I just completed #80dayobsession!! Very proud of myself and really enjoyed the process. Thank you @AutumnCalabrese for creating this program! I almost cried when the last workout ended! 😅😂😭
Good news and bad news from the Plaza Art Fair: The interaction with “average people” or (non-choir) people has been fascinating and I have already learned so much about how people perceive our art form. Choral... https://t.co/L0Sr7myF16
Confidence: “I am GOOD at this.”
Conceit: “I am better than YOU.”
One is admirable, the other is a waste of time.
Yet, they are frequently mistaken for each other.
-a haiku
(I am aware that this is NOT a haiku, I just thought it would be funny.)
Thanks for all of the momentum on this goal. We are passed it but FB will let stay open until Thursday. Please consider chipping in to a great cause! #ksci2019 https://t.co/slW4icu56G
Step two: arrange your values from top priority to bottom. There have to be some things on your list that you would not give up even for other things on your list. (Hint: your list should change. I hope it’s not the same at age 15 and age 25 or 35)
Happiness requires years of work, and a process. Step one: list out all of your values. (can take some people years) If you are young, this will look like “your dream life.” That’s ok. DO NOT include perfect job, house or income. Think “what do I want to achieve?” Not “obtain.”
Truly happy people do not take their own lives. People can seem happy, but if they are suicidal, then what you are seeing is not happiness. Maybe some momentary fun or pleasure, but not real, lasting happiness. We must teach children how to achieve this. Being happy is not luck.
Thoughts on happiness, and teen suicide. Thread: I do not claim that this thread will contain the solution, or even one single causal factor. (There are many) However, suicide has impacted me greatly, and I work with teenagers every day, and these are some thoughts I have thunk.