How many houses did that child build?

Here’s a great story. When Rachel Wheeler was nine she went with her mom to a fundraiser for Haiti. Her mother didn’t think she’d understand much, but she stood on a chair before she left that meeting and declared she was going to raise money to build 12 houses in Haiti.

Three years later, this young woman has raised $250,000 and built 27 houses. Now she’s rebuilding a school — this time with walls. You can read more about her and participate in her quest at http://foodforthepoor.org/rachel

I can’t imagine how proud her parents must be — and how good they must feel about their parenting. She saw a problem and she put her mind to it. Businesses all over the country helped her out. It helps to be a cute 9- or even 12-year-old girl.

But here’s the truth. People want to participate in something larger than they are. Give them a chance! Do something that’s good for the world and invite your friends to c’mon along. You have no idea what you can do. But if you start off with the old “what’s the use?” then nothing magical is going to happen. And who doesn’t want life to be magical. But magic is actually very hard work. But oooh, the results!

Go, Rachel Wheeler!

Civility

I worked retail for years, and by years I mean, ten of them at least.  I was trying to figure it out—it’s been a long time since I worked retail—and between the record store and the toy store and the clothing store and the two shoe stores…and the engraving place…oh, and there was the department store…yeah, at least ten.  And then I went into food service.

My unglamorous work history has one thread that largely unites my various jobs; I have had to work with the public.  I’ve seen them cranky, angry, delighted, I’ve watched couples get engaged, helped people celebrate sixty years of togetherness, prepared special orders for people with life-threatening allergies, and shoveled more Christmas presents into bags that I can dare to count.  All that time, my objective was to do so nicely.  With a smile.  Whether I was feeling good, bad, or indifferent, I still mustered up the energy to say “please” and “thank you”, “congratulations” and “have a nice day”.  At least I did so most of the time because—even  though I am from New Jersey, which many people consider to be The Land that Decency Forgot—my parents raised me right.

Courtesy.  Civility.  Manners.  They’re really pretty useful.

I had a conversation not too long ago with a friend who’s raising three kiddos, and they’re all toddlers so they’re in the primary stages of socialization.  She’s teaching them to be polite, to say “sir” and “ma’am” and “please” and “thank you” in the appropriate places and at the appropriate times.  She said, “I saw a TV show where a father and son were on, and the son said he didn’t think he needed to learn manners because he didn’t want to lower himself to someone else.  And BAM! It hit me…manners aren’t about lowering yourself, they’re about showing respect to the people around you.”

Indeed.

For those who think that a display of manners is a display of weakness or inferiority, please bear this in mind: you’re doing it wrong.  Manners are simply, as my friend said, a sign of respect.  I see you, person, who is another sentient, living being, standing right in front of me, and I celebrate your inherent humanity.  Where’s the debasement in that?  (Hint: there is none.)  We have become far too insular, and I’m not sure if it springs from our unhealthily grand sense of entitlement or our decreasing opportunities for genuine social interaction, or something else entirely.  But, me?  I find all this non-interactivity exhausting.

Humans are social creatures.  We form families, we make friends, we live in societies.  John Donne recognized this four hundred years ago when he said, “No man is an island, entire of itself.”  The world is since a remade place, but some things hold as true now as they did then…we’re still talking about Shakespeare.  Guy Fawkes is back in the news.  And no man, no matter how you look at it, is an island.  So, I’m rejecting insularity and taking civility back.  I’ve had it with feeling that weird, numb tension you feel when you’re transacting; I want to look a stranger in the eye, smile and say, “Yes, please,” or, “No, no…after you,” or “Thank you very much.”  And from now on, I will.  If I’m the only person saying it, then at least I’ll have lived up to my end of the social deal.  I can’t make people act how I’d like, and I’m sure I’ll get odd looks from my fair share of cashiers and unsuspecting neighbors, but then again, maybe I won’t.  The funny thing about behaving nicely is, I think more people want to do it than you realize.  All this time working with the public and I still think people are, in their cores, good.  If you play nice, I will hazard a guess that they will follow.  That’s what I’m doing, anyway.  I’d love for you to join me.

Sacred Connections

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Soon there will be great posts appearing from other Village Wisdom Keepers! Stay tuned! And Go out there and make a difference! (this fabulous little spring brings sweet cold water fresh from the Earth at the Hickernell Spring!) All the posts that show up here will be straight from the source as well!

Women of Wisdom and Power Gathering to Transform the World

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It’s time! The clarion is sounding! You, you wonderful Woman of Wisdom, it’s time to use your powers for good. Finish up that last self improvement class, pronounce yourself good enough to make a difference. What do you want to do with the rest of your life? With whom do you want to do those things? How can you make your community better, safer, saner, healthier? What legacy are you going to leave?What are you waiting for?

Women connect: problems with solutions, dreams with reality, one group of people with another. Any problem shared is a problem lightened. Any dream shared is a dream expanded. Gather your besties into a Council of Wise Women. Figure out what problem you want to tackle. And then do it.

I’m almost done designing a program that’s going to help you change the world. I’ve gathered my Council of Elders around me and we’re getting ready. You start dreaming and keep watching this spot.

In the meantime, at the moment, these are the pieces of the program that are going to take you from Vision to Plan… and right on to community change and personal satisfaction. If you can’t have it all, you might as well decide you want the good parts! Let’s go! There’s a world of Peace waiting on us.

