FAMOUS Naomi Shihab Nye The river is famous to the fish. The loud voice is famous to silence, which knew it would inherit the earth before anybody said so. The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds watching him from the birdhouse. The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek. The idea you carry close to your bosom is famous to your bosom. The boot is famous to the earth, more famous than the dress shoe, which is famous only to floors. The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it and not at all famous to the one who is pictured. I want to be famous to shuffling men who smile while crossing streets, sticky children in grocery lines, famous as the one who smiled back. I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous, or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular, but because it never forgot what it could do.(My thanks to Naomi Shihab Nye, via Poetry Foundation.)
U NIVERSEIt might as well be uselessI meanWhat exactly is aNIVERSENary another nothing until aUIs brought not just to itbut for ITWho would think(Not Many)That it takes a Uyour simply perfectly imperfectYou-est UTo not just completeincludeBut actually createThe Universewith the best part beingthat it is evermore beingCreated/Recreated because ofOh the holiest of holiesU
Caught In The MIDDLE
At best it’s really blurry
and never fully
picture-perfect-clear. . .
DO YOU KNOW FOR SURE JUST WHO YOU ARE
Are you more
E X T R O V E R T E D
Are you more
I N T R O V E R T E D
Are you more
A M B I V E R T E D
Do you really know
Do you really care
5 Signs You Might Be an Ambivert
According to experts, many of us fall into this
category. . .
Sira M.Follow was kind of wondering if you were wondering what it truly might be like to be caught in THE MIDDLE; The In-Between of Extroverted and Introverted. Much in the same fashion of Jeff Foxworthy’s YOU MIGHT BE A REDNECK IF. . .
We’ve all self-identified as introverts or extroverts at least once. However, some of us were probably wrong with that identification.
Bestselling author Travis Bradberry explains that personality traits exist along a continuum, and the vast majority of us aren’t introverts or extroverts — we fall somewhere in the middle. And the word ambivert is used to define people who don’t lean too heavily in either direction.
As psychotherapist Ken Page, LCSW explains: “Many of us are ambiverts to some degree, and all of us are located somewhere along the spectrum between introversion and extroversion.”
Now you might ask, what does ambivert exactly mean? According to the Oxford Dictionary, the definition of ambivert is:
“A person who has a balance of extrovert and introvert features in their personality.”
As Bradberry puts it: “Ambiverts have an advantage over introverts and extroverts. Since their personality doesn’t fall into one of the two extremes, they have an easier time adjusting their approach to people based on each situation.”
Here are five signs you might be an ambivert.
You Feel That Spending Time With
Others Sometimes Exhausts You and
Other Times Energizes You
A few weeks before the pandemic, a friend of mine invited me to her place to have dinner on a Friday night. I was tired, but happily accepted the invite, as I assumed it was going to be a quiet evening, just the two of us.
When I arrived at her place, there were already eleven people there. I wasn’t expecting that, and I immediately felt overwhelmed. It’s not that I don’t like to be around people, but that night I felt exhausted and didn’t have the mental energy to interact with people I didn’t even know.
I spent the evening looking forward to going back home. I was craving some alone time. After two hours I decided to leave, saying that I had had a very busy week and was really tired — which was the truth.
The next Friday afternoon I felt the need to spend some time with other people, so I invited a few friends to my place for dinner. It was a similar situation: I had had a long week, and again I was mentally exhausted. The only difference was that I had been working from home and had spent almost the entire week alone. This time I felt the need to be around people. And I realized something important:
Sometimes, to recharge my batteries, I need some “me time,” while at other times spending time with people is what actually gives me energy.
According to Sarah Regan, this is something ambiverts tend to have in common. They can get energized both by being around others, like extroverts, and by spending recharging time alone like introverts. Sometimes they enjoy alone time and social time equally, or the one they enjoy the most fluctuates depending on what’s going on in their life.
Sometimes You’re Talkative and Other
Times You’re Very Quiet
A friend of mine, Nadia, is the best example of what an ambivert is. For example, like me, she says that sometimes what energizes her is socializing while at other times she craves alone time because it helps her recharge.
Another thing I’ve noticed about her is how sometimes in group situations she’s talkative while at other times she practically doesn’t say a word. When she is more talkative, she actively interacts, asks many questions and shares details about herself as well. When she is quiet, she enjoys listening to others, but barely talks.
