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How to Feel More Loved: 9 Tips for Deep Connection
by Lori Deschene
20 May 2012 at 10:01pm
by Lori Deschene ?It is astonishing how little one feels alone when one loves.? ~John Bulwer If there?s one thing we all want, it?s to feel loved. We want to feel deeply connected ...
How to Love Without Losing Yourself
by Jennifer Gargotto
17 May 2012 at 10:04pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Jennifer Gargotto “We love because it is the only true adventure.” ~Nikki Giovanni  Last night I sat with an old friend who has recently broken ...
Are We Happier When We Have Purpose and Tiny Buddha Book Giveaway
by Lori Deschene
17 May 2012 at 10:02pm
by Lori Deschene IMPORTANT NOTE: This post contains two poll questions and a giveaway for an autographed copy of the Tiny Buddha book. If you?re reading this in your inbox, you ...
Finding Positive Ways to Express Difficult Emotions
by Dina Weldin
16 May 2012 at 3:43pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Dina Weldin ?Never apologize for showing feelings. When you do so, you apologize for the truth.? ~Benjamin Disraeli Each day, month, or year I want ...
Tiny Wisdom: This Moment Is Worth Savoring
by Lori Deschene
15 May 2012 at 10:58pm
by Lori Deschene ?The journey is the reward.? ~Chinese Proverb So much of our language about the things we enjoy in life revolves around getting ahead. We wonder where our relationships are going. ...
Releasing Judgment and Allowing Others to Have Their Process
by Tiela Garnett
15 May 2012 at 10:58pm
Editor’s Note: This is a contribution by Tiela Garnett  ?Judge nothing, you will be happy. Forgive everything, you will be happier. Love everything, you will be happiest.?  ~Sri Chinmoy We live in ...
Start the Climb: Take One Purposeful Step
by Kirsten Tulsian
15 May 2012 at 12:10am
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Kirsten Tulsian ?Don?t be afraid to go out on a limb. That?s where the fruit is.? ~H. Jackson Browne When I close my eyes and ponder ...
What Does It Mean to Have Enough and Tiny Buddha Book Giveaway
by Lori Deschene
15 May 2012 at 12:05am
by Lori Deschene This is the 7th post in a 10-part series. If you?ve been following this series since I launched it, much of this post will be redundant for you. ...
Tiny Wisdom: The Pain of Fighting Our Feelings
by Lori Deschene
13 May 2012 at 9:06pm
by Lori Deschene ?Whatever you fight, you strengthen, and what you resist, persists.? ~Eckhart Tolle Have you ever exacerbated difficult feelings by responding to them with resistance? Although I made peace with my ...
Creating an Inner Peace That Endures
by Marilyn Briant
13 May 2012 at 9:06pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Marilyn Briant ?Peace of mind is not the absence of conflict from life, but the ability to cope with it.? ~Unknown Like many people, I ...

