Reading: Creativity, Talent + Marissa Mayer. Also: Urban Revival and Adults Making New Friends
What I’m reading: Creativity, Start-ups, Marissa Mayer and how adults make friends later in life (do they?)
100 Gratitudes, One Hundred Dollars, and the $29,000 Birthday Swim
We live in a world of abundance, and this is the year that I finally became worth nothing. Out of all the things that I worked through and built this year, the entire time I still had a bed to sleep in, a family close by, a job that I went to everyday and plenty of food to eat. A pool to swim in, places to run, a city to call home. When I returned from WDS this year, I was humbled, quiet, confused, and a bit sad: despite all of the engagement, inspiration, and learning, I still wonder: Am I doing things worthwhile? I’m not sure yet. Is there more to do? Absolutely. Have I reached all of my capabilities? I don’t think so. Can I do more? Yes. There’s so much more I want to do. Join me as I try to raise $29,000 for my 29th birthday — and if I do it, I promise to be a little crazy. More crazy, I mean.
100 Gratitudes
“Dwell on that which makes you happy, and you’ll be happier. You are what you think.” What are you grateful for? Here’s a list of one hundred things that I’m grateful for today; there are thousands of things. Hugs Unexpected generosity...The Stories of Humanity and the Power of Connection: #WDS 2012 Recap (Day 1)
What does it mean to be human? Humanity is what you say to someone when you think no one’s watching. It’s what you do when you’re all by yourself. Humanity is what you feel when you watch another person suffering, and decide to either do nothing, or do something. Humanity is the ability to reach out and hug someone. Humanity is being grateful for your family, your friends, and your ability to do something in this world. Humanity is the ability to trust, the ability to connect, the ability to touch. To be human means we can move, create, love, share, and laugh. Humanity—the essential element or essence of being human is more than what you do. It’s who you are, and who you are able to be together. It is the ability for one thousand people to sing–as a group–the entirety of “Don’t Stop Believing,” and fill a theater with our voices.