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Positive Thoughts | Positive Actions | Positive Results

TGIFYGDF…Thank Goodness It’s Feed Your Good Dog Friday!

September 4, 2009 by Rose Caplan

NOT A COAL MINER’S DAUGHTER…RATHER A MOTHER TO ALL MINERS.

The first Labor Day in the United States was celebrated on September 5, 1882 in New York City. Since then there have been many working heroes…men and women who shaped America’s labor movement. To commemorate the 127th anniversary of Labor Day, we remember one such working hero, Mother Jones.

Mary Harris “Mother” Jones “labored” for and on behalf of American workers, mostly miners, from 1871 until her death in 1930. To some she was known as the Mother of All Agitators, to others the Miner’s Angel.

Mary Harris was born in Cork, Ireland in 1837. During the Great Irish Famine, she immigrated with her family to Canada where she trained to be a dressmaker and teacher. She later moved to Chicago and then Tennessee.

The turning point in Mary Harris’ life was when she lost her dressmaking shop in the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, only four years after losing her husband and four children to the yellow fever epidemic while living in Tennessee.

One biographer believes that Mother Jones’s interest in the labor movement really began when she sewed for wealthy Chicago families and observed the blatant economic and social inequities that existed. According to Fetherling, she said: “Often while sewing for the lords and barons who lived in magnificent houses on the Lake Shore Drive, I would look out of the plate glass windows and see the poor, shivering wretches, jobless and hungry, walking alongside the frozen lake front…. The contrast of their condition with that of the tropical comfort of the people for whom I sewed was painful to me. My employers seemed neither to notice nor to care.”

She learned a great deal about unions and about the psychology of workingmen from her husband, and took that knowledge and worked it to improve the lives of those who she saw in need of better economic and social conditions.

When Mother Jones died in 1930, she quickly faded from public memory, except in coal mining communities. She was at once exceptional and quite typical–of the militant, pro-union coal miner’s wife who might curse out a mine guard or beat up a strikebreaker but who also cherished her traditional role in the family.

This Labor Day remember those who have worked over the years, and continue to do so, with the intent of improving our working lives.

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins! visit with us on facebook follow us on custom twitter logo

Excerpts from Answers.com with reference to The Reader’s Companion to American History, edited by John A. Garraty and Eric Foner, published by Houghton Mifflin Company and Bibliography: Priscilla Long, Where the Sun Never Shines: A History of America’s Bloody Coal Industry (1989); Edward M. Steel, ed., The Speeches and Writings of Mother Jones (1988). Author: Priscilla Long Other resources: Mother Jones: The Miners’ Angel Mara Lou Hawse with reference to Dale Fetherling’s Mother Jones the Miners’ Angel: A Portrait

Filed Under: General, Spirit Tagged With: Labor Day, Mother Jones, working heroes

Wednesday Wide Smile

September 2, 2009 by Rose Caplan

The following two short stories from A Magazine for People and Possiilities, Victoria M Hay, Publisher, demonstrate how a random kind word or gesture can turn someone’s world right side up.

First up is an 18-year old teenager, Brittany Eckert, who needed to hear something positive about teenagers from an adult. And, then, a mom who needed to be reminded of the treasure she had in her 2-year old daughter. This one will definitely receive a prop from any mom who has been on a mandatory shopping trip with her toddler after a long day. Both stories remind us of the power of a kind word or gesture spoken “on the fly”. Enjoy!

From Brittany Eckert

Dear Readers:

This is really little, but it made my day. I am an 18 year old and lately I have been hearing more and more stories on the news about “how awful today’s teenagers are.” Its always sad to hear what people say about the category of humans that you fit into.

I went to pick up some supplies for school one afternoon and I simply held the door open for a frail-looking elderly woman. To my delight she was extremely grateful and said things like “thank you so much!”, and “you teenagers are so sweet these days.” She quickly put a big smile on my face and I told some friends at school. They thought it was really neat.

Isn’t it wonderful how sometimes, the littlest things can touch you in the perfect way? It’s just a thought, but to me an act of kindness is a gift to you, as well as the person you give it to.

From A Mother and Child

Dear Readers:

One day I was shopping with my child after work to pick up supplies needed for an employee celebration. I was exhausted and wanted to get in and out quickly. My child was tired and cranky and wanted out of the shopping cart. She was grabbing for every item we passed. I was losing my patience and temper when an elderly woman came over to us. She took my child’s hand, and said “what a lovely child.” My little girl was quiet immediately. The woman looked at me. She had an angelic smile and then again said, “they are so wonderful at this age.” At once I felt peaceful and in control of the situation. After she walked away, I found a snack that pleased me and my little one and we had a pleasant shopping trip. That one moment of someone reminding me what a treasure I had turned my whole attitude around and made my shopping trip so much easier.

