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    <title type="text">Stitched - 50 Letters in 50 Days</title>
    <subtitle type="text">50Letters.com</subtitle>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.50letters.com/" />
    <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="/letters/atom/" />
    <updated>2012-02-07T21:05:54Z</updated>
    <rights>Copyright (c) 2012, Missy Durant</rights>
    <generator uri="http://expressionengine.com/" version="1.6.7">ExpressionEngine</generator>
    <id>tag:50letters.com,2012:02:07</id>


    <entry>
      <title>What Matters&#8230;.Gratitude </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/what_matters....gratitude/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2012:/8.63</id>
      <published>2012-02-07T20:00:53Z</published>
      <updated>2012-02-07T21:05:54Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>This site was my salvation.&nbsp; When I stepped out of the corporate world in 2009, I started writing letters to people that made a difference in my life.&nbsp; 50 letters.</p>

<p>That led to this blog.&nbsp; When I wrote about life, connected with old friends, and made a LOT of new ones.</p>

<p>I discovered I love writing&#8230;so I wrote a book, <a href="http://www.whatmattersthebook.com" title="What Matters&#8230;Gratitude">What Matters&#8230;Gratitude</a> that was published in November 2011.</p>

<p>And that&#8217;s where you can find my new blog&#8230;.I hope to see you there!
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Holding on is a bad habit </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/holding_on_is_a_bad_habit/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2011:/8.62</id>
      <published>2011-10-11T20:13:23Z</published>
      <updated>2011-10-11T21:21:24Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Today is National Coming Out Day.&nbsp; Robert Eichberg came up the idea in 1988.</p>

<p><br />
In 1988, I had no idea there was such a day.&nbsp; That’s because every day for me in 1988 was <i>National Keep the Door Closed Tight on the Closet Day.</I> And let me tell you this…holding the door closed was exhausting.</p>

<p>I decided when I was 15, that I would keep that part of me really secret. Because, I just knew, it was really horrible. Something you don’t talk about. That was the message I got growing up in the South.</p>

<p>I did finally come out, in 1992.&nbsp; </p>

<p>I took a deep breath each time I was ready to tell someone, and braced myself for a potential backlash.&nbsp; It never happened.&nbsp; But I still braced myself.</p>

<p>In 1993 I went to the March on Washington for GLBT rights.&nbsp; </p>

<p>There were 1 Million people there.&nbsp; <br />
It was a life-changing event.&nbsp; <br />
I remember calling my parents, and my dad saying, “We should be there with you.”&nbsp; I could hear him choking back tears.</p>

<p><br />
I was feeling really high when I got back to Jacksonville, FL.&nbsp; All my co-workers wanted to know how it was, wanted details so they could share in the high. All but one.She walked by my office that afternoon and said, “I know where you went, and I’m praying for you.” <br />
 </p>

<p>And in all the years since, she is the only person who had something potentially negative to say to me.&nbsp; And in the end, I’ll take all the prayers that come my way.</p>

<h2>Imagine my surprise</h2><p>
that in 2011, I found myself unconsciously bracing myself again.&nbsp; Wondering what people that don’t even know me might think when they find out.&nbsp; </p>

<p>That’s because I wrote a book. Which was a good idea, until I realized people would read it.&nbsp; And in the book, I tell several stories, because it’s a part of who I am.&nbsp; I had convinced myself that I’d sell a few books to friends and family, but had already written off any other sales.&nbsp; All because I didn’t want to come out <b>AGAIN! </b> Hadn’t I already done that!</p>

<p><br />
My amazing partner Sam asked me enough questions a couple of weeks ago on a vacation that I realized what I was doing. Holding on tight to the closet door, again.<br />
 
When I realized that’s what I was doing, I got up from my beach chair, walked into the ocean and took a swim.&nbsp; </p><h2>I walked out a lot lighter.</h2>

<p>I’ve told this story a few times now, and the same thing that happened years ago, happened again.&nbsp; When I speak from the heart, it creates a sacred moment, and the person I am talking to always shares something heavy on their heart.</p>

<h2>Today, I am so very grateful. </h2><p> </p>

<p>For the women who got me to that march in 1993 and for the women who prayed for me in 1993.&nbsp; </p>

<p>For a man I never met, Robert Eichberg.</p>

<p>For Sam, who is just the most amazing person in the world.</p>

<p>And for my parents, who got on a train in 2000, at the age of 70, and marched with us in Washington DC.</p>

<h2>Today is a good day.</h2>

<p> </p>

<p> </p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>49 more </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/49_more/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2011:/8.61</id>
      <published>2011-05-21T18:23:08Z</published>
      <updated>2011-05-21T19:39:09Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Today, I decided to write 49 more letters.&nbsp; Well, because, next week, I turn 49, and I&#8217;ve decided to embrace my age, much like my kids.</p>

<p>Because an entire year has gone by, and I&#8217;m running around my life with a list in my head, of all the people I am grateful for. Carrying it with me everywhere with good intent. </p>

