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jeudi, janvier 28, 2010
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A Very Good Neighbor … In Stereo We each can use a good neighbor, right? Someone nearby who cares about us. Someone who’s there when we really need them. For nearly 90 years now, State Farm has proven they’re just what their slogan claims: a very good neighbor. Hey, there’s a reason our Humanity Project office is protected by a State Farm policy! State Farm’s neighborliness extends to good causes around the country too, including support for the Humanity Project’s anti-bullying programs for elementary students (like those kids in the pic above). So we’re very pleased to announce that State Farm has just signed on as an official sponsor of the Humanity Project podcasts for 2010. You can hear these stereo webcasts through iTunes, among other major podcast providers – or by just going to our website at www.thehumanityproject.com and clicking on “Podcasts.” We offer interviews, original music and stories and lots more. And thanks to our good neighbor, State Farm, we’ll be able to keep sharing these special Internet broadcasts with you every month.
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lundi, janvier 04, 2010
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Thanks, Office Depot Foundation
As we begin a new year and new decade, everyone at the Humanity Project wants to thank our members, friends and supporters. For the third consecutive year now, our growing list of important sponsors includes the Office Depot Foundation. On New Year’s Eve, they approved another grant to help us to keep on helping others in our community, especially young kids around South Florida. We are very grateful. Special thanks to David C. Fannin on the Board of Directors as well as to Mary Wong, Sabrina Conte and others at the foundation. It’s folks like you make our work possible. Thank you, Office Depot Foundation.
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mercredi, novembre 18, 2009
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Humeur actuelle :  optimiste
Please Help Michael There are lots of good causes in this needy world of ours. Including our work at the Humanity Project. So we don't normally talk much about other fundraisers outside our own efforts. But this is an exception. If you live in South Florida, please attend an important event this Saturday, November 21, in Pompano Beach. They're raising money to help the family of Michael Brewer, who was set on fire deliberately by five classmates several weeks ago. It is, to us, one of the most horrible examples we know of extreme bullying. Michael nearly died but is slowly recovering, just out of ICU. It's a long, expensive haul for him and his family. The fundraiser will be held starting around noon at a lovely restaurant/bar called Galuppis. Here's a link for the address: http://galuppis.com/ The Humanity Project believes that we can learn to help others in ways that also help ourselves. Surely, this important fundraiser is one time to give what we can, helping to make a difference in a child's life -- and in our lives too. Thanks so much!
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vendredi, novembre 06, 2009
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Humeur actuelle :  agité
Thank You, Michael Jackson You may wonder why we're thanking Michael Jackson. Fair enough. The answer is best seen, not read. Go to this link and watch the Humanity Project's latest offering, "If You Help Someone." www.youtube.com/hpflorida. Loosely based on MJ's classic video "Beat It," we use child dancers and actors in our own tale of bullying -- and how to stop it. You'll hear original music that's very different anything Jackson did -- but that also sends a strong message young kids will remember. (While you're at our YouTube site, also check out the other videos, especially the wonderful news story about last year's anti-bullying Thousand Youth March for Humanity.) We think these videos will make you smile! Thanks MJ ... and thanks to you for your interest and support!
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jeudi, octobre 15, 2009
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Humeur actuelle :  optimiste
This is the sixth in a series of original modern fables by The Humanity Project. They are short, fun, fictional tales that we hope will help demonstrate key points of The Humanity Project message. Stories have been used to teach moral lessons for centuries, from the ancient Greeks through the Bible and up to today’s self-help gurus. That’s also our goal with these stories. We hope you’ll enjoy “The Tale of Me-First Mary.” The Tale of Me-First Mary Mary was an odd name for this particular Mary. For this particular Mary often pursed her unmerry lips in disgust at some other someone. Someone, anyone who got in her way during any particular day. Mary was as unmerry as any someone could be. Knowing that she lived in a me-first world, Mary often used her lips to speak aloud the two words always mostly on her mind. “Me.” And “my.” (Sometimes Mary often spoke the words “I” and “mine” too.) These were the syllables that tumbled off her tongue from each day’s first sunflicker to every night’s final moongleam. Driving to work, she fumed that an accident ahead on the highway put “me” behind schedule. Vacationing in the mountains, she snorted that her boyfriend’s sprained ankle ruined “my” holiday. Watching television, she sniffed that terrible news about terrible floods somewhere interrupted “my” favorite program. The drivers in the accident and the boyfriend in the mountains and the people living near terrible floods were not tickled by these events either, of course, though this thought never meandered completely into Mary’s mind. Mary wasn’t mean, mind you. No, Mary didn’t want to hurt anyone, of course, of course not. No, Mary had just learned, oh yes, Mary had learned the big lesson very very well: If you’re helping someone else, you’re not helping yourself. It was a hard but simple truth, as every someone understood in this me-first world. The trouble with being just one me in a me-first world is all those other me-firsters living in your world, of course. Yes, all those other me-first people just keep getting in your way. Which was why Mary so often pursed her unmerry lips in disgust at some other someone. Which was why Mary was as unmerry as any someone could be. And so it went for Me-First Mary, day after day after day becoming less merry by the moment. Until one day Mary had to wonder, just for one moment beneath her pursed unmerry lips: “Maybe me-first isn’t the best way to be in this world. Maybe, maybe helping only yourself isn’t really helping yourself at all.” This is what Mary wondered one day. Was it possible that doing something helpful for some other someone really might help Mary too somehow? Was it possible Mary might feel a little merrier if she thought a little less about herself alone? Was it really possible that any of this was really possible in this me-first world? Mary pursed her lips again, tighter than usual. “No, that’s really not possible,” Mary said tartly to herself aloud. “My life’s hard enough just worrying about ‘me’ all the time! ‘Me,’ ‘me,’ ‘me’ every minute and I still can’t get what I want. Imagine how bad my life would be if I started worrying about any of ‘them’ too!” The Humanity Project believes that Me-First Mary had it all wrong, wrong, wrong. :-) Because she was so unmerry precisely as a result of thinking only about herself. Our group believes that each of us simply function more fully as human beings when we do, indeed, worry about other people too. We think it’s possible, we know it’s possible, to focus on helping ourselves and others – all at the same time. Not only “me” and not only “them” but rather “us.” For instance, when bystander students learn to stop school bullying, they also make their schools better places for themselves to learn and enjoy each day. Practical action that helps both yourself and humanity – that’s the Humanity Project. Find out more by exploring www.thehumanityproject.com or call us at 954-205-2722.