Excerpts are from Random Acts of Kindness Edition with 33 Heartfelt “Stories of Kindness” Collection of Stories Copyright © 1998 by Rebecca Ryan Resources.

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins! visit with us on facebook logo follow us on custom twitter logo

Filed Under: Good Dog Deeds, Wednesday Wide Smile Tagged With: be the change, random acts of kindness, random kind words, smile

Monday Motivational Quote

August 31, 2009 by Rose Caplan

We cannot know for certain how long we have here. We cannot foresee the trials or misfortunes that will test us along the way. We cannot know God’s plan for us.

What we can do is to live out our lives as best we can with purpose, and love, and joy. We can use each day to show those who are closest to us how much we care about them, and treat others with the kindness and respect that we wish for ourselves. We can learn from our mistakes and grow from our failures. And we can strive at all costs to make a better world, so that someday, if we are blessed with the chance to look back on our time here, we can know that we spent it well; that we made a difference; that our fleeting presence had a lasting impact on the lives of other human beings.

This is how Ted Kennedy lived. This is his legacy.

Excerpt from President Barack Obama’s eloquent Eulogy for Senator Ted Kennedy, August 29, 2009

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!

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Filed Under: General, Mind, Monday Motivational Quotes, Spirit Tagged With: love, make a difference, President Barack Obama, Senator Ted Kennedy

TGIFYGDF…Thank Goodness It’s Feed Your Good Dog Friday!

August 28, 2009 by Rose Caplan

“DOING GOOD” IS ALIVE AND WELL DESPITE REPORTED WANE IN VOLUNTEERISM

The results of some surveys indicate that we are experiencing a decline in civic engagement. The good news is that despite this decline we are helping in other ways. Especially true for Americans 45 years and older, who are making a shift from their work within organizational structure to helping others in their own neighborhoods by coming up with their own creative ideas and implementing them.

A New York Times article entitled, Volunteering Waning in Recession, Report Says, written by Stephanie Strom and published August 26, 2009, refers to an example of such creativity and work in Peter Norback, of Miles, Tuscon, AZ.

Mr. Norback, a self-employed computer consultant, saw hunger in his neighborhood. In January, after hearing President Obama’s call for community service, Mr. Norback started the One Can A Week Food Donation Program.

He shared his passion with his neighbors as he began talking to them about his idea and soliciting and collecting food from them. He felt if every neighborhood did what he was doing, hunger would go away.

All of the food Mr. Norback collects goes to the Community Food Bank, where the demand for food was up 40% and, as a result, the amount of food available to families had to be cut in half. Mr. Norback’s One Can A Week program is successfully helping to fill the need of the Community Food Bank. The first week Mr. Norback raised 78 pounds of food and, this past week, week 33, Mr. Norback’s One Can A Week program netted 340 pounds.

You can read more about One Can A Week at Mr. Norback’s blog, and if so inspired you can read his how-to-guide there and learn how to start such a program in your own neighborhood.

According to his Second Week Update post, Mr. Norback learned two things in the first two weeks: People like the simple but useful commitment to community service and if he is consistent in his weekly pick ups, the donations will be consistent.

Feed Your Good Dog encourages you to be of service, whether you volunteer within an organizational structure such as a non-profit or come up with your own creative way of helping your neighbors.

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!

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Filed Under: Good Dog Deeds Tagged With: feed your good dog, Volunteer Opportunities, volunteerism

Wednesday Wide Smile

August 26, 2009 by Rose Caplan

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed, citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. ~Margaret Mead

Sam Parker draws on his vast sales and life experiences and brings us the concept of “212 degrees”. He reminds us that it is the extra effort that makes the difference. Sam’s message is powerful. He encourages us to try harder, to give more, and ultimately, enjoy more. Sam also prompts us to remember that our efforts and successes, not only improve our own lives, but can improve the world. Learn more by watching this motivational video or visiting just212.com

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!

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Filed Under: General, Mind Tagged With: improve the world, improve yourself, inspiration, motivation, self-improvement

Monday Motivational Quote

August 24, 2009 by Rose Caplan

 

The best way to cheer yourself is to try to cheer someone else up. ~Mark Twain

And, remember…Feed Your Good Dog, so your good dog always wins!

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Filed Under: General, Mind, Monday Motivational Quotes Tagged With: improve the world, improve yourself

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