Tag Archive for New

New Serenity Prayer

We can all use a bit of serenity about now. I’ve heard it said that the basis of all true religion is believing that “There is a God and I’m not him.”  That’s the spirit of this updating of the well known Serenity Prayer.

A New Serenity Prayer

by Jim Manney

God, grant me the serenity
to accept the people I cannot change,
which is pretty much everyone,
since I’m clearly not you, God.
At least not the last time I checked

And while you’re at it, God,
please give me the courage
to change what I need to change about myself,
which is frankly a lot, since, once again,
I’m not you, which means I’m not perfect.
It’s better for me to focus on changing myself
than to worry about changing other people,
who, as you’ll no doubt remember me saying,
I can’t change anyway.

Finally, give me the wisdom to just shut up
whenever I think that I’m clearly smarter
than everyone else in the room,
that no one knows what they’re talking about except me,
or that I alone have all the answers.

Basically, God,
grant me the wisdom
to remember that I’m
not you.

Amen

A Monday Promise

We’re starting our first full week of a brand new year. I don’t do resolutions. But here are my promises to myself–and my hope for you during 2020.

Love and Calm in the New Year

A calm, beautiful 2020 to you and your loved ones!  (Here are two of mine.)

En-Abling Theatre

Here’s an interesting new concept for the Arts–theatre with performers exclusively from the disabled community. There’s a lot of talent among them, but Hollywood casts what I call the “temporarily non-disabled”* into roles of characters with disabilities. That’s the case with live theater, as well.

The National Disability Theatre, created by a group of theater artists, will offer opportunities for talented individuals with disabilities to perform in major productions. In the process, they’ll be showing the world that the disability isn’t the person–and educate, say, potential hiring people to the fact that brains, creativity, work ethic, and other valuable employee-assets can NOT be determined by focusing on a person’s limitations.

Read more about this new venture at Disabled Artists Launch National Disability Theatre.

  • “Temporarily non-disabled” because all of us will, sometime in our lives, experience either a short-term or permanent disability.

Our Amazing Universe

A new birth! Not a boy or a girl…a planet! And we’re present at its birth. The  first time ever we’ve had  this experience. It doesn’t have a real name, just PDS 70b (around a dwarf star, PDS 70).

It’s amazing, breath-taking, and awe-inspiring. Partly because of our ability to see such an event outside our own solar system.

Below is a picture of it. But you can see and learn more by going to https://www.cnn.com/2018/07/02/world/newborn-planet-image-study/index.html.

This is welcome positive news to start the week. It gives me hope that, despite what we humans are doing to each other on Earth, the Universe continues to be fashioned in beautiful, magnificent ways.

A Positive Look Back and Forward via UC Berkeley

The Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley has published its 2014 “Top 10 Insights from The Science of a Meaningful Life.”  For an explanation of each, click on their article cited above. Meanwhile, here’s the list:

  1. Mindfulness can reduce racial prejudice—and possibly its effects on victims.
  2. Gratitude makes us smarter in how we spend money.
  3. It’s possible to teach gratitude to young children, with lasting effects.
  4. Having more variety in our emotions—positive or negative—can make us happier and healthier.
  5. Natural selection favors happy people, which is why there are so many of them.
  6. Activities from positive psychology don’t just make happy people happier—they can also help alleviate suffering.
  7. People with a “growth mindset” are more likely to overcome barriers to empathy.
  8. To get people to take action against climate change, talk to them about birds.
  9. Feelings of well-being might spur extraordinary acts of altruism.
  10. Extreme altruism is motivated by intuition—our compassionate instincts.

I think there’s a lot to chew on as we finish one year and embark on a brand new one.

 

 

New Rock Accidentally Made by Man

On the shores of Hawaii, scientists found a brand new rock-type, one that man has made.  It’s multi-colored, has a variety of textures, is eroded into a round shape, and is usually 2” to 8” in size.  Break down its name—plastiglomerate—and you’ll guess at what it’s made of.  Yes, it’s partly plastic.  It forms when our garbage plastic melts, then hardens inside the pores of a rock.

How does our discarded plastic get melted?  Because the area where the hybrid rock was discovered is remote, campers keep fires going for cooking and heat for the period in which they camp there.  Often they think they’re doing a good thing by burning their garbage, much of which contains plastic. The melted plastic seeps into the ground and into rocks.

Makes me wonder how else we’re changing Nature.

 

Plastiglomerate

My 2014 Wish for You

Dear Readers and Other Friends,

May 2014 bring peace to every corner of your world.  Happy New Year!

Sincerely,

Jackie

 

 

Resolutions into Actions

[Something to bolster your New Year’s resolutions: ]

“The single largest pool of untapped resource in this world is human good intentions that never translate into action.”  — Cindy Gallop

[Especially good intentions like being kinder and more tolerant with each other and helping people make better lives for themselves.]

How Much this Season Costs the Earth

Every year at this time, the U.S. creates an extra 5 million tons of waste, or 3.5 million metric tons of CO2.  Take a look at these numbers from www.terrapass.com.