And as Ronald E. Riggio, Ph.D. explains in an article published in Psychology Today, people like Nadia — that is, those who are sometimes talkative, and other times not — might be ambiverts.
Some People Describe You as an
Introvert While Other People as an
Extrovert
I remember when I was attending college, one day a friend of mine, Naomi, told me this:
“A few days ago I was with Elena. We were talking about you. She told me she really likes you, and the way you are, but she thinks you should open up more. She thinks you’re very quiet and don’t talk too much about yourself. However, I see you in a completely different way. I told her she doesn’t know you as well as I do. You’re always full of energy and it’s always nice talking to you and listening to your stories.”
This is what I replied: “You’re both right. I can be full of energy and talk a lot at times, and be very quiet at other times. It depends on many factors, like my level of energy at a specific moment, and the people I’m with. I think you know me a bit better than she does, but still, what Elena said is true, I’m often very quiet.”
You Enjoy Being the Center of Attention,
but Not For Too Long
If there’s something I don’t enjoy, it’s having to stand still in front of a cake, on the day of my birthday while everyone is singing Happy birthday and staring at me. The song is only around twenty seconds but as I sit there, blushing, it feels more like five minutes.
I was once talking about this with my friend Nadia, and she told me she feels the exact same way. When it’s her birthday she just blows out the candles before anyone can sing Happy Birthday, as, like me, she can’t bear standing in front of a group of people singing and staring at her while she doesn’t know what to do. It feels kind of embarrassing — this is how she defined it, and I couldn’t agree more with her.
However, we both agreed on one thing. It’s not that we don’t like to be the center of attention; we actually enjoy it, as long as it doesn’t last too long and it’s not too intense.
For example, I like to be part of a conversation where I can convey my opinion and I feel listened to. Also, I love it when I tell a joke and people laugh with me.
And Nadia told me she feels cared for when people ask her about her violin classes — or when they ask her advice on what to eat, as she’s a nutritionist. However, those are all situations in which there is an interaction, and the attention goes from one person to another — and consequently it’s not overwhelming for us.
You Are Good at Balancing Listening and
Talking
Psychologist and author Brian Little explained in The Huffington Post that ambiverts actually have the best of both worlds: they have the classic introvert’s skills of self-reflection, combined with the extrovert’s outgoing traits.
This make them great communicators because they understand when they have to listen and when they can talk. They’re self-aware, and they correct themselves if they are talking too much. If they feel the person in front of them needs to talk, they let them talk and ask questions.
If you’ve always thought you were an introvert or an extrovert — but also had some doubts sometimes — and recognize yourself in this description, you might be an ambivert.
Ambiverts don’t necessarily recognize themselves in all the above mentioned signs, but probably in the majority of them.
Being an ambivert has its advantages. According to an interesting article published in Healthline, ambiverts might be able to develop strong bonds. The extroverted traits may lead to interacting with more people, while the introverted traits can help connect deeply with others.
And this is a perfect combination when it comes to nurturing meaningful relationships.
So in a our every changing world
where there seems to be a
NEW NORMAL
almost every day
WHERE DO YOU STAND (OUT)
INTROVERT
EXTROVERT
AMBIVERT
. . .Why not
TEST IT
Quiz: Are you an extrovert, introvert or
ambivert?
Adam Grant PhD came up with the following test:
iStock
You probably have a hunch about which one you are, but why not take this quiz — from organizational psychologist Adam Grant — and double-check? Knowing your traits will help you figure out how you can best fit and function in the workplace and the world.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Adam Grant PhD is an organizational psychologist at Wharton, a #1 New York Times bestselling author and the host of the TED podcast WorkLife.
Not ANOTHER Birthday
Mark Twain
once said,
“The two most important days in your life are
THE DAY YOU ARE BORN
a n d
THE DAY YOU FIND OUT WHY”
We celebrate a person’s Birthday
Not because of the Day that they were born
But because of what they have born
Because of what they have given Birth in us. . .
I’ve celebrated well over 36
of my wife,
Erin’s Birthday’s
with her
And not one of them
has ever been without the over apparent
R E C O G N I T I O N
that I,
that many
are far more better
no so much
because she’s been Born
but because of what she has BIRTHED
in us. . .