  • An Introductory Meeting
  • A Overview of Councils of Elders
  • A Preparation Workbook for the Councils of Elders Retreat
  • A Councils of Elders Weekend Cyber Retreat
  • A retreat manual for building your project
  • Free Monthly Check-In for 6 months
  • Optional Coaching Calls for Optimal Success

Stop Whining! Change Your World and Everyone Else’s!

Have you noticed yourself whining? Have you noticed how much time you and your friends spend griping about life? Want to make life different? Stop complaining. Start your blessing counting. Tell good stories.

My husband and I are both rather wickedly funny. And I’m not giving that up. But it can morph pretty easily from laughter to sort of pursed mouth whining about others and what they do do or don’t do and how incredibly wrong this is.

So we’re weaning ourselves off the superiority and the negativity. And you know what? We live in a much better world. And we have more fun together. Our life together and our lives in the world are really, really great. He’s a musician. I’m a writer and a minister. It doesn’t get much better than that. We love going to work every day. So, why whine?

And really? Laughing. More fun than whining. And leaves a lot more time to get things done. And other people want to laugh with you. And then you can engage them in your sneaky little plans to change the world and make it better and they’ll want to because wow! They’re having fun. Ha! Keep making Peace… who was it that sang “and when you’re smiling, and when you’re smiling, the whole world smiles with you?” I don’t know. But they were right. Smile at people, next thing you know you’re caring about their lives

A passion for sewing, a need for dresses and the world changes

In the local paper I read about a woman who saw a newspaper picture of a little girl in a favela. This child was dressed only in her underwear. The woman discovered there were a lot of little girls not only there, but all over the world, who didn’t have clothes. “You know what?” she thought. “I have cloth and I sew. I can make dresses.” And so she started sewing. She didn’t decide to change the world, just to make dresses and send them to little girls wherever they might be needed. She made contacts and started sewing dresses.

Her friends found out. Why, they sewed too. So they started sewing with her. And now there are a bunch of women, sewing dresses for little girls who would otherwise have nothing to wear.

Then the seamstress of dresses and dreams got sick. Cancer. Now the sewing of clothing provides purpose and inspiration to help her cope with her treatments. The other women carry on when she feels lousy.

She’s just one lovely woman doing what she can and changing the lives of little girls all over the world. Because you know, when you have a dress, you can go to school. And education, particularly for women, is the single largest indicator of a changed life. A newspaper article and a Singer. Stealth sewing. You go, Grrl!

Dashing into the Light, Laughing All the Way!

My fabulous mentor is a woman of a certain age. She lives in California in a wonderful retirement community designed Julia Morgan (swoon!). She’s a former seminary president and professor. The people who live in her community have been ministers and professors. It’s a lively bunch — someday I’ll write about the way they’re organized.

But my friend has a group of women who have gathered first casually in friendship, but then formally in the expressed intention “to help each other into the light.”

They’ve done their paperwork and their planning. Now they’re doing something better. They’re building up memories: treasured times when they laugh and eat; good times they can recall when they are easing out of life.

These are good women, earnest and concerned. They do good work and good works. They’re involved in their communities, both in leadership roles and as worker bees. They’re living their lives to the fullest and helping others to do the same. My own dear friend, paints and swims and makes the most laser-like assessments of where the world goes askew. And she usually has a reasoned, yet wildly creative, suggestion about which direction to start working to make life better.

But through it all, she laughs and cries and paints the wonderful and amazing paintings. Her friends do amazing things as well. Really, amazing things. Daring, wonderful, not your father’s grandma kinda things. Wild Women Live Great Lives. They’re the mentors we all need.

One of my favorite stories was of a group outing to a discount shoe store. There they were, distinguished women spanning the decades from 45-80, trying on heels and platforms and thigh high boots and laughing their asses off. If that’s not changing their world, I have no idea what is!

The Priestess is In!

Welcome to my blog at the Sacred Village. This site has been designed to offer tools and resources for engaging in the work of making communities stronger, saner, healthier and a whole lot more fun. I wanted to spend some time with you musing about not only what might be done, but what’s being done all over the world.

It’s pretty clear that governments are not necessarily well-set-up to create Peace. Too much of our media is focused on what’s wrong and how folk harm one another. As long as we focus on the horrible — and I know, we need to know what’s going on — that’s what we’ll find when we look, more horrible things. You know what? Let’s shake it up! We’re just going to have to take Peace into our own hands and go about building stronger communities and a better world. I’ll spend less time on the massive projects and more on the little things that neighbors decide to do for their neighbors, whether they’re here or across the world.

I’ll be telling a lot of stories about my part of the Global Village, here in the beautiful Susquehanna River Valley. I’ll share great quotes and wonderful pictures. Why don’t you write and tell me about what’s changing and making a difference in your part of the Global Village? I’ll put it up for the world to read! Let’s talk about making schools work and hearts dance. Let’s hear who’s planning gardens and who’s feeding their community.

My friends, together, let’s get busy “Building a World of Peace, Village by Sacred Village.

Smile, Just Smile!

You want to make a difference where you live? Start smiling. Really. Smile when you see yourself in the mirror in the morning. First thing, don’t bother with the o-my-goodness-do-I-look-like-that?? Nope smile. Then smile at your family or the cat and the dog if you have them. Walking down the street. Smile. Say how are you. Care about the answer. Do it every day.

You’ll feel better, because everyone is happy to meet someone who smiles at them. And other people will start smiling and asking the people they meet how they are. And caring about the answer.

A smile. What a simple way to start a revolution.