Author: Lori Deschene

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Runaway Thoughts

    Tiny Wisdom: On Runaway Thoughts

    “Your worst enemy cannot harm you as much as your own unguarded thoughts.” ~Buddha

    For the vast majority of my life, I took pride in being a fighter–which meant I was always ready for an attack so no one else could hurt me. The irony is that because of this mindset, I frequently hurt myself.

    I was too busy guarding myself against other people’s negative intentions to create positive intentions of my own. I was too preoccupied judging and doubting people to connect with them on a meaningful level.

    The people and things I fought weren’t the problem; my thoughts and assumptions were.

    I find this is true for a lot of people: The things we’re afraid of are nowhere near as damaging as the way we suffocate ourselves in those fears.

    Today, if you find your thoughts taking on a life of their own, pulling you into a dark place that has nothing to do with what’ actually going on in front of you, take a breath and let them go.

    Make a conscious decision to see everything anew instead of tainting your perceptions with worst case scenarios.

    The best things in life can only happen if we’re fully open to experiencing and receiving them.

    Photo by HaPe_Gera

  • Tiny Wisdom: On the Future

    Tiny Wisdom: On the Future

    “Whatever the past has been, you have a spotless future.” ~Unknown

    Everyone has something in their past they wish they could change. Whether it’s a mistake, a regret, a disappointment, or a deep pain, we’ve all had moments that can feel overwhelming if we try to hold onto them while building tomorrow.

    We can never change what’s come and gone, but we can always choose instead to focus on what’s coming and where we’re going.

    The future is never set in stone, no matter how limiting the past may have been. The only thing standing between us and new possibilities is our attachment to the possibilities we lost.

    Today, if you find yourself dwelling on something that happened before, and how you felt about it, shift your focus to what you want to feel right now, and then do something to create it. Take a walk, call a friend, or look up that class you want to take, and immerse yourself in that moment.

    The future is unwritten. The question is whether we’ll write it in response to everything that appears to have gone wrong in the past, or in awareness of everything that’s going right in the present.

    Photo by swanksalot

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Living with Honor

    Tiny Wisdom: On Living with Honor

    “The greatest way to live with honor in this world is to be what we pretend to be.” ~Socrates

    Most of us live the majority of our lives for other people—trying to do what they want us to do, aiming to meet their expectations, and hoping to be seen as we’d like them to see us.

    Trying to sway perception is exhausting and oftentimes fruitless because we can never dictate what other people think. We don’t get to control our reputation; we only get to shape our character.

    Today, if you find yourself fixating on other people’s perceptions and judgments, shift your focus to what you think about your choices and actions. Are you being someone you’re proud of? If not, what needs to change?

    Photo by zackzen

  • 4 Tips to Create Meaningful, Authentic Connections Online

    4 Tips to Create Meaningful, Authentic Connections Online

    “The most important things in life are the connections you make with others.” ~Tom Ford

    Three years ago I was living in the Bay Area, working for a start-up website as a community and content and manager. Every day, I signed online and wrote for hours about a topic that meant absolutely nothing to me.

    I accepted the position because it was a dramatic pay increase from my previous temp and freelance lifestyle, and it afforded me my first solo apartment. I’d held dozens of different jobs in my time as I searched for meaningful work, and I certainly worked hard, but I always felt like I’d failed when it came to taking care of myself.

    I simultaneously worked fifty-plus hour weeks to build my freelance resume and stockpiled ramen noodles, which felt disheartening to say the least. When I had a desk, a briefcase, and copious amounts of overtime where other people had a social life, I felt accomplished and important.

    It wasn’t until the office closed and I began working from home that I realized how unfulfilled I felt.

    I didn’t want to develop some calculated online persona to represent my company—I wanted to be my authentic self. I didn’t want to write about something that meant absolutely nothing to me for the sake of getting paid. And I didn’t want to engage with people superficially with an eye on Google Analytics.