Erin
creates
CARING CATALYSTS
in everyone she meets
or those who come across
her paths
“I never saw it coming
and all of a sudden
there was YOU
and I don’t have to live without you anymore. . .”
which means that the best
Birthday Gift of all
Is what you cause to be born in others. . .
Your Colorful Confetti
just doesn’t’ flutter from you. . .
IT EXPLODES ALL OVER US
and
THROUGH US
There’s no Candle on a Cake
that could ever illuminate more
and it’s
u n e x t i n g u i s h a b l e
Some actually powerfully prove
their Flicker
never compares to the
F L A M E
they ignite
and spread to others
. . .talk about a
fortunate inextinguishable inferno. . .
YOU: A (S) HERO
Most of the time
we don’t see ourselves as
(S) HEROES
TAKE A CLOSER LOOK
We often look to do the EXTRAORDINARY
instead of just taking the ORDINARY
and bringing our
E X T R A
to it. . .
NOW THAT’S TRULY (S)HEROIC
It’s all that’s necessary. . .
Not just
YOU BEING YOU
but simply bringing your
YOU-NESS
to the moment before you. . .
Yeah,
(S)HEROIC
YOU:
A (S) HERO
THE GREATEST CREATOR
GOD CREATED MAN
MAN CREATED GOD
I found this recently scribble on a sliver of paper that fell out of a notebook I had in a box from high-school nearly fifty years ago. . .
and it brought me to a question
that I believe
Y O U
are the Answer:
WHO IS THE GREATEST CREATOR
Let’s ask a different question that’ll lead us all to the Answer:
How often do you see yourself described in this list?
- You believe you can make someone else’s life better. And are willing to invest your own time, effort, resources, and heart to do so.
- You share the lessons you’ve learned on your journey to make other people’s journey easier.
- You love to turn nothing into something.
- You recognize that a great way to understand who you are and what you believe is to try to express it to others.
- You believe there’s a better way. Always.
- Curiosity is one of your core values.
- You’d rather have no map to follow than be forced to use step-by-step instructions.
- You routinely question authority, or the status quo, or conventional wisdom, or the way it’s “always” been done.
- You define “success” for yourself and aren’t bound by the expectations of others.
- You understand that the cost of doing something you don’t believe in will always be more than the reward.
- You’re brave enough to try.
- You put dreams ahead of your fears.
- You’re willing to take a leap and figure it out on the way down.
WHO IS THE GREATEST CREATOR
Psssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssst:
THE ANSWER:
YOU
It’s ALL-WAYS
Y O U
The same day
GOD CREATED MAN
MAN CREATED GOD
fluttered out of my notebook
that I not-so-accidentally
took from the overly dusty box
I not-so-accidentally
came across a tweet from Josh Spector
who I kind of accidentally follow
but don’t really know
Josh Spector intended his original list to describe creative professionals. I’ve broadened and adapted it to include anyone who aspires to live an imaginative, creative life.
I suspect that includes you!
Am I right?
(My thanks to Josh Spector.)
My thanks to the greatest Creator
Y O U
YOU, The Village
OVER ONE YEAR LATER
. . .We are literally living in some severely surreal times. . .
STILL
well past 365 days later
The World just doesn’t merely seem to be rocked on it’s axis
or upside down
But actually less Round than we previously thought. . .
and whatever it was we thought we knew
almost seems
myth-like
to what we’re feeling. . .
L I K E :
IT
TAKES
A VILLAGE
and not that it’s just a nice cliche
IT HAS NEW MEANING
We have all heard it said it takes a village to raise a child. . .
but what about an ADULT?
What’s it take to not so much raise but
CARE FOR
AN ADULT. . . ?
Because of our continuing
MASKING
PHYSICAL DISTANCING
HAND SCRUBBING
VACINNATING
We’ve never been less of a Village
than right now,
AND THEN AGAIN. . .
never more than
A Village
OF ONE
than NOW. . .
Who could have ever imagined,
even with all of our safety measures
that one person could be a Village. . .
that YOU are a Village?
It is true isn’t it. . .
Y O U
The Village
. . .How is that even possible?
Because now more than ever you are re-defining
overcoming the myth
you have lived with all of your life
The fib that’s been told to us
ever since we were very
very small
the lie that might’ve been the first lie
we ever heard:
That you have a purpose
That you have a reason
That you have a destiny
That you have a meaning. . .
