Five Resources To Help You Live Simply and Successfully
Slow Living:
“In some ways, Slow Living offers new language to describe what’s also been called the social and economic transition or living local — the renewed commitment to patient, community-minded and wise economic and social exchange."
http://www.axiomnews.ca/node/3666
“We
asked Chouinard what he thinks his legacy will be—turns out he
"couldn't really care less." But we speculate it will be measured not by
what he encourages (be in nature, be personally responsible, simplify)
but by what he discourages (buying, spending, polluting).
“In short,
Chouinard wants us to stop being consumers and start being thoughtful
global citizens. Below are the six life lessons we learned from the avid
explorer.“
I’ve posted Tim Kasser’s great article on this topic before. But this quick video presentation does a great job of getting Tim’s ideas across quickly and effectively.
This animation lays
out the problems of excess materialism and points toward solutions that
promise a healthier, more just, and more sustainable life.
I find that I’m much healthier, fitter and more energetic and optimistic when I can get in my regular daliy walks along the seaside path. Now science is finding evidence to support my anecdotal evidence of the benefits of walking (and other exercise).
This slightly longer piece includes a review of Paul Tough’s book How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character and
a short video of Andrea Duckworth, the psychologist who coined the term
“grit” for passion-driven perseverance, and popularized the amazing
results achieved by children and adults who developed grit, and applied
it to pursuing what mattered to them.
“Duckworth
finds it useful to divide the mechanics of achievement into two
separate dimensions: motivation and volition. Each one, she says, is
necessary to achieve long-term goals, but neither is sufficient alone.
“Most of us are
familiar with the experience of possessing motivation but lacking
volition: You can be extremely motivated to lose weight, for example,
but unless you have the volition — the willpower, the self-control — to
put down the cherry Danish and pick up the free weights, you’re not
going to succeed.
— Paul Tough
What Tough is calling willpower and self control, Duckworth calls “grit.”
You can read more about grit and why it “trumps” IQ on my blog:
http://createwhatmattersmost.blogspot.ca/2013/11/getting-gritty-why-grit-is-much-more.html
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