    If I signed onto a social networking site with a link to something I wrote, I wanted my heart to be in it. If I commented on someone else’s blog, I didn’t want it to be a thinly veiled attempt to drive traffic back to my employer’s site. I wanted my words and interactions to mean something more than that. (more…)

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Becoming Again

    Tiny Wisdom: On Becoming Again

    “To live is to be willing to die over and over again.” ~Pema Chodron

    A lot of times we say we want to expand our world, but without realizing it we attach to the way things are.

    We attach to our feelings, relationships, and circumstances, and then fight to hold onto them for dear life. It’s scary to let go of what is and what works, and sometimes even what doesn’t work. Familiar and bearable can be a lot more comforting than the unknown and potentially dissatisfying.

    And yet tomorrow is always unknown. No matter how secure we may feel with what we have, everything can change in a heartbeat. We can choose to fear what could go wrong and then wade into a murky tomorrow feeling fearful and resistant, or embrace the possibility of what could go right and face tomorrow with excitement and wonder.

    Every day we can mourn who we were before or many befores ago, or celebrate who we’re becoming now and in the nows to come. Which do you choose today?

    Photo by daz smith

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Being Fully What You Are

    Tiny Wisdom: On Being Fully What You Are

    “By accepting yourself and being fully what you are, your presence can make others happy.” ~Jane Roberts

    I suspect we all want permission to be exactly who we are—to accept ourselves instead of feeling unsure of ourselves, and then somehow find a balance between being and improving.

    When we see someone else who appears to do that, despite their weaknesses and flaws, it’s immensely inspiring and gratifying. Why? Because we all want to believe that even if we can be better, there’s nothing wrong with being exactly who we are.

    Yet only we can give that feeling to ourselves. No one else can validate us, support us, love us, inspire us, or motivate us to believe that we are enough. If we can find that magical feeling of being okay with being, we can give so much to the world around us, whether we realize it or not, because everyone wants to let themselves relax and simply be.

    Today if you question yourself, doubt yourself, or otherwise feel down on yourself, remember: everyone does, but the moment when one of us finds the courage to stand strong, it has a ripple effect on everyone else. The question remains: which ones of us will be brave enough to love who we are today?

    Photo by Eddi van W

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Perfect Plans

    Tiny Wisdom: On Perfect Plans

    Green Buddha

    “A good plan today is better than a perfect plan tomorrow.” -Proverb

    Tomorrow always seems like a safe bet for action. Then you’ll be ready to get started, or get serious, or get over it, or get on with it. Tomorrow you’ll finally set your plan in motion instead of shaping it into something just right. You’ll take the offer, the plunge, or the road less taken tomorrow, when you feel sure.

    Tomorrow can become a moving target while todays pile up and expire.

    Sometimes we need to be patient, but oftentimes we use it as an excuse to wait for something that will likely never come. Today is our chance to act. We might not always know precisely what to do, but we can trust that we’ll figure out as we go if only we get started.

    Of course that comes down to whether or not we’re willing to trust in our abilities. What do you need to start today, and if you don’t trust in yourself, what can you do to change that?

    Green Buddha image via Shutterstock

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Enthusiasm

    Tiny Wisdom: On Enthusiasm

     

    “Enthusiasm is the greatest asset in the world. It beats money, power, and influence.” ~Henry Chester

    Money can leave you feeling emptier than you were before you had it; it can buy you everything yet give you none of the feelings you hoped it would provide.

    Power gives the illusion of control, when in all reality, everyone must come to terms with our universal vulnerability. And influence—well, it might make people follow you, but it doesn’t guarantee you have something worth following.

    Enthusiasm, when directed toward something healthy, gives you the power to imagine, create, and enjoy, all rooted deep within your own sense of self, possibility, and passion. It’s an infectious feeling based on the beauty you see and nurture in the world.

    It’s not about getting somewhere else, bringing other people with you, or convincing them you’re a worthwhile leader. And yet enthusiasm has the power to do those things without ever requiring that intention.

    Enthusiasm is simultaneously a gift to yourself and a gift to the world. It’s immersing yourself in the flow of your enjoyment. It’s gratitude in action. Whether it’s a blog, art, music, or even family, our greatest asset in life is enthusiasm for something that feels both bigger than and part of ourselves.

    What are you enthusiastic about? What time have you set aside to nurture it today?

