Sunday Reading - 4/2/2007
April 1st, 2007 by Richard CockrumIn this part of the world, spring is springing. Daffodils are blooming, the apples are budding, the roses have begun to put out leaves. Temperatures have a desert-like range, very cold at night and shirtsleeve warm during the day.
Today’s reading has no overall theme, but each is worth reading and thinking about.
Debbie Call of Spirit in Gear led me to Bill McKibben/s article Reversal of Fortune, in which he talks about some research related to happiness levels and material abundance. One interesting point data point - move a Calcutta homeless person into a slum and their happiness level reaches that of the average of a selection of college students from 47 nations.
Carolyn Manning at Thoughts & Philosophies is pondering what her goals are. In the midst of her thought, she’s given us some tips on how to Let Success Be Your Mindset.
Emotions happen. They are as necessary to live as breathing, and serve as great an evaluative function as rationality in the realm of meaning. Anger, too, serves a purpose, but like any other emotion, when carried to extremes is self-defeating. In Do you have good anger or bad anger Dave Schoof of The Disquiet shows how to tell the difference between the two, and some of the things we can do to convert the bad to the good.
Enjoy!
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April 1st, 2007 at 9:33 am
Thanks for my morning coffee read, Rick. Oh, yeah!, and the link.
April 1st, 2007 at 10:52 am
Enjoy your coffee, Carolyn!
April 3rd, 2007 at 11:49 am
[…] Shards of Consciousness - Rick explores the paths to consciousness and freedom […]
April 3rd, 2007 at 11:53 am
Hi Rick - Thanks for the honorable mention! And I just tagged you:
http://www.thedisquiet.com/discussions/what-are-my-goals/
April 3rd, 2007 at 1:04 pm
Hi Dave,
You’re quite welcome. I think half my life has been a quest to understand emotions. If they didn’t serve a purpose, they wouldn’t be built in. On the other hand, they cause huge amounts of misery for us and those around us. Finding the middle way of emotional flow is one of the most useful things any of us can do.