DO GOOD,,FEEL GOOD


There is no single person in this world that never wants to feel good,
We all want to feel good and comfortable with life and everything that goes on around us.
The big question comes, WHAT DO YOU NORMALLY DO TO FEEL GOOD???

Well on my side i feel good when i do good things, and the good things to me is when i think positively, when am kind to people, when i give cheeerfully, when I humble my self, when am able to make others smile, when am able to encourage someone, when am able to solve someones big puzzle, , but generally when I am a solution to someone.

Doing good things does not necessarly mean doing big things or giving huge mounts of money but doing those small things that can make others happy and you happy, its about making someone see the other brighter side of life and for him/her have hope, see humanity in felloow people.

No one was born complete, and just to my thinking, God made us that way so that we can need eachother all the times. So that we can be a solution for eachothers problem.

I sympathize with the Families that lost their beloved kids at the massacre which happened in US,  Am not a parent yet but i can feel their pain, i can imgine what they are going through.,
All i can do is pray for them for God to heal their wounds!!!

Alot of heart breaking tragedies are going on and it feels so bad to see people suffering, example the wars in DRC, it really breaks my heart everytime i got to watch news and see small  children even mothers running with their kids for their safety,,i keep asking myself when will that end??when will this people live to feel good nd safe in their own country,,, what can we do help them??

We must  change for better and we must use the chances we are given to do good things, for  day will come and you will miss that opportunity of showing your acts of kindness.
Show them now...

Ann's article
'If you do good, you'll feel good': Ann Curry explains origins of #26Acts of Kindness

"After being in Newtown, I woke up the next morning and thought about what could be done. What is the answer to this kind of national suffering? And I remembered a moment on the edge of Darfur, when I came upon a woman who was elderly and in the hospital, recovering from burns after an attack by Janjaweed militias. She was surrounded in the hospital, by younger women carrying babies, and I asked her to tell the story of how she had suffered these terrible burns all over her body. I learned that she had tried to rescue her invalid husband when her village was attacked and her house was set on fire. She tried to carry her husband out of her house and stayed so long that the thatched roof of her house came down, the hot embers giving her 3rd degree burns. But she was unable to save her husband. Her husband died.


I remember walking out of that hospital, and the producer saw the look on my face. He said, “Are you okay?” And I said, “No.” And without even thinking, I remember going to our team van and pulling out a Polaroid camera I had brought on that trip. And then I went to all of these women with their children who were in the courtyard of the hospital, knowing that they had never owned a photograph – ever – of their child. I went around from woman to woman, and I took pictures of them, I took pictures of them with their child, or just of their child alone – without even thinking, just snapping pictures. The first time I did it, I remember giving a photograph to a woman, and she looked at this black square with this quizzed look on her face, and I said, “Just wait one minute! Just wait one minute,” holding up one finger. And then I watched her face melt as she watched her child’s face slowly appear on that Polaroid.
It made me feel better. So I went from mother to mother to mother until I ran out of film.

After the experience in Newtown. I thought, “What if? Imagine if everyone could commit to doing one act of kindness for every one of those children killed in Newtown.” So that’s what I tweeted. And guess what? People committed. I said in my tweet, “I’m in. RT if you’re in.” Not only did they commit to 20 acts of kindness, they wanted to up it to
26 acts of kindness

for every child and adult who was lost at the school. Some even debated maybe we should include the mother, who died, at 27 acts. Some debated maybe we should include the killer as well as he was struggling and in pain.

I think it’s up to you. Commit to how many acts of kindness you want to. It’s really your choice.

It started with a simple idea: Twitter hashtags #26Acts and #20Acts to encourage acts of kindness after the horrific shootings in Newtown, Conn., and multiplied into a movement of kindness. NBC's Ann Curry reports.

What’s really remarkable to me is how many people responded. They are the ones who carried the ball. They are the ones who chose what to do. People would tweet back, “I’ve done two!” “I bought coffee for a guy in line!” “I bought toys for homeless children!” “I’ve got 18 more to go!” or “24 more to go!” – whatever number they were trying to reach.

I was inspired by them. So I started tweeting about what people were doing. Some people thought it was boasting when they would say “I’ve done this” or “I’ve done that.” I don’t think so. I think that whenever you show by example an act of kindness – big or small – something that spends a lot of money, or because you don’t have the money, something that doesn’t, all of it is welcome.

There are many questions about Friday's shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, but one being asked by just about everyone is how to best honor the victims. In Newtown and across the country, random acts of kindness are being performed in the memory of each person lost. NBC's Andrea Canning reports.

There is no judgment. I think that’s the key. If people want to do it, great. But I think that if they do it, something great happens to you.

When I was tweeting, I noticed that the number one trending topic was something like "ThingsIlikeaboutmyself." I thought, “Well, if you do act of kindness, I bet you’ll like even more about yourself.” So that’s what I tweeted.

I know the truth: if you do good, you feel good. It’s the most selfish thing you can do. Right now, this country wants to heal. I think the only thing comforting in the face of a tragedy like this is to do something good with it if you can. Be a part of that wave.)))))

 
love is my home,
c......

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