    Photo by h.koppdelaney

  • How You Made Tiny Buddha Beautiful This Year: Our 2010 in Review

    How You Made Tiny Buddha Beautiful This Year: Our 2010 in Review

    “We may not have it all together, but together we have it all.” ~Anonymous

    Before September 2009, I thought I wanted to run a personal development blog—a place to share the lessons I’ve learned and generally build a community around the idea of teaching people to improve their lives. Then I realized that wasn’t my vision.

    There were a couple reasons for that.

    I feel the biggest challenge isn’t gaining new information; it’s learning to apply it.

    Instead of trying to build authority, I wanted to embrace my humanity—to be both strong and vulnerable, willing to share what I’ve learned and continually learn from you.

    I wanted to be part of this community, not standing outside it telling you to follow me.

    I am not Tiny Buddha—we all are. We all have the same capacity to learn, grow, and inspire.

    This year you have all inspired and amazed me. You’ve demonstrated bravery, honesty, and authenticity. Whether you’ve written for the site, commented, read and shared, or simply passed through, you’ve been a valuable part of this community.

    Though I know I just said this site isn’t all about me, it means the world to me. I put all of my heart into running Tiny Buddha, and I couldn’t be more grateful for your continued participation. You make Tiny Buddha what it is, and I appreciate you.

    So I’ve decided to do a hybrid year-end review. I’d like to share a little of what I’ve accomplished, some of what you’ve accomplished, a bit about the site’s growth, and a few details about plans for 2011. (more…)

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Everyday Change

    Tiny Wisdom: On Everyday Change

    Buddha

    “The doors we open and close each day decide the lives we live.” ~Flora Whittemore

    Some decisions seem so inconsequential when you make them.

    You choose not to go to lunch with your coworkers. You decide against making that call about taking a class. You reconsider your plans to go out with your friends and instead sit alone, in a familiar space, with a familiar level of comfort.

    Every small decision affects the next decision you get to make.

    If you don’t go to lunch, you might not learn about a new position at your company. If you don’t make the call, you might not find out there’s a scholarship program that could help make your dreams come true much more easily than you thought. If you don’t join your friends, you might miss a unique experience that you’d have cherished if you had it.

    We don’t have to do everything; in fact, it’s just not possible. But we can choose to open doors more often than we close them. We can choose to be part of the world more often than sitting on the outside.

    What doors will you open today?

    Photo by neonow

  • The One New Year’s Resolution That Creates Lasting Change

    The One New Year’s Resolution That Creates Lasting Change

    “If you focus on results, you will never change. If you focus on change, you will get results.” ~Jack Dixon

    I originally started to write a post offering tons of different New Year’s resolutions and tips to stick to them to create lasting change.

    After all, that’s what we bloggers do around the end of the year: share our best practices for improving our lives as December rolls into January; compile well-researched suggestions to change, and do it consistently, despite knowing most people give up on resolutions within weeks of setting them.

    Then I realized that didn’t feel authentic to me.

    I don’t actually believe New Year’s Day is any different than any other day. I don’t believe a random point in the time measurement system we’ve created requires us to make a laundry list of things we need to change or improve.

    New Year’s Eve is, in fact, just another day, and the next day is one, as well.

    I don’t mean to minimize the excitement of the New Year, or any of the days we’ve chosen to celebrate for religious or honorary reasons. I love a big event as much as the next person; in fact, I sometimes bust out the champagne for parallel parking well or using a really big word in a sentence.

    What I’m saying is that New Year’s resolutions often fail for a reason, and it’s only slightly related to intention or discipline.

    Resolutions fail because they don’t emerge from true breakthroughs. They’re calendar-driven obligations. and they often address the symptoms, not the cause of our unhappiness.

    Some resolutions are smart for our physical and emotional health and well-being. Quitting smoking, losing weight, managing stress better—these are all healthy things.

    But if we don’t address what underlies our needs to light up, order double bacon cheeseburgers, and worry ourselves into frenzies, will it really help to vow on one arbitrary day to give up everything that helps us pretend we’re fine?

