Center For Living Peace

Good Happens

Archive for the month “December, 2010”

Let’s make GOOD HAPPEN in 2011!

Have you heard the internet buzz? People keep talking about how 2011 is the year for social good.  With the popularity of social media sites like Jumo teaming up with Facebook, and the emergence of non-profits in the social mediasphere, it is becoming fun and easy to stay up-to-date with your favorite do-gooders on the world wide web. I found this really cool blog entry that delves deeper into this idea.

(If you aren’t already following us on Facebook, Twitter, or Jumo, please check us out!)

The good doesn’t end there! Have you heard about Ilchi Lee’s 2,011 prayers for peace in 2011? Ilchi Lee, founder of Dahn Yoga and holistic health teacher, along with 2,010 other people will be praying for peace in 13 different languages! Ilchi Lee originally wrote this prayer in 2000 for the United Nations Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders.  He has chosen to reignite this prayer to reaffirm our commitment as a society to peace.  Each person can sign onto Ilchi Lee’s site, download the pdf’s for the prayers, and read it in whatever way they choose– whether that be silently, or with friends and family. To sign the pledge, and be a part of this event, click here.

I encourage you, dear friends, to go out into the world and make one small gesture to help live peace and make good happen in 2011.  Tell us what you are doing to make good happen, and tell us what you’d like us to do to help you make good happen.  ”Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.” – Helen Keller

 

From all of us at CLP, HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

 

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out!

 

 

Happy Holidays from CLP!

We at the Center for Living Peace wanted to THANK YOU for all of your love, support and encouragement.  Since we opened in May, we have been so happy to have each and every one of you be a part of our family.  Thank you for all that you do to make GOOD HAPPEN in the world.  Each small action has a huge impact.

We are looking forward to moving together with you in the new year, as well all make GOOD HAPPEN together!

Image from here.

 

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out.

The Ecology Center Presents: Alternative Holiday Gift Wrapping!

We had an amazing day at CLP today.  The Ecology Center came and showed us how to wrap eco-friendly gifts.

Did you know…

- Americans produce an additional one million tons of trash each week between Thanksgiving and New Years Day.

- If every household chose to wrap three gifts with reused materials it would save enough paper to cover 45,000 football fields.

- If each household reused two feet of ribbon it would save 38,000 miles of ribbon. That is enough to tie a bow around the planet!

Today we learned some simple and beautiful ways to wrap gifts that produce less waste.  Here are some ideas of items you can use to create earth-friendly gift wrap:

Giftwrap:

  • Newspaper
  • burlap
  • Old sheet music
  • Outdated maps
  • Cloth/fabric (scraps make great ribbon! And you can find discounted cloth in the remnant bins at many fabric stores)
  • Old posters
  • Old calendars
  • Reusable bags
  • Restaurant menus
  • Tins
  • Boxes

Seal:

  • Raffia
  • Twine
  • Yarn
  • Tape

Stuffing:

  • Real peanuts
  • Real popcorn
  • Pine needles
  • Shredded paper

Finishing Touches:

  • Flowers– fresh or dried
  • Herbs– fresh or dried
  • Pine Cones
  • Unpaired earrings
  • Old greeting cards (they make great gift tags!)
  • Buttons

Here are some gifts wrapped with old architectural plans and calendars:

Another gift-wrapping technique that the Ecology Center showed us was the Furoshiki-style. Furoshiki uses techniques similar to origami to wrap presents or carry groceries in Japan.  Here are some presents that were wrapped with fabric using the Furoshiki-style!

You can find a great instructional how-to video for Yotsu Musubi (pictured above) here.

You can even use Trader Joe’s bags to create eco-friendly gift wrap! Ink & Post turned her Trader Joe’s paper bags into beautiful gift tags, and Mer Mag used hers to create beautiful gift wrap! So amazing!

Thank you to everyone that came to our class and learned how to make GOOD HAPPEN this season by producing environmentally-friendly gift wrap.  And a special thanks to Morgan Greenwood from the Ecology Center for being such a wonderful teacher!

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out.

Celebrations of Africa Week and CTAOP Event Wrap Up!

It has been such an amazing week at the Center for Living Peace! We had the Celebrations of Africa Week, then we had Working Groups at CLP on Saturday, followed by the Charlize Theron and Dr. Michael Bennish talk at UCI, and then the gala to raise money for Charlize Theron’s Africa Outreach Project! Here are a few highlights from the  events!

Sneak peek of Celebrations of Africa Week…

Artful Eating: South African Foods

Artful Eating: South African Food

Tapping the Body's Wisdom: Sacred Snakes

Tapping the Body's Wisdom: Sacred Snakes

Celebrations of Africa week was such an amazing series of classes! Thank you to all of our wonderful teachers for putting together the classes, and thank you to everyone who came and participated in the classes!

