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be the change


 

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mmefaucon is now two score and seven years.

Found the origin of this phrase 3 weeks ago

It’s a quote from Gandhi—”You must be the change you want to see in the world.”

As my favorite 9-year-old used to say, it’s time for me to “learn my new lesson!”



2penquins cant find her morning pages

PotteryI 8 months ago

I might make a plate with these words on at pottery.



i have a pin 10 months ago

on my backpack that says this. a lady asked me about it on the train and i spread some of my be the change love! i got it at me to we style my internship/workstudy place of fun. so now i’m wearing even more organic fabrics than before…almost my whole wardrobe is second hand or organic! there’s the occasional new piece but i really try to keep that to a minimum.



I'd like to be a dime 19 months ago

A perfect 10.



notagoodgirlfriend is recollecting my year.

life work 22 months ago

When you work hard to finally do the thing you know you are supposed to be doing, and then discover it is an impossible dream, you have to peel off that layer of fear and keep going. It’s the only real dream worth dreaming. I want to leave a trail of positive change.



Kenya. 2 years ago

Hey everyone!

Well, I arrived back home on Thursday around 9pm. After two days of travelling (and three hours of sleep in there somewhere) I am glad to be home.

My trip was an absolute whirlwind, I can’t even begin to describe a lot of what went on. However, I will tell you that my wonderful group of 26 (3 boys and 23 girls! holy cow) worked on 4 different schools (one school being one classroom, about 5×7m), doing everything from mixing concrete and mortar to laying bricks to digging the trench for the foundation.

We lived in a mobile camp in a small community called Salabwek. It’s in the Maasai Mara (Southwest part of Kenya) , and it took us about 8 or 9 hours to drive there from Nairobi. The camp itself was much more well-equipped than I expected, we had outhouses, camp showers, a mess tent, 4 beds per tent and a generator that provided power at night (it started to get dark around 6:30 pm) until about 9:30. We spent most of our days school-building, playing with the kids and exploring the community. However, we did go to the market once on a Saturday to see what that was like (busy busy busy!) and we went on a really cool safari and got lots of animal pictures. I fell asleep every night to the sound of crickets and frogs and woke up to sheep, goats, cows and the rooster that lived in our camp (which liked to crow around 2am everyone morning).

Most importantly, I must thank each and every one of you for supporting me. The experience I had was beyond amazing and a real eye-opener. It’s definitely one thing to learn about poverty, development and all the things that go along with those subjects in theory and to see it first hand. To see every single one of those schoolkids with yellow eyes from malnutrition and many with runny noses and dirty, grubby hands was absolutely heartbreaking, but at the same time they are all so excited to see and play with you and to learn that you can’t help but be filled with hope. I am so happy to have been able to help with my own two hands to bring education to those kids, and I thank each and every one of you wholeheartedly for helping me get there.

Like I said, I can’t even begin to describe everything, I am still processing much of my trip. However, I’ve made a short slide show which you can find at http://picasaweb.google.com/samantha.rice/Kenya/photo#s5091868643203552786. I’ve started to work on a couple of presentations about my trip and empowering youth to “be the change they wish to see in the world,” so if you go to MDHS you’ll probably hear more about my trip in and around September and October. However, I encourage questions if you have them! Please, please drop me a line if you want to know more because I am positive that some of you will not be satisfied with this basic recount of my trip.

I will end off with a giant thank you to all of you, and a reminder that you can “be the change” without doing something quite as large as I did (by the same token, I totally encourage all of you to go on a trip like mine). I’ve brought back small habits with me, like taking staggered showers and using my nalgene water bottle instead of buying bottled water, which are small acts with big results if everyone pitches in.

“If any of you happens to see an injustice, you are no longer a spectator, you are a participant. And you have an obligation to do something.” – June Callwood, journalist, activist and author (and Canadian too!)

Peace, love and open doors,

Sam



Cont... 2 years ago

And that is why I truly believe that God came down to earth for us Sinners!



Being a Role Model in society 2 years ago

After years of Drug abuse, alcolism, adultery and many other shortcomings, I decided to free myself. And it was only after I received my final warning from the Lord, and it was a stern one! Believers in Christ would relate better to what I have to say, because God can definitely make a difference in everyones lives. Its funny and amazing at the same time, how a worthless sinner like me would be chosen, from so many righteous people I know, to be a different person, a leader, a life filled with the holy spirit.

I feel the difference in my life, I also feel the strain and pressure on my life from the evil that surrounds me. But this time Im fighting it, and Im not giving up!

Is this what I want..? YES! This is what I’ve always wanted, but too afraid that Society might judge me differently, Coz I badly wanted to fit in. Why? I ask myself now… When I actually need only to fit into my Family and Kingdom where I truly belong.

Today is Today my friend, and the Change starts today! Not tomorrow, not next month.TODAY!



I guess the idea 2 years ago

behind this goal is that I can’t be content to just complain about things anymore. I can’t just sit here and be okay about not doing anything.



"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." -Mahatma Gandhi 3 years ago

Lead by example.

Open up; build bridges, not walls.

Trust.

Be positive, be caring, be enthusiastic.

Share in love, light and laughter.

Be the change.



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