Sunday, January 8, 2012

A Poverty Solution That Starts With a Hug - NYTimes.com

A Poverty Solution That Starts With a Hug - NYTimes.com:
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

PERHAPS the most widespread peril children face isn’t guns, swimming pools or speeding cars. Rather, scientists are suggesting that it may be “toxic stress” early in life, or even before birth.


This month, the American Academy of Pediatrics is issuing a landmark warning that this toxic stress can harm children for life. I’m as skeptical as anyone of headlines from new medical studies (Coffee is good for you! Coffee is bad for you!), but that’s not what this is.

Rather, this is a “policy statement” from the premier association of pediatricians, based on two decades of scientific research. This has revolutionary implications for medicine and for how we can more effectively chip away at poverty and crime.

Toxic stress might arise from parental abuse of alcohol or drugs. It could occur in a home where children are threatened and beaten. It might derive from chronic neglect — a child cries without being cuddled. Affection seems to defuse toxic stress — keep those hugs and lullabies coming! — suggesting that the stress emerges when a child senses persistent threats but no protector.

Read more.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Five Reasons to Serve by Nipun Mehta

5 Reasons to Serve
What doing things for others does for ourselves.
by Nipun Mehta


At the height of the dot-com boom in 1999, a few tech-savvy friends and I walked into a homeless shelter to give without any strings attached. Our motivation? We just wanted to serve, and quickly discovered that such a practice of selfless giving is something that we all have access to, no matter who we are or what we do.

Our trip to the homeless shelter led to us building a website for them at no charge. That experiment in giving blossomed into an organization called ServiceSpace, which went on to develop and gift websites to thousands of small nonprofits. But the ripples didn't stop there. ServiceSpace has now evolved into a remarkable incubator for dozens of projects, including an online good news portal, "Smile Cards" that spread kindness, and a gift-economy restaurant in Berkeley and rickshaw in India—all touching millions of people.

Read the whole article here.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Kindness Is Contagious

Occupy It ~ Be It!

Random acts of kindness is a start.
Now become it.
Embrace it as a way of life,
a way of protest against injustice.
Occupy it. Be it!