Sue Smalley

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What is your pace of life? — Sue Smalley

Children and adults with ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) are often moving at a different pace than those around them, and that can be a source of difficulty. Recognizing your pace (and ranges of comfort and discomfort) can be an important part in discovering how to sync with the world around you.

26Jun2008 | Sue | 2 comments | Continued
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Four Steps Towards Peace — Sue Smalley

So what can we do to address our varying levels of ignorance and create a more peaceful and compassionate world? I believe there are four steps we each can take everyday to promote a more compassionate world.

15Jun2008 | Sue | 0 comments | Continued
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You Can’t Handle the Truth - Sue Smalley

James Carse in his new book, The Religious Case against Belief, writes of various types of ignorance differing in the degree of effort present with each. As the flip side of ignorance is awareness, it also comes with various shades of effort. It does take effort to direct my eyesight inward and see the 1000+ regions of mind (good and evil) and to realize that perhaps the greatest purpose in in life is the discovery process.

10Jun2008 | Sue | 0 comments | Continued
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When a work ethic conflicts with fun - Sue Smalley

Scientists are showing that play is important for health and well-being, having fun makes us live happier and healthier lives. So what stops us from having fun?

3Jun2008 | Sue | 3 comments | Continued
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Teach your children well: they’ll be gone before you know it. Sue Smalley

At 53, I play the game of life from an ‘infinite’ perspective, where the only goal is to keep the game going and engage as many players as possible.

25Apr2008 | Sue | 0 comments | Continued
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Meditation, the seat-belt of mental health - Sue Smalley

We all know that the road of life is bumpy with unexpected drop-offs, accidents, and only the occasional smooth-sailing highway. I believe that meditation — a practice for increasing awareness — is truly a seat belt of mental health. . .

17Apr2008 | Sue | 0 comments | Continued
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Mystic Mom - Sue Smalley

All moms are mystics by virtue of experiencing this moment of self-transcendence, experiencing a moment where “I” doesn’t exist, where “I,” the objective I, and “Am,” the subjective “being,” blur together as one. . .

2Apr2008 | Sue | 0 comments | Continued
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