FLOW in ACTION

FLOW Vision News: November 2007

FLOW Action News: October 2007

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FLOW PROGRAMS

FLOW announces our

&

Women's Empowerment Free Zone Coalition

Contact us for more information.

Participate in the FLOW on-line community at Zaadz.com

Learn how economic freedom, prosperity, and trade promote peace ... through this program
produced by FLOW...

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Welcome to FLOW!

FLOW is an entrepreneur of meaning, advancing an idealistic worldview through a community that supports new ways of seeing, being, doing, and belonging, based on a commitment to human flourishing, non-violence and radical tolerance. The FLOW ideal draws on the classical liberal tradition – freedom, voluntary exchange, individual initiative, combined with social and environmental consciousness.
 

Our goal is to liberate the entrepreneurial spirit for good, to create sustainable peace, prosperity, happiness, and wellbeing for all in the next fifty years.

Click on their names for links to articles by FLOW founders Michael Strong and John Mackey.

Member Platform: ARIEL MILLER, 8th grader, Oneness Family School

Changing the World through Random Acts of Kindness

When I look at the world I’m growing up In I want to see kindness and love.

And I do see a lot of that, in my family, in my friends, in my school. But I also see a lot of hatred and unhappiness. One of the areas I’d like to address is unhappy and unfriendly people. Everyone has been subject to unhappy people, whether they are shouting at you to get off the grass or shoving you to get on the metro. I used to think that unfriendly people were something every community has, people who are born unfriendly, live unfriendly, and die unfriendly. Now I know better. Unfriendly people are people just like us who don’t have enough love and kindness in their lives. and I would like to fix that using Random Acts Of Kindness.

>Click here to Read the rest of Ariel's paper.

Ariel Miller, a Danish-Jewish American, is 13 years of age and attends the Oneness Family School in Chevy Chase, Maryland. She has lived in Atlanta and Geneva, Switzerland and enjoys acting, singing, and reading.  She has earned her brown belt in Tae Kwon Do and has appeared in a number of staged and television performances including "Scapin" at Wolf Trapp, Virginia and "A Day in the Life of Ariel" for French Canadian television.  She enjoys reading, travelling to meet new friends from around the world, as well as performing in the company of her classmates and younger brother and sister.

Featured Media, Projects, And Organizations

 

How to Raise an Amazing Child the Montessori Way is adapted for easy use with children at home and based on the key ideas that create confident, independent children in Montessori schools, this inspiring book shows parents how to deal with children's physical and intellectual growth from birth to six years.

The Montessori Foundation inspires and supports the development of strong, successful Montessori schools around the world.


Ariel Miller's Member Platform continued... I came up with three everyday techniques that are certain to make any person feel happier and friendlier. After each step I’ll provide an example so you’ll know exactly what to do and what are the effects of the step. All right. Step Number One: The Actual Acknowledgement. Say your walking down the street and you notice someone walking toward you. You smile at them, wave, and say hello. This will make that person feel acknowledged, which will make them feel good because we all want to be acknowledged, right? Next up, Step Number Two: The Casual Compliment. You’re in the grocery store and the cashier is ringing up your groceries. You notice she has a nifty hair ornament and compliment her. She smiles, thanks you, and goes back to her humming. This works because you’re complimenting her (and we all like to be
complimented) and you’re making her feel noticed. Finally, Step Number
Three: The Common Chat. You’re on a train next to someone who looks tired/stressed/grumpy. You say hi and remark on something trivial, the weather for example. They become more animated and a conversation might ignite. This has an advantage for both of you, you get a lively conversation with a stranger. The three steps are sure to make someone smile.

The only snag we’ll hit is that human nature makes us think about ourselves. You’ll think “Okay, so it makes this total stranger feel happy. How does that help me?” So I’ll tell you. It’s called a win-win solution. A win-win solution is when both people gain, both people feel good, essentially, both people win. It is definitely true I this case. Your Kindness Victim will feel good, and so will you. In fact, I guarantee it. You’ll feel good about yourself and what you did. You will feel great that you helped make this turbulent world we live in a tiny bit kinder. And what’s even greater is that it will keep going! Yes, just like a chain reaction, you kindness will spread and spread. Let me explain. You use one of the steps and make a person feel happier. In return, they use your step, or the idea that you can make someone feel better by acknowledging them, or noticing them. Then that person uses a step to another, and more people join the chain. Kindness, like hatred, is catching and will move so fast it might come back to you!

And now, if this idea of “Random Acts of Kindness” starts moving and more and more people are happier, we’ll be free to work together to solve some of the other problems facing today’s society, such as drugs and war. Then, Imagine this. Imagine your community slowly started changing for the better.
Imagine it slowly spreading to other communities, states, and countries.

Imagine a world wide movement of kindness and respect. Wouldn’t that be a peaceful world?

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"Criticize
by
Creating"

~Michelangelo

 

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