T O D A Y
especially today
with what’s going on all around us
all that’s grumbling loudly within us
where our World feels like it has been
rolled down a steep hill
heading quickly for a cliff
of a dark unknown return
stumbling and rumbling out of place;
B U T
now more than
our ever
we are eerily discovering
that we were born for
THIS TIME
in THIS PLACE
for THIS MOMENT
THIS NOW. . .
And it’s not to be
For a Purpose
For a Meaning
For a Reason
For a Destiny. . .
It’s truly to be
A Village
YOU,
The Village
. . .because now more than ever
we have never been more
P L U R A L
than Who we are in right now. . .
Now more than ever
Y O U
are not just a Person
A Woman
A Mom
A Man
A Dad
A Partner
A Significant Other
A Uncle
A Aunt
A Grandfather
A Grandmother
You’re not just what your vocation says you are
you are all of those roles
all of those characters
wrapped up in one. . .
You are a walking
You are a talking
You are a living
You are a giving
V I L L A G E
YOU,
The Village
Now the most ultimate question of all
. . .especially for this new
N O W
is just what kind of a
Village are you. . . ?
Can you even be found on a map
Seen from a Satellite from way above;
Are you inclusive
Are you exclusive
Do you draw circles and include everybody
or are you a line drawer in the sand
that points as it emphasizes
you
You
and YOU
are IN
and
You
You
and most especially
Y O U
are out?
YOU,
The Village
are living in an age where the temporary feels like the permanent
but it most assuredly isn’t. . .
The new
NEW
is born in you
not just once
or once in a while
or even once a day
but every single moment. . .
And now
N O W
proves to us that it always has been this way
but never as magnified
as it is at this very
I N S T A N T
We have long heard the question
that determines whether or not we are
Optimists or Pessimists :
Is the glass half full or half empty?
N O W
Maybe another way to ask this question
Is this
NOW
Happening to us
or
HAPPENING
For Us. . .
It’s no longer
WHAT FILLS YOUR GLASS
b u t
WHAT EMPTY’S IT
(or WHO). . . ?
It’s not really a question to answer with your mouth
but your Actions;
so how live you. . .
not what say YOU
HOW LIVE YOU
YOU ARE A VILLAGE
To know it is one thing.
To be it is another.
But this
N O W
means to share it
is
the ultimate thing
. . .and then never let the
l o v i n g
stop from overflowing
from one
to another
until this
S E T T L E M E N T
becomes
YOU-NIVERASL
Meeting Yourself In Others
Can it be this simple. . .
WE HAVE
a lot in common. . .
But we don’t always notice it
. . .Wonder
if we did;
it might not only mean that we see things differently
but even live better in other ways. . .
m a y b e
R I S K
finding out
D A R E
knowing. . .
Your face in the mirror
is always a reflection of someone else. . .
until you see that
you’ll never really ever see yourself
Making a S P L A S H
“When you were born, you cried, and the world rejoiced. Live your life in such a manner that when you die, the world cries and you rejoice.”
Can you
DO YOU
Dare Imagine
that we were created for a time like this;
not for a time 359 years ago
or 3500 years ago
or 680 years in the future
b u t
NOW
HERE
THESE MOMENTS
Y O U
are more than a single drop in the Ocean;
YOU ARE A RIPPLE-MAKER
The best
S P L A S H
you can ever make
requires no water. . .
Drown us in goodness
Hey. . .
Try practicing being selfless everyday,
Just a thought. . . .
MASS WEAPONS OF CONSTRUCTION
We can’t LEGISLATE LOVE
or outlaw H A T E
. . .b u t
You
I
US
WE
can make a difference
H I S T O R Y
proves that as well. . .
We know that
Compassion and Kindness
Loving and Caring
DO NOT
stop bullets or halt bombings
or roadblock rented Home Depot Trucks
from running up on sidewalks and
killing people
b u t
Loving and Caring
Compassion and Kindness
don’t pull trigger or light fuses or press on excelerators, either. . .
The Random Acts of Kindness Foundation, was founded in Denver, Colorado, in response to the city’s “Summer of Violence” in 1993, when dozens of people were killed in gang-related shootings, including several children. One victim of stray gunfire was just 10 months old.