    It’s almost like we set ourselves up for failure to avoid addressing the messy stuff.

    Why We’re Really Unhappy

    I can’t say this is true for everyone, but my experience has shown me that my unhappiness—and my need for coping mechanisms—come from several different places:

    • I’m dwelling on the past or obsessing about the future.
    • I’m comparing myself to everyone else—their accomplishments, the respect and the attention they garner, and their apparently perfect lives.
    • I’m feeling dissatisfied with how I’m spending my time and the impact I’m making on the world.
    • I’ve lost hope in my potential.
    • I’m expecting and finding the worst in people.
    • I’m turning myself into a victim or a martyr, blaming everyone else.
    • I’m spiraling into negative thinking, seeing everything as a sign of doom and hopelessness
    • I’m assuming there should be a point in time when none of the above happens anymore.

    The last one, I believe, is the worst cause of unhappiness. All those other things I mentioned are human, whether we experience them persistently or occasionally.

    We’ll do these things from time to time, and they’ll hurt. In the aftermath, we’ll want to do all those different things that every year we promise to give up.

    We’ll want to eat, drink, or smoke away our feelings. Or we’ll want to work away our nagging sense of inadequacy. Or we’ll judge whether or not we’re really enjoying life enough, and in the very act of judging detract from that enjoyment.

    So, perhaps the best resolution has nothing to do with giving up all those not-so-healthy things and everything to do with adopting a new mindset that will make it less tempting to turn to them.

    An Alternative to Resolutions

    Maybe instead of trying to trim away all the symptoms of our dissatisfaction, we can accept that what we really want is happiness—and that true happiness comes and goes. We can never trap it like a butterfly in a jar.

    No amount of medication or meditation can change the fact that we will sometimes get caught up in thoughts and emotions.

    What we can do is work to improve the ratio of happy-to-unhappy moments. We can learn to identify when we’re spiraling and pull ourselves back with the things we enjoy and want to do in this world.

    Instead of scolding ourselves for all the things we’re doing wrong and making long to-do lists to stop doing them, we can focus on doing the things that feel right to us.

    This may sound familiar if you’ve read about positive psychology.

    I’m no posi-psy expert, and to my knowledge no one is since the industry is unregulated. But it doesn’t take an expert to know it feels a lot better to choose to nurture positive moments than it does to berate myself for things I’ve done that might seem negative—all while plotting to give them all up when the clock strikes tabula rasa.

    4 Simple Steps to Increase Your Happiness Ratio

    This is something I’ve been working on for years, so it comes from my personal experience. As I have worked to increase my levels of satisfaction, meaning, and happiness, I have given up a number of unhealthy habits, including smoking, overeating, and chronically dwelling and complaining.

    That all required deliberate intention, but it was impossible until I addressed the underlying feelings. I still have some unhealthy habits, but I know releasing them starts with understanding why I turn to them. Starting today, and every day, regardless of the calendar:

    1. Recognize the places where you feel helpless…

    …the housing situation, the job, the relationship, that sense of meaningless. Then plan to do something small to change that starting right now. Acknowledge that you have the power to do at least one small thing to empower yourself.

    Don’t commit to major outcomes just yet. Just find the confidence and courage to take one small step knowing that you’ll learn as you go where it’s heading. As you add up little successes, the bigger picture will become clearer. This isn’t major transformation over a night. It’s a small seed of change that can grow.

    2. Identify the different events that lead to feelings that seem negative.

    Like gossiping with your coworker, overextending yourself at work, not getting enough sleep, drinking too much.

    Whatever it is that generally leaves you with unhappy feelings, note it down. Work to reduce these, making a conscious effort to do them on one fewer day per week, then two, and then three. The key isn’t to completely cut out these things, but rather to minimize their occurrence.

    3. Identify the things that create positive feelings.

    Like going to the park, painting, looking at photo albums, or singing. Whatever creates feel-good chemicals in your head, note them down and make a promise to yourself to integrate them into your day. As you feel your way through your joy, add to this. Learn the formula for your bliss.