 

Sneak Peek of our Working Groups…

On Saturday, December 4th before the Charlize Theron speaking event, we brought together local groups to talk about what they could do to help the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project.  Here’s a video that our friends at Apples and Oranges Productions put together for us!

Thank you again to Apples and Oranges Productions for filming our Working Groups and putting this video together for us! You guys did an amazing job!

 

Here is a preview of some photos from the gala…

Jason Niedle and Cali Green attended the gala on Saturday and wrote up a beautiful posts about the event!

Good really is happening! THANK YOU to everyone who helped us organize these events, and THANK YOU to everyone who came out and supported the Center for Living Peace and the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project!

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out.

Kelly Smith and The Center for Living Peace in TakePart!

The Center for Living Peace’s founder, Kelly Smith, was recently featured in a TakePart article!

Image courtesy of Coast Magazine

TakePart is “is an independent online community that connects its members directly to the issues that inspire them to engage, contribute and take action.” With a community of citizens, activists and non-profits, they invite local groups to interact with one another, explore issues, share resources, develop campaigns and use their site as a platform to promote issues and causes. By offering up-to-date news and engaging storytelling, they help connect large and small issues to help make a positive change in the community!

To find out more about TakePart and join their movement, click here.

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out.

Living Peace Series Winners Announced!!!

The lucky winners from our Facebook contest are:

Jennifer Halber

Sera Chang

Cynthia Anderson

Traci Fish

Val Engstrom

Rolanda Engstrom

Richard Scheck

Francis-Gene Acosta

The winners were selected at random.  Here are their entires…

From Jennifer Halber:

Loving others regardless of our own ingrained prejudices in order to pursue a means of equality is what living peace means to me. For those who can sacrifice a piece of themselves to form a bond and connection with others in this world is the most beautiful picture we can paint for the generations to come. By seeing how we have lived with peace and greatfulness of life towards others we can be made whole.

 

From Sera Chang:

Living in peace means to me an active pursuit of happiness for not oneself but for another. Is there peace when one is at a comfortable, happy state but those around are in contrast struggling and striving to survive? Many think they have acquired peace by believing in the idea of peace but when has believing in itself achieve anything? 

Living peace is an act that separates one from the idea that the world revolves around oneself. It’s time to recognize others and their needs. We need to serve others, especially those who the world have turned away from and through that a chain reaction can flow into an invincible wave for living peace.

 

From Cynthia Anderson:

I’d like to think that this journey we are all on leads us to a better world where we all get along and live our lives in peace and harmony – where we have acceptance, love and gratitude for one another … I think The Center for Living Peace reflects this and strives to provide the avenue to achieve this goal.

 

From Traci Fish:

Living Peace can mean many things to many people. One of my 8 year old students once told me that “peace” meant “stopping world hunger.” If good comes out of this, if good happens…there is no bad definition. To me, Living peace means being grounded. It is a conscious DECISION we make every day. It is genuinely loving and accepting every thing and everyone around us. Finding peace in all people, living things, and in all of life and using it to do good, to better ourselves and the world. Living Peace is harmony and civility. It is not trying to be above all the struggles in life, Living Peace is having struggles and obstacles in life but living in calm, constantly learning, and loving every moment of it; taking in everything around you and finding the beauty and peace within. In my life, Living Peace is valuing life as a whole; being aware of the past, living in the moment, and preparing for the future.

 

From Val Engstrom:

Great changes have been brought by living peace. Wars have been avoided or arrested. Despots have been brought down. People have been freed and shackles removed.

But living peace isn’t just taking a stance against war. It isn’t just being non-violent or resisting oppression, exploitation or servitude.

All of the above has been achieved by living peace. There have been great achievements and changes brought about in the world by living peace. But to actually describe it you have to bring it down to a more personal focus.

To understand living peace you have to focus down to a more intimate level. You have to change your focus from the wide-angle world’s view, and set your focus down to macro focus where you can see all the details and nuances of your own life. You need that focus in order to not only understand it, but to take it and make it your own.

On macro focus you can see that living peace on a personal level is just living peacefully. Peace has at its root an act of confirming an agreement or fastening to a way of life that excludes hate and disorder. To live peace you banish hate, bitterness and anger, while you champion empathy and tranquility. You try to end argument and hostilities. You focus that camera lens down to macro in order to examine the minutia or your life. At that tight focus you can see how much easier it is to hate than to love. But as you get the pictures of your life together, you can see how much fuller your life is without all the disorder that hate and anger brings into your life. Focus on empathy and humanity. Sign a peace agreement with yourself to live peacefully.