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lundi, juin 08, 2009
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We hope you're planning your 4th of July "Freedom from Bullying Party," which we explained in the previous blog. But there’s another way you can help us complete our unique, effective anti-bullying program for the school kids if you live in South Florida. Our great friends at Yellow Strawberry Global Hair Salon in Fort Lauderdale are giving to The Humanity Project yet again. Owner Jesse Briggs is a wonderful guy who cares about kids a lot – and is helping us to stop bullying. He also has cut the hair of some pretty famous folks over the years. If you’ve never had the chance to try upscale Yellow Strawberry, now’s a great time because it will also help stop bullying. Here’s Jesse’s generous offer: Anytime in June, bring the below coupon with you and get a shampoo, conditioner, haircut and blow dry. He’ll give us $20 toward the music video for each woman’s cut (out of the total price: $60 or $75, depending on length) and he’ll donate $10 for every man’s cut ($35 total price). Please make SURE to bring in the coupon below. The offer’s not valid without this. Just print the newsletter and cut out the coupon. Ask for Jesse Briggs or one of the other four talented stylists who are helping us. They’re named in the coupon. You’ll get a great cut – and help a great cause!! ____________________________________________________________________________________ COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON This coupon is redeemable for one woman’s haircut ( total price: $60; $75 for long hair) or one man’s haircut ($35) at Yellow Strawberry Global Hair Salon, 1007 E. Las Olas, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, between June 1 – June 30, 2009. Yellow Strawberry will donate $20 from each woman’s cut with coupon, $10 from each man’s cut with coupon, to The Humanity Project’s important anti-bullying program. Ask for Jesse Briggs, Shelly Van Pelt, Franco Magnotta, Christopher Durst or Edy Gomez. Call for appointment: 954-463-4343. COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON
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lundi, juin 01, 2009
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mercredi, mai 20, 2009
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(Reprinted from www.thehumanityproject.com -- Copyright (c) 2009, The Humanity Project. All rights reserved.)
Just a very quick blog this morning as a thought struck me – a thought about the nature of competition in our society. Each of us feels the universe revolves around “me” … or should anyway. From our individual perspective, everything begins and ends with myself. Me. So when we compete for things, we put the “me” first. That’s true whether competing for attention in a group, or for a new job, or a parking space at the grocery store. To most of us, competition means getting mine for me and me alone. But there’s another approach that may work better for us, individually and as a society. Competition that lifts everyone involved. I was recalling what Paul McCartney once said about his backstage songwriting competition with John Lennon when they worked so closely together composing those classic tunes for the Beatles. “John would go off and write ‘Strawberry Fields Forever’ and then I’d go write ‘Penny Lane.” In other words, the achievements of one of them inspired the other to greater achievement too. And back and forth it went with them, leaving us with some of the greatest popular songs ever penned. They even put both their names on all their songs precisely to avoid igniting an unhealthy competition between them. Competition can be viewed as a friendly effort to get the most out of “us,” rather than a destructive battle just for “me.” That was my morning thought and I wanted to share it with my friends at The Humanity Project – which is about teaching individuals to take practical action for the betterment of both humanity and themselves. “Us.” Have a great day! :-)
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samedi, mai 16, 2009
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Humeur actuelle :  énergique
(Reprinted from www.thehumanityproject.com -- Copyright (c) 2009, The Humanity Project. All rights reserved.)
On my desk sits a small bronze figure of Buddha. It represents to me the many wise lessons imparted to the world by this insightful man. But it also means something else: friendship. The inexpensive figurine was handed to me spontaneously by a woman at a shop along the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok, Thailand. The sales clerk did this as a kindness, I believe, a gesture of good will between us. I already had bought several masks and other art pieces at her store and paid for them. She had nothing to gain except my smile.Just now, as I dusted the Buddha during my weekly housecleaning, this thought occurred to me: the gift was given with no knowledge of how I would receive it. I might just as easily have seen this as worthless junk and tossed it in the nearest trash can. Or I might have put it in some jewelry box when I returned home and never glanced at it again. Or. Or … yes, I might have looked at this small gift in the way I do, as an object I genuinely appreciate and use to enhance my life. That thought led me to another. Isn’t the same true of our own gifts, the talent and experience and enthusiasm we can share with others? All we can do is to give these, with no knowledge of how they will be received. Just like the Buddha from my friend in Bangkok. We only have the power to hand out our individual treasures to the world. What the world does with them is entirely up to others to decide.
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samedi, mai 02, 2009
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Just a quick post to let our blog followers know about a podcast they may want to check out. It's called "One Mom & Two Kids," the first Humanity Project show on which we've heard the voices of children who actually have experienced bullying first-hand in their school. It's an engaging interview with a mom and her kids and you can listen to all or part of the program, which runs about 1/2 hour long. An interesting way to spend a little free Web-surfing time! Check it out at http://www.thehumanityproject.com/podcasts/Podcast61.html. Thanks -- and please email the link to your friends!
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