    Know that these moments of joy are a priority, and you deserve to receive them. When you’re fully immersed within a happy moment of your own choosing, you’re a lot less likely to get lost dwelling, obsessing, comparing, judging, and wishing you were better.

    4. Stay mindful of the ratio.

    If you’ve had an entire week that’s been overwhelming, dark, or negative, instead of getting down on yourself for falling that low, remind yourself that only your kindness can pull you out. Tell yourself that you deserve to restore a sense of balance—to maintain a healthy ratio.

    Then give yourself what you need. Take a personal day at work and take a day trip. Go to the park to relax and reflect. Remind yourself only you can let go of what’s been and come back to what can be.

    It’s not about perfection or a complete release from all the causes of unhappiness. It’s about accepting that being human involves a little unhappiness—but how often it consumes us is up to us.

    This might not be a lengthy list of unhealthy behaviors you can give up, and how, or a long list of suggestions for adventure and excitement in the new year. But all those things mean nothing if you’re not in the right head space to release the bad and enjoy the good.

    Resolve what you will this year, but know that happiness is the ultimate goal. It starts in daily choices, not lofty resolutions—on any day you decide to start.

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Flaws

    Tiny Wisdom: On Flaws

    Flawed

    “A beautiful thing is never perfect.” ~Proverb

    The vintage couch pillows that don’t even slightly match. The homemade scarf that’s a little too long and yet just the right size. The worn T-shirt that looks like trash but holds too much nostalgia to toss. The hand-made card depicting a child’s version of a happy family—not even slightly realistic and yet precise in all the right ways.

    Imperfect beauty surrounds us, and without realizing it, we also own it, with our diverse colors, shapes, sizes, and smiles; in our varying tastes, skills, perceptions, and quirks.

    All those little things that make us completely different despite our universal sameness endow us with a beauty we’d never choose to lose if only we could recognize it. That seems to be the hard part: realizing that because the paintings of our lives are a few strokes away from perfect, we are so undeniably beautiful.

    The things we see as flaws are often just a reminder we are whole and wholly unique.

    If you choose to do something to improve yourself today, which in itself is a positive thing, remember: you have a lot less to change than you think.

    photo by linh.ngan

  • Review & Giveaway: The Power of Receiving

    Review & Giveaway: The Power of Receiving

    Hand Open to Receive

    Sometimes in the name of being good we forget to be good to ourselves. We put so much energy into meeting other people’s needs that we fail to meet our own. And yet that doesn’t change that we have needs; it just pushes us to deny them or to find manipulative ways of getting them met.

    For the longest time, I felt certain that good people put everyone else first. They stretch themselves, bend over backward, and even completely exhaust themselves if it means making everyone else happy.

    I also thought giving would naturally invite reciprocity. Inevitably, after months of martyrdom, I’d feel frustrated that other people weren’t returning that kindness and meeting my expectations. The truth is that it wasn’t their job. It was my job to take care of my needs.

    And it’s the same for all of us: only we can make the choice to receive.

    Knowing firsthand how challenging it can be to find a balance between giving and taking, I was excited to read Amanda Owen’s new book The Power of Receiving.

    On the surface, it may seem like a book about putting yourself first, but it’s so much more than that.

    The Power of Receiving is about being able to receive without feeling obligated or indebted. It’s about finding the courage to be your authentic self so that you can invite other people’s genuine acceptance. And it’s about identifying and receiving the dreams that will fulfill you, professionally and personally. (more…)

  • How to Love Your Authentic Self

    How to Love Your Authentic Self

    “You, yourself, as much as anybody else in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.” ~Buddha

    In our personal development-focused, life coach-dependent world, it’s all too easy to think you need to change. Not just the things you do, but who you are.

    It’s one thing to invite transformation for the sake of growth, improvement, and new possibilities. It’s another thing to feel so dissatisfied with yourself that no amount of change could possibly convince you that you’re worthy and lovable.

    This type of intrinsic self-loathing formed the basis of my adolescence and some of my twenties. It was like I was constantly trying to gut myself so I could replace myself with someone better.

    Ironically, I won a karaoke contest in the early nineties for singing The Greatest Love of All—yet I hadn’t learned to love myself. I didn’t know the greatest love of all, or any love, really, being about as closed off as a scab.

