I've been working all year and it's almost here...GES 2013 in just one week!
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@aspiringidealist-blog
I've been working all year and it's almost here...GES 2013 in just one week!
Hear different design phrases thrown around and have no idea what they really mean? Yeah, me too. This glossary clears everything up though--check it out if you're interested in design!
The Holstee Manifesto. Holstee is a super cool organization, learn more about it here.
Awesome graphic/resource about the human centered design process. Check out this link for more info!
Book suggestions inspired by TED 2013! Check it out if you're looking for some new reads.
This is a really cool opportunity for all you changemakers out there! Submit ideas for solutions to various challenges and then win $$$ to implement your project!
good.is is a great platform for learning about and sharing innovative and creative ideas in a variety of fields related to social change. Check it out!
Graphic of The Social Innovation Process, via Nonprofit Quarterly
Shared with me by GES's lovely co-directors. Essentially the process our delegates go through at the Summit!
Top Ten Cities for Women Entrepreneurs 1. San Francisco, CA 2. Seattle, WA 3. Washington, DC 4. Minneapolis, MN 5. Portland, OR 6. Atlanta, GA 7. Austin, TX 8. Raleigh, NC 9. Denver, CO 10. San Diego, CA
(via Top Ten Cities for Women Entrepreneurs)
Sadly no Chicago....More reason to move after graduation!
Sugata Mitra is the 2013 TED Prize Winner! His talk about the future of learning is incredibly inspiring. Check it out!
Why Travel Makes Us Better Designers (and Chefs and Scientists) -Â Shaun Ellis wrote in Design, Living and Travel
Oddly enough, there is an intense beauty in these moments of travel. Or maybe more to the point: Part of what makes travel special is that it can yield so many moments that are beautiful almost purely because of their intensity. Here itâs a will-we-or-wonât-we-make-it-across moment. Another day itâs an Iâm-not-sure-if-I-can-survive-this-bus-ride moment. Or perhaps a seasick-ferry-ride-to-somewhere moment. Or an unscheduled-pit-stop-in-nowhere moment. Threshold moments, you might say.Â
Continue reading on good.is
This post is part of the GOOD communityâs 50 Building Blocks of Citizenship. This week: Get a Passport. Follow along, join the discussion, and share your experience at #goodcitizen.
This website highlights innovative businesses and organizations that are "reinventing the world and redefining the rules of business around fun, fulfillment and fairness to all life." Check it out!
âInocenteâ makes history as first Kickstarter-funded film to win Oscar
World Trade Center High Wire Artist Philippe Petitâs Colorful Advice For A Career On The Edge
On a summer day in 1974, a 24-year-old Frenchman stepped onto the world stage with one of the most astonishing performances in modern historyâwalking back and forth on a wire illegally rigged across the void between New Yorkâs World Trade Center Towers, three quarters of a mile above spellbound onlookers.
Petit has gone on to perform many other spectacular wire walks, authored over half a dozen books, was the subject of the acclaimed documentary Man on Wire, and singlehandedly built a barn using eighteenth-century tools and design. Whether on the high wire or not, Petitâs philosophy is epitomized in his response to reporters shouting âWhy?â after his dramatic Twin Towers crossing. Petitâs answer: âThe beauty of it is, there is no âwhy.ââ
When we spoke to Petit about how he walks the high wire, our conversation expanded to Petitâs philosophy of how he lives his life on the high wire. We found that his improvisatory, chaos-courting, risk-managing principles could be applied to anyoneâs work or personal life.
Here they are in his own (colorful) words:
1. Let life be your teacher.
How can you achieve greatness if you havenât experienced the hard lessons of life? To become a great theatrical director, a great actor or a Renaissance man, you have to do all the jobs most people donât want to do, like washing dishes and shoveling horseshit.
2. Court disaster.
If you go where trouble is you will find a magnificent transformation. After all, if I had followed the rules, would I have traveled across the ocean to a foreign country and illegally snuck into and then wire-walked across a building a quarter mile above the ground?
3. Make your art a joyful adventure.
If I were to sit at a desk, write a list, make a schedule, and go and meet the building and then make a plan to do a high wire walk in the most safe and intelligent way, I would not have that sense of adventure and exploration. And, there would be no point in living.
4. Be a madman of detail.
Before I walked the Twin Towers, I gathered information with cunning and precision. This door in this place opens to the left this wide with this many steps of a certain thickness, the 450-pound cable must be brought up this way to avoid detection, and so on. There were at least a thousand other details to solve. When it comes to doing my homework, Iâm obsessed. I want to live to be very old. A half a millimeter of mistake, a quarter secondâs miscalculation, and you lose your life.
5. Improvise.
Improvisation is turning away from a well-polished plan within a millisecond because thereâs no such thing in life as a well-polished plan.
 Check out this great story here!
[Image: Flickr user Carolina Pastrana]
Citizen Building Block #7: Get a Passport - Meghan Neal wrote in Building Blocks Of Citizenship and Global
Who doesnât love travel? Ever since our hunter-gatherer days, humans have been on the go. It feeds curiosity. Itâs fun. Itâs something to brag about. More importantly, it frees the mind. Our brains and thoughts are limited when we stay in one place, but vastly expand when we explore. It can reshape your perspectiveâ even change your life course. So are you ready? Is your passport expired? Buried in a closet somewhere? Make sure itâs up-to-date and handy. And let us know: Where do you want to go?
Illustration by Jessica De Jesus
3 Paths Toward A More Creative Life
In an era of volatility, uncertainty, chaos, and ambiguity, being creative is perhaps the best way to navigate your career and succeed.Â
Here are three specific ways that can help you lead a creative life from innovation and design expert Bruce Nussbaum.
1. BE MINDFULâDISCONNECT
We are all so connected these days and distracted by constant interactions. Our time is spent responding, reacting to others or absorbing, taking in new information. But we often lack the space, the time, the moment to integrate that knowledge, connect those dots, generate that creativity. Slowing down and disconnecting provides that space.
You need to allow your creativity to flow without interruption and to let your mind to fill up.
2. TO CREATE MEANINGFUL THINGS, DELVE INTO THE PAST
You need to allow your creativity to flow without interruption and to let your mind to fill up.
3. BE MASTERFUL
To be very creative, however, requires a deep mastering of both knowledge and skills.Â
Read the full story here.
[Images: Heads via Shutterstock]