What do you call someone who can play the banjo, guitar, and harmonica? Talented. What do you call someone who can play the banjo, guitar, and harmon...
It is my great privilege to partner with the two organizations described in the guest post by Rebecca Davis, Executive Director of MindLeaps. It's lau...
We teamed up again with Mike Malaro with Flying Mutts Rescue and transported 11 dogs this past weekend from rescues in North and South Carolina to res...
One of my favorite charities is Nowzad Dogs, which started off reuniting soldiers with the dogs they befriended while on tour in Afghanistan, and has ...
Fear feels thick in the air these days. If, like me, you're watching the news or scrolling through your Facebook feed, you're probably seeing and ...
Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden's two-day-old baby hippo, born six weeks early, is hanging in there. Her care team continues to give her 24-hour a...
Parenting often feels like a fifty-sided Rubik's cube, deceivingly simple before you really get into it, but then seemingly impossible to figure out w...
Remembering Martin Luther King surely reminds us of the miles we’ve walked, but it also forces us to admit how many miles ahead there are. It’s s...
The Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden's first baby of 2017 is a guereza colobus, a type of monkey once thought to be abnormal because it has no th...
One of my good Twitter friends, Shola Abidoye, has asked me to write a post on these islands. The idea is simple but surprisingly powerful. Happines...
When my brother and I were growing up my mom fed us 3 meals a day. Each of those meals always included bread (she made homemade biscuits every day) an...
There is a difference between friends and girlfriends. Read my musings to discover the characteristics of each. It was a lovely summer afternoo...
People who are successful and happy focus on activities that address a variety of needs, not just immediate achievements.
I came across this small but useful study from Oxford researchers, and it caught my attention because it's one more bit of evidence of our underlying ...
It's time to make kindness--towards others and to ourselves--the norm. It's time to turn away from greedy tendencies, negative gossip, instigating, fighting, and all other disturbing behaviors. Time to focus more on giving and receiving more joy and kindness. The Kindness Couture movement strives to keep this in mind.
Happiness researcher Sean Achor demonstrated through his extensive research that if you perform random acts of kindness for two minutes a day for twen...