http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/”>cc</a&gt;
Image

Christmas Wishes

christmas wishes

All I Want For Christmas Is Snooze!

medium_2172138920Are you dreaming of a White Christmas – a thick white feather duvet atop crisp white sheets?

Do you long for Silent Nights?

Do you want to Deck the more than the Halls when you hear Jingle Bells?

Do you wish you could slip Away to a Manger for oh, say, a month, until it’s all over?

If so, then you need to take care of the most important person on your list – YOU!

Make time for yourself.  Indulge in a stress-reliever. You deserve it. You need it!

Find time each day for a tiny bit of self-indulgence.

Take a walk after dinner and enjoy the holiday lights and the crisp fresh air.

Take a long hot bubble bath.  Light candles, play soft music and stay in there until your fingers are good and wrinkly.  Consciously relax and breathe deep.

Meet up with friends for a coffee

Buy your favourite treat and hide it from the others in your house so it’s sure to be there when you want it the most.

Ask for help.  Delegate some of your list to someone else. Come on. There’s something you can let someone else cover. Two things? Three?

Take the long way home to avoid traffic and sing along, loudly, really loudly, to your favourite radio station or song list.

Wear a tiara around the house and twirl in circles every now and again. When’s the last time you did that? Are you giggling just thinking of how fun that would be?

If your budget allows, get a massage for the length of time that you can afford – half an hour, forty-five minutes, one hour…

Whenever you can get away with it, hit the snooze button and enjoy the indulgence of an extra ten minutes.  Hit it again.

Take care of yourself during the holidays and every day.  Be good to yourself. You deserve it.  

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What do you do as a special treat for yourself?

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photo credit: http://photopin.com
flickr.com/photos/voglesonger/2172138920/

Bright-Side of the Web: Skating on Thin Ice

Before I introduce today’s Bright-Side of the Web, if you celebrate Hanukkah, I want to wish you peace and love and a very

Happy Hanukkah!

In today’s Bright-Side, National Geographic photographer, Paul Nicklen, shares his awesome (literally, awesome) photographs and his adventures as a wildlife photographer in the arctic and antarctic.

If you can’t spare the time to watch the entire program, be sure to watch the first five minutes, although I’m sure you will have a hard time pulling yourself away.

Our polar ice is melting and something must be done. Paul Nicklen will show you why.

Share your comments on this video.

 

video credit: http://www.ted.com/talks/paul_nicklen_tales_of_ice_bound_wonderlands.html

Recalling Happier Days

The winter holidays of “kiddom” * likely conjure up some of your best memories of childhood.

Gathering at the local toboggan hill, you lined up at the top, mounted your trusty sled and raced your buddy to the bottom both seeing if you could break the record for who would go the farthest and the fastest only to run back up and do it again. Or perhaps you both piled onto the same sled, rushing to get your feet in, legs wrapping around legs, pushing yourselves forward with knitted mittens caked with tiny damp snow balls, tumbling sideways off the toboggan as you neared the finish. You would both grab hold of the rope and scramble up the hill again, toboggan in tow.

Making snowmen at morning recess and hoping the big kids didn’t knock it down by lunchtime.

Writing letters to Santa, wondering if he’ll have time to reply and desperately hoping you’d been good enough all year to get your wish which you revealed in confidence to the big man himself.

Excursions to the tree farm to select the perfect specimen to grace your home for the holidays. One worthy enough for the home-made ornaments.

Rushing through dinner so you wouldn’t miss a minute of your favourite holiday classic.

And on Christmas eve, tuning into the radio to listen to the reports from the airforce on where they last spotted an unidentified object flying through the sky which every kid knew without a doubt or hesitation was Santa, then racing off to bed “uncharacteristically early”*.

In our house, as the Christmas cards arrived in the mail, my mother would tape them to the wall behind our dining room table. As the month passed, the collection grew. Bright and cheery images added to the holiday decor. Inevitably, there would be at least one pair of matching cards, sometimes two, and we would make a game out of trying to find the match.

On Saturday mornings, my father would get up early and drive my best friend and I to the local outdoor skating rink, often arriving at 7:00am. (at least that’s how I remember it).  The place was vacant. We had the entire rink to ourselves. He would leave us to skate to our hearts content. Where he went, if he even went anywhere, I do not know and never considered until only a few years ago. All I knew was, we were alone, we always felt safe, and we were given the freedom to do what we loved. We would practice our twirls and try to add jumps and would race from one end to the other. My father would arrive to pick us up again just as the official public hours would begin and snack bar would open.  We rode home with dreams of olympic glory in our futures; the next Dorothy Hamills.

When my children were small, I began the tradition of giving them one new ornament each year.  As we decorated the tree as a family, just before the final one was hung, I would present them with that year’s ornament. My hope is that when the time comes for them to have a tree of their own, to decorate with a family of their own, that they will begin their new lives built on happy memories. Hanging among their shiny new ornaments will / that each ornament they unwrap from their past will recall a happy memory from their childhood days which they can use as a base from which to branch out.

What’s your happiest holiday childhood memory?

* “kiddom” – from A Christmas Story
* “uncharacteristically early” – from Miracle on 34th Street (1994)
Photo credits: http://photopin.com
flickr.com/photos/54159370@N08/6816859094/
flickr.com/photos/cafemama/3245427194/
Video Credits: YouTube