    On most days, I kept a running mental tally of all the ways I messed up—all the dumb things I said, the stupid ideas I suggested, and the inevitably unsuccessful attempts I made to make people like me. How could they when I wasn’t willing to lead the way?

    I tell you this not as an after picture who can’t even remember that girl from before, but as someone who has lived this past decade taking two steps forward and one step back. For my willingness to give you this honesty, I am proud.

    People are more apt to share their struggles once they feel like they’re on the other side. It’s a lot less scary so say “This is who I used to be” than “This is what I struggle with sometimes.”

    But this is my truth, and I give it to you, wholeheartedly and uncensored. On a primal level, I really want to be loved and accepted, but I learn a little more every day that my own self-respect is the foundation of lasting joy. (more…)

  • Mindfulness Giveaway: Win Awake at the Wheel Mindful Driving CDs

    Mindfulness Giveaway: Win Awake at the Wheel Mindful Driving CDs

    Open Road

    Update: This winners for this giveaway have already been chosen.Subscribe to the Tiny Buddha List to learn about future contests!

    When I was twenty-one years old, I got into a series of car accidents just after getting my license.

    The first time, I drove the wrong way down a one-way street. The second time I side-swiped a double-parked car trying to get around it. And the third time, I hit a Channel 7 news van while looking at printed directions in the middle of Big Dig construction madness (not my proudest moment).

    In all of those instances, I was lost and harried, and because I was feeling agitated and not fully paying attention to the road, I became a danger to myself and everyone around me.

    Luckily, I didn’t hurt anyone through my recklessness, but others aren’t so lucky. According to the Department of Transportation, distracted drivers kill approximately 6,000 people and injure over a half-million annually.

    I rarely drive these days because I work from home, but often when I’m walking in my neighborhood, I notice drivers who remind me of my younger self.

    Some of them are looking at GPS systems on their phones. Others are balancing their cells on their shoulders, while putting on lipstick or trying to scarf down fries that appear to be lodged deep down in a greasy bag.

    Then there are the texters—some who hold their phone up high as to only partially take their eyes from the road, and others who seem oblivious to the risks of completely shifting their glance to their laps.

    And then there’s another breed of distracted driver: the ones who are looking straight at the road or even right into your eyes but appear completely vacant. It’s like they’re there but not—engaged in a twenty-minute commute or even a twenty-hour road trip, and yet completely disconnected from the experience. (more…)

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Wasted Time

    Tiny Wisdom: On Wasted Time

    “Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely.” ~Rodin

    John Lennon said time you enjoyed wasting was not wasted. The same can be said for time you didn’t enjoy if you decide to find value in the experience of the moment.

    It’s easy to do this retroactively—to look back and ascertain that a frustrating moment taught you patience, or a disappointing moment taught you humility. It’s a lot more difficult to ground yourself within a less than ideal moment and decide then to use it wisely; not to remember it wisely later, but actually do something with it right then.

    One thing I like to do when I’m immersed within an experience that feels like a waste of time is ask myself: How can I make this valuable?

    It might mean practicing mindfulness when I’m somewhere I’d rather not be, breathing deeply when I feel impatient, or learning something from a mistake that I can use to improve in the future.

    If our thoughts shape our world, then we can decide every moment is valuable and then make it so.

    Today if you come up against time that feels wasteful, ask yourself: How can I use this moment wisely?

    Photo by EPi.Longo

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Resisting Emotions

    Tiny Wisdom: On Resisting Emotions

    “Whatever you fight, you strengthen, and what you resist, persists.” ~Eckhart Tolle

    No amount of strength will change the fact that we are human, and to be human means to hurt. We won’t hurt always, and we don’t have to suffer endlessly, but we will feel emotions all through our lives.

    Even if we become really adept at dealing with uncomfortable emotions, we will never completely transcend them. And would we even want to? The ability to feel the darkest of moments gives us the capacity to enjoy the lightest.