This is living peace where it starts—at home.

 

From Rolanda Engstrom:

To me living peace is everywhere you look. We are not the only living species on the planet. Flowers, birds, elephants, dogs, cats, trees, etc. are living peace. Humans seem to be the only ones who can hold a grudge, act out in a jealous rage and covet what our friend or neighbor has. Humans also can manufacture instruments of destruction; guns, ammunition and bombs, which are the antithesis of living peace. Have you ever seen a bird toting an AK 47? Living peace means to be at peace with the earth and to make sure that the peacefulness remains for the next living creature that happens by.

Sadly, most people do not know the meaning of living peace. Making war and the by products of it seem to be easier. When greed, dishonesty, war and a disregard for other living things and the earth’s natural resources continue, we slip further and further away from living peace.

Now more that ever, living peace should be at the top of everyone’s list. It is time for all of us to take a more active role in this quest for living peace. Starting with the inner self, let’s take the first step on the road to living peace. Peace and kindness can then spread like wild fire. All we need to start is to say, “I am living peace.” Let’s practice this today, tomorrow, and forever.

 

From Rickard Scheck:

What Living Peace Means To Me
by Richard Scheck

Living Peace requires a level of self-mastery in which one models
compassion, selflessness and the acceptance of others.

Living Peace entails the ability to live in the present with an attitude of unconditional love toward all the other creatures who share this planet with us.

Living Peace is a concept that challenges us to be self-aware and
maintain our nobility in the face of hardship, abuse and tragedy.

Living Peace is the notion implicit in all spiritual disciplines
that calls on mere mortals to rise above their baser nature and
strive toward the perfection achieved by history’s great religious
teachers.

Living Peace is the call from above to listen to that still, small
voice within that connects us to our bliss and reminds us—even in
the darkest hours—that heaven awaits those who can transcend anger
and remain firm in their uniqueness.

And yes Living Peace is the accomplishment of having a life filled with joy while behaving in a manner that inspires others and leaves us feeling complete with the knowledge that there is truth in the world.

To Live in Peace is to be tranquil despite disappointment, to be fearless
in the face of perfidity, to keep an open mind and loving heart in a
world seemingly dominated by deception, ignorance, greed and the pettiness
of people with small minds.

To Live in Peace is to have the innocence and wonder of a child first
seeing a bird in flight, watching snow fall on a naked mountain top, listening to the ponding ocean waves or experiencing the emergence of
the night’s starry array as the sun flees from the sky.

To Live in Peace requires the relentless pursuit of truth and the ability
to resist the unending temptations presented to us daily.

And finally, Lving Peace is knowing to a metaphysical certainty that the
force that constitutes our bodies is the same energy that infuses the
entire Cosmos and allows us to rest comfortably within the Soul of God.

 

From Francis-Gene Acosta:

Compassion, understanding, respect, tolerance, acceptance…all without question necessary virtues that contribute to “living peace.” But in themselves and collectively they are insufficient (not to mention a little cliché) in describing what “living peace” should truly mean. I think living peace can best be understood relative to its greatest foe—indifference. I say greatest without hesitation because indifference often escapes people’s minds as an issue that hinders humanity’s ability to reach its potential for moral excellence. This is especially true of American culture. We all must understand that we can only fully combat indifference through action. To give an example in the wake of World AIDS Day, to me “living peace” might mean volunteering and sacrificing one’s time to teach and care for HIV/AIDS orphans abroad. It can also mean actively challenging leaders to aim for universal treatment and care for HIV/AIDS patients and combating the discrimination and ignorance that places marginalized groups at higher risk. Too often individuals are satisfied with donating money or reading up on a cause or issue as their means of contributing to “living peace.” Too many individuals surf through television channels and the internet avoiding noteworthy news sources that report on the state of the world because they deem them to be “just too depressing.” Individuals with this mindset are as troubled as the victims they see in the news—those infected with disease, those oppressed by their leaders, those suppressed by society—because like them they lack the ability to inspire change. In fact I would even claim that they are more troubled than these victims because they don’t really “lack the ability” they just choose not to exercise the freedom to actively fight back against disease and oppression that they have over those who are truly suffering. To achieve “living peace” we must implore those around us to allow the causes for this inaction—be it fear, laziness, selfishness, etc.—to fuel the vehicle that will lead us down the path for not only “living peace” on a day-to-day basis, but more importantly, “lasting peace” that will resonate in generations to come.

 

Thank you to everyone who entered! Your definitions of living peace were inspiring! If you didn’t get tickets to see Charlize Theron speak about her work with the Africa Outreach Project, fear not.  We will be streaming the event live from our website.

 

Good Happens.

Peace Grl Out.

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