Critical Thinking

Today's Story on ADAPTING TO CHANGE: Do we really know where our values reside and whether they are values and not a hidden selfishness? As I read today's story I was in and out of support for the lady and her tale of emotional turmoil. But why would I swap and be with her one moment then opposing her another? These are the challenges we face every day. It is a case of structuring a formula that sees the dilemma and resolves it. Wisdom and Philosophy being the structure of course. Rather than work out an explanation and determine the ultimate answer, with the intensity and quality that Wisdom can give you; you act from an inner sense and work out the explanation afterwards. The story is entitled 'Change' but ultimately the lady isn't going to change, so it could have easily been called 'Not Changing'. I sense the lady is justifying her decision to go with her thoughts about life, but only she will know if it's the right decision. The story has an immense value as it appears to explain how we approach every daily dilemma. We see it, we act and then if it doesn't follow some major vein of truth we justify it. We do this to satisfy our subconscious mind. Once an action has happened we cannot take it back. We are better for accepting there may have been an error and correct it should the next need arise. This story may not be the full story, and we may find ourselves adding to fill in the gaps, but there is a sense that the bitterness from the emotion involved caused her to pass her view in this manner. Upon reflection, some months later, her view maybe different. The observation however, is that a heightened emotional state of mind confuses our decision making tools. CHANGE I walked into the house and dropped my bag on the floor with a barely concealed sigh of relief. My back was a mass of aching misery, and it was a joy to be home. To the computer to check email, and then a nap. As soon as the monitor lights, there is a message. "I hope you kill yourself." I sighed. At one point in my life, this would have bothered me. Isn't it strange when you get used to such mundane things. But at some level, the journal entries, the harassing phone calls, the instant messages, the bad poetry... they all blended together. Into one sort of amalgamous ball of hatred. It wasn't a comfortable honour to be named someone's "unwilling muse" like that. But what else could I do? Talking to her held gave no leeway. She was so egotistic that any attempts at discussion were simply rebuffed because I couldn't possibly be right because... well... I was me. Not that I considered myself right, granted. In this situation, there's not a right. But I'm not ashamed of the choices I made. I tried to stand by someone I cared about. Granted again, it got me emotionally kicked in the face a few dozen times, drove me into full blown manic depression, and left me disconsolate and disbelieving of love... but sometimes you just had to make choices. Even now, she taunts me. Taunts me that because I've managed to lose everything in a matter of months (including her precious boyfriend, who she won't allow to talk to me) that I was depressed, weak, and filthy. Because the two of us had been involved, I was a "slut". My friend Rachel pointed out once that if her criteria for judging sluts was the people that'd slept with her boyfriend, there must not be any mirrors around. And so, I sort of bumble along. She's hidden her journal, though I won't hide mine. Occasionally a poem pops up, full of loathing and bitterness for the life I continue to ruin by just being in it. And she always claims how I've ruined his life too. Funny, he used to tell me the opposite. Which is why I stayed. But, her little master plan has worked now. Cut off from all the people who loved him and who he loved in return, he's got no choice but to fall back on her now. That's how they imprint baby animals, you know. And so, I sit here. Thinking about the times we had, looking at the gifts he gave me, and wondering if he's ok. Anyone that'd encourage another human being to kill themselves, taunt them for not having the courage to do it, and then define even thinking of it as a cowardly act scares me on a very deep soul level. But yeah, that's my story. There was a boy, and I loved him once. And he moved and got a new girlfriend without telling me. Or her, apparently, that there'd been a me. She found out, she flipped out, and now she hates me because I've ruined her life. Sounds like something from a soap opera, don't it. Some day, I'm going to write a book. And it's going to make lots of money, because, let's face it, people eat stuff like that up. Yet, even so, I resent being called a slut because I loved. I turn off the monitor and head into the bathroom. Tom is coming over in an hour or so, and I'd like to be ready on time for once. Maybe I'm his slut too. Maybe I fall in love too easy. At any rate, I refuse to change. (Jennifer A. Binkley) QUOTE: 'After all it is those who have a deep and real inner life who are best able to deal with the irritating details of outer life.' (Evelyn Underhill)

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Critical Thinking News


Letter: Without critical thinking, society is captive of its disputes - TCPalm


Letter: Without critical thinking, society is captive of its disputes
TCPalm
We were asking, what happened to critical thinking? This was defined by the National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking 1987 as the "intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, ...

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International Interest Growing In Destination Imagination, As New Teams ... - MarketWatch (press release)


International Interest Growing In Destination Imagination, As New Teams ...
MarketWatch (press release)
CHERRY HILL, NJ, May 21, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Worldwide interest in Destination Imagination's critical thinking challenge programs outside of North America has been increasing steadily over the years, and in 2012, record numbers of new ...

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How the Conservative Worldview Quashes Critical Thinking -- and What That ... - AlterNet


How the Conservative Worldview Quashes Critical Thinking -- and What That ...
AlterNet
This lesson fosters a lifelong dependence on external authority, and further quashes self-assessment and critical thinking. High-stakes testing is an artifact of the conservative belief that education is about acquiring a required body of knowledge ...

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Whatever happened to critical thinking? - Consulting-Specifying Engineer


Whatever happened to critical thinking?
Consulting-Specifying Engineer
After much harrumphing, hand-waving, and a few colorful words, we all arrived at a central theme: Critical thinking ability is missing in today's younger engineers. By critical thinking I mean the ability not to just analyze a single problem and ...

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Critical thinking is taught too early - Greenville News


Critical thinking is taught too early
Greenville News
Second, students should learn to use those skills in a critical thinking way. Third, students should be taught to communicate what they've learned. The curriculum stresses critical thinking. A PASS test question might be, “If you had 7905 apples and 85 ...

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Critical thinking - Calgary Herald


Critical thinking
Calgary Herald
In this day and age where the letters to the editor section seems to be filled to the brim with unintelligent, irrational people, it's nice to know that critical thinkers still exist in this city. Marc DeSorcy, Calgary © Copyright (c) The Calgary ...

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Belief in God, Critical Thinking Butt Heads - Discovery News


The Atlantic

Belief in God, Critical Thinking Butt Heads
Discovery News
By Emily Sohn Thinking analytically reduces the strength of religious beliefs. A tendency to think either critically or more intuitively could help distinguish between people who are or are not religious. Critical thinking is not enough to destroy ...
Study of the Day: Even the Religious Lose Faith When They Think CriticallyThe Atlantic
Logic Quashes Religious Belief, New Study FindsHuffington Post (blog)
Study: Critical Thinkers Less Likely to Believe in GodU.S. News & World Report

all 139 news articles »

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False portrait of my father - Washington Post


False portrait of my father
Washington Post
Graduates of his tough English classes praised his insistence on critical thinking in weekly thesis assignments, all of which he read even as his eyesight deteriorated. He imparted his vast knowledge of literature and enjoyed reciting long passages ...

