Parents From The 43 Missing Students From Ayotzinapa Have Been Demanding Their Disappeared Children Back,

Parents From The 43 Missing Students From Ayotzinapa Have Been Demanding Their Disappeared Children Back,

Parents from the 43 missing students from Ayotzinapa have been demanding their disappeared children back, for 7months now. Masses have gathered and marched in Mexico showing support. Now the parents are in New York bringing international light to this issue. They appeared at last night at #JarabeDePalo's concert reminding the audience New York is #Ayotzinapa ! They are marching towards the United Nations right now.

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10 years ago
Education NOT Deportation

Education NOT Deportation

8 years ago

<3

New Moon Blessings ✨💫

New moon blessings ✨💫

9 years ago

we’re all interconnected by the beauty and surreal power of our Mother Earth. 

dia-ar-te - DiA
8 years ago

💪💓

Maria P. P. Root, Bill Of Rights For People Of Mixed Heritage

Maria P. P. Root, Bill of Rights for People of Mixed Heritage

10 years ago

The fact that they were three Muslim students, I think, has had something to do with the muted – relatively muted response we have had and I think that it’s time to say all lives matter.

Geraldo Rivera on The Chapel Hill Shooting (via themindfulmuslim)


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8 years ago

3 parts of building a habit: a cue, a routine & a reward.

As part of transitions, I am developing new habits both naturally (like sleeping longer ☁) and those at will (like working out more ☜). But how does the human body, brain and soul develop new habits? AND how do we build a positive habit over a negative habit? But first, we should acknowledge that only YOU have a say in what is a positive or a negative thing that you want for yourself at at given time and space. With that being said, here are some good tips I just read about developing new habits, and repetition or self-torture are not the answers. 

What are habits and how are they formed anyway?  Habits are made by synapses, or gaps between cells that send impulses to the brain. This helps facilitate what a person thinks or does. If this is repeated constantly, it becomes more accessible -- or a habit. 

Now to the 6 ways to breaking a bad habit and developing healthy habits:

Link the new behavior to a routine or environmental cue: Repetition is only part of forming a new habit. It is useful to develop a habit loophole, which means performing something at the same time of the day. This becomes a response to specific cue.

Link a difficult task to a reward: Pretty much think “If i do this tough task, then I will reward myself with something that I like” The idea behind the if-then principle is to link the new behavior, which may be uncomfortable at first, with something positive so the new behavior is associated with positive. This enhances confidence in performing new habit and thus increasing positive feedback and desire to do it again. 

Repeat new behaviors and keep track of progress: Okay, I did say repetition but 24/7 repetition is not what makes a habit successful. In addition to repetition, keeping track of new habit and response to performance is a helpful technique in developing new habitual behavior. Be mindful that life happens (let it happen) and it is okay to miss a day or two of your routine. It is much more important staying schedule most of the time rather than ALL the time. This helps build a new habit. 

Keep it simple: Focus on one habit at a time, otherwise it becomes overwhelming and easy to give up

Use peer support for accountability: Tell a friend, partner or join online support group for motivation or a even a little peer pressure. 

Make a detailed plan: As with many other personal or professional goals a plan in mind will provide more direction. This can be very helpful when building a new habit as well. 

Forget the 21-day habit myth, there is no exact time for developing a habit but with a cue that reminds you and makes you comfortable to do something, a routine that fits you, and a reward for your hard work, a habit will be formed. 


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10 years ago
Favorite Passages From The Tibetan Book Of Living And Dying By Spiritual Master Sogyal Rinpoche

Favorite passages from The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Spiritual Master Sogyal Rinpoche


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8 years ago

When you recognize your personal power, you no longer need to feel superior or inferior to anyone else.

Deepak Chopra (via icreatewhatibelieve)


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10 years ago

TIME LAPSE OF MILLIONS MARCH NYC.

8 years ago

support all indigenous people

- support indigenous people you’re hearing about for the first time - support black indigenous people - support all dark-skinned indigenous people, mixed or not - support indigenous people who are disconnected from their roots and are only now rediscovering them - support indigenous people who arent white-passing or mixed with white - support multiracial indigenous people - support indigenous people who are mixed with white but refuse to identify with that part of their heritage - support all indigenous people regardless if they speak their tribal/native language, whether they live on their land or not, whether they know a lot of their heritage or not


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  • randyhaddock
    randyhaddock liked this · 10 years ago
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    dia-ar-te reblogged this · 10 years ago
dia-ar-te - DiA
DiA

I am an indigenous-mestiza-afrodescendent trans-national Latina sister from the picturesque South American city of Guayaquil and brought up in East Flatbush, Brooklyn. I love and respect my journey in exploring my browness and my womanhood.

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