Today’s Solutions: January 22, 2025

Total number of posts: 23059

Life is…being enlightene

Life is...being enlightened

Tijn Touber | May 2004 issue Are you living now? Are you living here? Think less, live more. The world is as you see it. What does your world look like? Are your thoughts based on abundance or scarcity? Are you a master or a victim? You are responsible for your own thoughts and feelings. No one Read More...

Looking for signs

Looking for signs

This gift is in the little everyday things Paulo Coelho | May 2004 issue We tend to assume that life will give us another chance tomorrow at whatever came up yesterday and today. But if we really pay attention, we see that no single day is like another. Every morning brings a hidden blessing that Read More...

As above, so below

As above, so below

The message from a warmed Read More...

Click-click

Click-click

Thanks to a camera, Julius Mwelu survives life in a Read More...

Family life

Family life

Canadian photographer Read More...

instead of asking for trust yo

instead of asking for trust you should give it

A German health food company takes a different Read More...

Is there a doctor in the count

Is there a doctor in the country?

Physicians in the Third World are emigrating to the Read More...

The Tao of democracy

The Tao of democracy

Collective intelligence as a path to true Read More...

A president from Venus

A president from Venus

America, the nation dedicated to the pioneer spirit, has turned out to be a stronghold for men. But if an 11-inch-tall doll with long blonde hair and permanently arched feet has her way, things are about to change. Jurriaan Kamp and Tijn Touber | April 2004 issue In May 2000 the Mattel company Read More...

How Jerome learned to read

How Jerome learned to read

Children are more than the deficits and disorders on which we put more and more emphasis. Children have a unique talent and a natural born desire to learn. There are ways to stimulate those. This is how Jerome learned to read. Dawna Markova | April 2004 issue Jerome was a six feet tall, bitterseet Read More...