<p>I’ve thought&#8230;.<i>tonight will be the night, when I put the kids to bed…I’ll write that letter.</i>&nbsp; <br />
Then I lie in bed and think&#8230;..<i> tomorrow will be the day, during lunch, I’ll just write the letter.</i><br />
I blink and the week is gone&#8230;.<i> so maybe Saturday morning will be a better time, I’ll get up before the kids, and just write the letter. But the kids get up before me, and we’re smack dab in the middle of it!<br />
So, Sunday night. That’s it. That will work.&nbsp; When everyone is getting ready for the week, I’ll tuck away in the office and write the letter in between making the family calendar, returning a few work emails and ordering that birthday present for….</i></p>

<h2>The weeks have passed with good intention sweeping by like the second hand on a watch.</h2><p>&nbsp; <br />
There is no letter. Only good intent.</p>

<p>Lucky for me, I still remember the words from a wise barista. Structure is important.&nbsp; So I decide to write 49 more. 49more letters.&nbsp; Structure is all I need.&nbsp; However, there&#8217;s still a problem. </p>

<p><b>The paper is blank. <br />
Blank. <br />
Still Blank.</b></p>

<h2>Wait, look who&#8217;s here?&nbsp; Well hey there doubting Thomas!</h2>

<p>I should be able to do this. Just write a letter. What is wrong with me. Excuses show up, reasons to just wait for later.&nbsp; Maybe after yoga, then it will be the right time.</p>

<p>Yoga!&nbsp; That’s it!</p>

<h2>Practice.</h2><p>
It’s not yoga completion.&nbsp; It&#8217;s a practice.</p>

<h2>Writing letters is a practice. Gratitude is a practice, not a destination.</h2>

<p>That small change in perspective, small shift was all it took to write my first letter, again!</p>

<p><br />
<b>One down, 48 to go.</b></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Word &amp;amp; Centuries </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/word_centuries/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2011:/8.60</id>
      <published>2011-01-13T20:10:25Z</published>
      <updated>2011-01-13T21:18:26Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<h2>Words and Centuries</h2><p>
 <br />
<b>Letter to the Widow Bixby, November 21, 1864</b></p>

<p><br />
<i>Executive Mansion, <br />
Washington, November 21, 1864. <br />
Dear Madam, <br />
I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. <br />
I feel how weak and fruitless must be any word of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. <br />
I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom. <br />
Yours, very sincerely and respectfully, <br />
A. Lincoln</i></p>

<p>Many people ask the question, “Why write a letter? Why not tell the person?”&nbsp; Maybe it is because “…writing a letter creates an intimacy that’s hard to achieve with spoken word.” one participant recently said as he covered is heart with his hand.&nbsp; Words on a page are everlasting, a testimony of an experience and somehow have the ability to reveal details of the heart.&nbsp; </p>

<p>Abe Lincoln wrote this letter to the Widow Bixby in 1864 to express his gratitude and sympathy for the death of her sons during the civil war.&nbsp;  His choices for communication at the time were in person or a handwritten letter.&nbsp;   Over a century later, in the one hundred thirty-seven words he penned, we still feel the deepness and are moved by the emotion he was trying to convey.&nbsp; And even though we did not know him, when we read the words, it’s as if his voice and tone live on in the letter. 
</p><h2>Letters have that power.</h2>

<p>Sometimes events happen in our lives that are big. So big, it’s hard to make sense, because there is no sense to make. I imagine there were moments, when President Lincoln questioned his faith, questioned if this horrific war, a war full of bigger meaning and impact, was worth all the individual lives that were being taken. It was a war within a nation that had brothers fighting brothers, tearing families apart.&nbsp; In times like these when events of this magnitude can paralyze even the strongest, finding a way to connect to something small, in this case writing a letter to a mother of fallen soldiers likely created a way to keep moving forward.&nbsp; It provides a way to re-engage and feel a connection to something bigger.</p>

<p>Every one of us wants to know that our life mattered, that there was a reason or a purpose we are here.&nbsp; I imagine, President Lincoln knew this when he both expressed his sympathy for the Widow Bixby’s loss and acknowledged that their death was not in vain. <i>”But I cannot refrain from tendering you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save.” </i> In these words live a legacy, a written account and reminder that each of our existence on this earth does matter.&nbsp; And while the act of writing a letter may seem dated, a time consuming task when the options for communicating are many, words on a page have withstood the test of time as a way to convey what we think and how we feel. The page has a way of absorbing the pace of life, and creates a genuine presence and intimacy lost in other forms of communication.&nbsp; It has a way of connecting our head and our heart, exposing something real, a naked vulnerability. 
</p><h2>Letters have power&#8230;</h2>