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Leota Ester column: Critical thinking is a necessity - Appleton Post Crescent


Leota Ester column: Critical thinking is a necessity
Appleton Post Crescent
We learned to think critically.î But as I affirm a belief in the importance of critical thinking, I find myself asking, ìWhat is it to think critically? What does it really mean?î I went to my computer, Googled the question and, sure enough, ...

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Response to Paul on Cyber-Regulation for Critical Infrastructure - Lawfare (blog)


Response to Paul on Cyber-Regulation for Critical Infrastructure
Lawfare (blog)
“We would not be thinking of a new regulatory scheme just to deal with cyber crime. This isn't accurate. We (meaning the US government and others involved in cybersecurity) are thinking of new regulatory schemes to deal with cyber crime.

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Are any of my options 'soft'?
I'm picking my A-levels in the coming months and was relatively comfortable and happy in myself, however after having a chat with friends they suggested some of my subjects may be 'soft'. I'm hoping to go to one of the top British Uni's (Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol etc.) and the last thing I want to do is sabotage my chances. My 4 choices are: (the 'soft' ones are starred) History Politics* English Lit. Philosophy* On top of this I'm hoping to do an additional in Critical Thinking, or an Extended Project (not sure which yet!) Thanks for this! :)

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I'm due to start College next year, and am having a little difficulty deciding my english course. More inside.?
Just for future reference, I'm living in the UK, West Midlands area to be exact. I've Cadbury and Solihull sixth form in mind, hence my sudden panic regarding my choice in subjects, as both want the applications in pretty damn soonish. Indecision, and all that. So, my A-Level choices thus far are as follows: Biology, Chemistry, and perhaps History. I reason that as the convention around these parts dictates you dump your fourth selection after the first year, History would help enhance my analytical skills generally speaking, which might be useful for the English course I'm tossing about in my mind. I'm sure the workload from these less 'soft' subject would be pretty overwhelming, but would pay off, should I decide to go to Uni. Now the choice itself: English Literature; or the combined course, bringing what would ordinarily be a GCSE-level Language course and melding it with the Literature for a much broader range of topics. If I pick the combined course, I'd obviously be getting a bit of both, and would come out of college with a good base of knowledge, which would be beneficial as I'm still stuck deciding what I'd like to do with my future. Literature has piqued my interest these past few weeks, enough to make me consider rolling with lit if only for the role critical thinking and analysis takes in the sciences. However, I'm not sure if plotting that vector would turn out well if I decide to go off in a completely different direction of study later on, something less...well, science-based. There you are. Which, in your opinion, would be more beneficial, and why?

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My dyslexia is becoming a problem?
Here's the case with me: I heard dyslexic ppl are very smart out of the box thinker, creative ppl, and good at music. My problem is I forget things quick, but I remember things no on ever remembers. For an example, I still remember things that happened when I was 5(pretty creepy), but I forget present state problems quickly. For an example, I go to get something in my room, but when I get there, I totally forget what i went for and just walk out. It gets worse everyday, when I was young, it wasn't so bad, until now its getting worse. The other thing is, I'm very good at solving solutions(ppl always look forward to me), but I also flunk on tests n the most common things that everyone understands. I'm good at critical thinking, and can give answers in seconds, but when it comes to understanding simple math equations and concepts(not the hard ones), I never get it. I flunk at common stuff because I think too much;I often start collecting sources from all over, and blend things learn from everyday life. It's weird, things others take to learn in second, I learn it for over three days. What is wrong with me?! I need serious help! When we take our state assessment tests, I get like super high averages, while everyone else fails. But when It comes to the ordinary tests we take in class, I make really low grades. I don't understand. I need serious help. PS: I'm good at music and writing poems; I'm sorry if I made any mistakes(I didn't have time to look over)

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what does vested interest mean?
its for my critical thinking exam

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Are these good A level choices?
A Level: English Language Computing Maths Critical Thinking General studies (I have to do it) AS Level Physics I want to study Computer science at first, are these A-levels going to get me in somewhere good? then do a Law conversion course and do that at somewhere like...University college London (Assuming computer science gets me a good degree, else somewhere standard) And don't say take Literature instead. I'm not looking for suggestions of diffrent A-levels, I'm looking for if these are good for what I want to do, or generally considered good subjects to have Thank you, Josh

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