    So I say lets stop fighting our natural duality. There’s no reason to pretend you’re smiling when you’re crying silently inside. It’s pointless to pretend you don’t feel angry, annoyed, frustrated, exhausted, disappointed, disillusioned, or dissatisfied when you do. Sit there and feel whatever you feel. It has a lot less power when you let it go through you.

    Only in experiencing and then taking power away from our emotions can we then let them go and move on.

    What do you need to feel and then release today?

    Photo by Kelp1966

  • Productivity and Happiness: Why Are We So Busy?

    Productivity and Happiness: Why Are We So Busy?

    “Life is what happens when you are making other plans.” ~John Lennon

    There have been times in my life when I believed all my happiness revolved around how busy I was. If I was busy, I was using time wisely. If I was busy, I was proving to myself that I was valuable. If I was busy, I was creating the possibility of a better life in the future. Any threat to my productivity was a threat to my sense of hope.

    Being busy didn’t make me feel happy, but it created the illusion that I was somehow building a foundation for that feeling someday, somewhere, when I could finally slow down and be free.

    Most of us are fiercely defensive of our busyness. We have processes to streamline, goals to accomplish, promotions to earn, debt to eliminate, exercise regimes to master, dreams to chase—and hopefully along the way, people to help and inspire.

    We multitask, even when it means not truly being present in an activity we enjoy, and maybe even feel guilty for blocks of unplanned time in our schedules. We look for productivity hacks and apps, join forums to discuss ways to get more things done; and when we do aim to simplify our lives, even that undertaking involves a lengthy to-do list. (more…)

  • Tiny Wisdom: On Giving a Gift

    Tiny Wisdom: On Giving a Gift

    “Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it. ” -William A. Ward

    Everyone likes to be appreciated, yet research shows we are collectively quicker to place blame than offer praise. Perhaps it’s because we’re wired to seek solutions to problems, which means we need to recognize things that aren’t working.

    But relationships aren’t problems to be solved. They might come with their challenges, but inherently they don’t need fixing. They need nurturing, and it’s our job to do that.

    Today make it a point to express all the gratitude you feel, even for little things. Thank the barista not only for your coffee but for serving you with a smile. Tell your coworker how much you appreciate that she’s so thorough and conscientious. Express your gratitude to your sister for always asking how you’re doing.

    Whenever you feel grateful, put it into words. It’s amazing how a small expression of gratitude can brighten someone’s day and remind them there’s a lot they’re doing right.

    Photo by Joel Bedford

  • 8 Ideas for Stress-Free, Meaningful Holiday Gift Giving

    8 Ideas for Stress-Free, Meaningful Holiday Gift Giving

    “You make a living by what you get; you make a life by what you give.” ~Unknown

    There’s something magical about this time of year, and it has nothing to do with the Santas posted like soldiers at various points throughout the globe or the million volts of electricity that light up Main Streets the world over.

    I’ve always loved Christmastime because the season inspires people to focus on everything that’s important in life.

    The usually harried slow down just a little to stop and smell the mistletoe, while humming along to redundant Christmas songs they secretly enjoy. Fighting relatives shelf their differences to share egg nog and brandy, bonding over the shared experience of wearing atrocious holiday sweaters from Christmas gifts past.

    I know holiday euphoria well. Since I always spend at least two weeks visiting my family around Christmas, the season packs double the punch—the infectious excitement of Yuletide energy and the joy that comes from sharing it with people I appreciate all the more for seeing them less.

    And then there’s the gift component. People may lament the commercialization of Christmas, but there’s something about it all that appeals to me. I love watching shoppers give to the Toys for Tots stand in the mall, recognizing just how many people do good things without needing recognition or reward.

    I also love the opportunity to mass-gift my family at a time when positive feelings are already heightened. Historically, I’ve devoted hours to plotting which gifts I’d give them, imagining how their eyes would light up when they opened them, like Ralphie’s teacher’s when she read his essay about wanting a Red Ryder BB gun.

    It might be the least meaningful part of the holiday season, but I’ve seen a lot of loving purpose among the humming shoppers scouring the shelves for people they love. Something about the fleeting magic of it all seems to make people more mindful; after all, the holidays come but once a year and they are, in fact, for giving.

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