The organisation borrowed the writer Ann Herbert’s call for people to “practice random acts of kindness, and senseless acts of beauty”.
The phrase has since been popularised on doormats and bumper stickers across the US and encourages Americans to surprise one another with good deeds.
Kelsey Gryniewicz, a director at the foundation, advocates activities such as anonymously leaving hampers of food on neighbours’ doorsteps and paying for the person queuing behind you at a coffee shop.
“It’s not just about single acts, though,” she says. “It’s about changing your mentality from day to day.”
The World Kindness Movement represents the work of organisations from 23 different countries. “It has gone way past the level of community endeavour,” says its secretary general Michael Lloyd-White.
Would you buy a “suspended coffee” for someone in need?
But measuring the impact of these groups is not easy.
Each year, the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) publishes a World Giving Index, which attempts to track certain types of giving behaviour in 146 countries across the globe.
The data is extracted from an annual poll conducted by research firm Gallup and ranks countries according to the proportion of people who have volunteered, helped strangers at random, or donated money to charity in a typical month.
In first position last year was Australia, where a third of the population volunteers each month and two-thirds claim to have helped a stranger and donated money to charity.
Lisa Grinham, from CAF’s Australian branch, says that the rise is due to the flooding that hit Queensland and Victoria the year before, pointing out that figures tend to rise in times of national hardship.
In the US, which dropped from first to fifth place in the global index last year, a team of academics is working on a programme of compassion education in schools to try to reverse the decline.
Richard J Davidson from the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison thinks that the level of kindness in society can be improved if children are taught to be more empathetic from an early age.
“Compassion should be regarded as a skill that can be cultivated through training,” he says.
The kindness curriculum is currently being taught in 10 schools across Wisconsin. The project is still at the research stage, but “the early signs are promising”, he says.
Not everybody is convinced that focussing on compassion in this way is helpful, however.
“We have made altruism a sacred object, so we’ve been blinded to its deleterious effects,” says Barbara Oakley from the University of Oakland, Michigan.
In a new book called Pathological Altruism, she argues against what she sees as a cultural obsession with the notion of kindness.
“There’s a misguided view that empathy is a universal solvent. Helping others is often about your own narcissism. What you think people need is often not actually what they need.”
Kelsey Gryniewicz doesn’t think that the American kindness movement is guilty of that charge, arguing that there are tangible, practical benefits to the activities they recommend.
“It doesn’t have to be about cradling people in a bubble of kindness,” she says.
In Singapore, William Wan takes a more reflective view. “We must be realistic. We mustn’t be naive. Kindness movements can’t solve all our problems, but if they can solve some of our problems, why not use them?”
Truth:
Love
Compassion
Kindness
Caring
are only WORDS. . .
They only become
MASS WEAPONS OF CONSTRUCTION
when we decide to let those very
a c t i o n s
possess us with all of their force
Love
Compassion
Kindness
Caring are only WORDS
Until SomeONE
gives them Meaning. . .
Are
Y O U
That Some One. . .
It’s November 14
. . .in just 8 days
We will be celebrating
T H A N K S G I V I N G
NO MATTER WHAT
. . .Hopefully we’ll understand
Before November 22
and way past it
That G R A C E
is not just a prayer
we say before
a meal. . .
It’s a L I F E S T Y L E
The ultimate Question
and even more Significant Answer:
IS IT YOURS ?
It’s really the neverending
S E A S O N
For You
I
Us
WE
To continue being an arsenal
in the armory
of the assembling
of the Greatest
Assortment of
MASS WEAPONS OF CONSTRUCTION
THIS IS NOT A POLITICAL STATEMENT. . .
It is an invitation for a
Personal Inventory to
REALIZING BY
BEING A DIFFERENCE
i s
MAKING A DIFFERENCE
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm of the DAY:
Sometimes. . .
M A K I N G A D I F F E R E N C E
I S J U S T B E I N G T H E D I F F E R E N C E
E V E R Y B O D Y
What makes a song
more than a melody
more than a jingle you tap your foot
more than a tune you can’t exorcise from your mind. . .
?
everybody needs love
but not everybody knows how to give
not everybody knows how to receive
it;
pssssssssssssssssst of the Day:
don’t be everybody
j u s t
b e
y o u
and let the
e v e r y b o d y ‘ s
give and get
Y O U R L O V E