<p>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>The Price of Stones </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/the_price_of_stones/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.59</id>
      <published>2010-11-30T18:22:36Z</published>
      <updated>2010-11-30T19:44:37Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><i>&#8220;Our Father who art in heaven&#8230;.&#8221;<br />
Every day in Uganda, fourteen hundred mothers pass HIV on to their newborns.<br />
&#8220;Hallowed be they name&#8230;..&#8221;<br />
Fourteen hundred deaths.<br />
&#8220;They Kingdom Come&#8230;.&#8221;<br />
Fourteen hundred graves.<br />
&#8220;Thy will be done&#8230;&#8221;<br />
Red earth drummed onto fourteen hundred coffins.<br />
&#8220;On earth as it is in heaven.&#8221;<br />
If only I could do more.</i><br />
&nbsp;  &nbsp;  &nbsp;  ~Twesigye Jackson Kaguri from his book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Price-Stones-Building-School-Village/dp/0670021849/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1263692394&amp;sr=1-1" title="The Price of Stones">The Price of Stones</a></p>

<p><br />
Rather than get lost in his grief, Twesigye founded a school, <a href="http://www.nyakaschool.org/" title="Nyaka AIDS Orphans School">Nyaka AIDS Orphans School</a>.&nbsp; He did it one brick at a time, turning hope into action.&nbsp;  It&#8217;s an amazing story, a must read, a great holiday gift.&nbsp; Buy one for you and give one away!</p>

<h2>Twesigye, you are a gift to the world.&nbsp; Webale~</h2>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Life is Precious </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/life_is_precious/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.58</id>
      <published>2010-11-02T18:45:37Z</published>
      <updated>2010-11-02T20:14:38Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Today <a href="http://www.lukeandginger.com/node/245" title="Ginger, Michelle, Sarah, Sami, Oliver's">Ginger, Michelle, Sarah, Sami, Oliver&#8217;s</a> life changed forever. Last night they recieved the news that the plane that carried <a href="http://blog.nerdery.com/2010/11/remembering-luke/" title="Luke">Luke</a>, Nate, Nick &amp; Noah was found with no survivors.</p>

<p>Their live changed in an instant.&nbsp; </p>

<p>I don&#8217;t understand it and it leaves me with more questions than answers when it comes to god.&nbsp; </p>

<p>A very good friend of mine stopped by my house last Tuesday when I called her with the news. Here is the conversation I continue to play over and over in my head.</p>

<p>&#8220;Is there really a god?&nbsp; Then why and the hell do bad things happen to good people&#8230;.&#8221; me.</p>

<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;s the 54M dollar question. Not sure any of us will really know.&#8221; my wise friend Jenny.</p>

<p>&#8220;That doesn&#8217;t help.&#8221; me</p>

<p>&#8220;Everyone wants the answer to the big question in times like these&#8230;.and when they don&#8217;t get it, they want the answer to all the little questions&#8230;.it&#8217;s just natural.&#8221; my really wise friend Jenny.</p>

<p><br />
Big sigh&#8230;&#8220;That makes sense&#8230;&#8221; me.</p>

<p>Today, when the time between seconds seem to turn into hours, I have a lot of little questions I want answered.&nbsp; And each time, I stop and remember what my friend Jenny said, I take a deep breath, and let go wanting answers to the little things. And when I do the space between the seconds seems to return to normal for a while.&nbsp; </p>

<p>I&#8217;ve repeated that process a lot today.&nbsp; Because life really is precious.</p>



<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>What a Wonderful World </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/what_a_wonderful_world/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.57</id>
      <published>2010-08-23T15:46:10Z</published>
      <updated>2010-08-23T19:31:11Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>I just spent 45 minutes running listening to this song over and over. It’s a song I listen to when I feel like the worlds really big, and I’m feeling small. Before you go any further, take 3 minutes, and just <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1bFr2SWP1I" title="Listen.">Listen.</a></p>

<h2>I spent the weekend with 60 kids at camp.</h2>

<p>Every one of them has experienced a loss recently…a mom, a dad, a sibling, a grandparent…&nbsp; This is my second year, and it still made me question my beliefs…. a lot.&nbsp; Why these kids, so young and full of life, have this big crap to deal with. </p>

<p>Friday night </p><h2>I wondered if I could deal with it….</h2>

<p>We had the biggest bundle of pent up energy from 60 kids I had ever seen in my life.&nbsp; They were all over the place, figuratively speaking. Our group was more like a gymnastics session and the campfire was more like a round up. By 11:00, we were beat, and questioning if this weekend was going to work.&nbsp; </p><h2>I thought…”I can’t do this…” </h2>

<p><i>Then I remembered.</i>&nbsp; <b>Alan</b><br />
Alan and I were in a workshop together once. I had already determined he was the weakest person in the group. So, when we had to do an activity that involved us standing in a big circle, arms forming a T, finger tips touching, and Alan stood next to me I thought…I can’t do this for him too.</p>

<p>The instructions were no talking, stand as long as you can and everyone makes it.&nbsp; When Alan’s hands started to drop, I swung my head around, made eye contact and willed his arms back up.&nbsp; It seemed like I did this a thousand times…and I was getting tired.</p>

<p>Someone realized the instructions said no talking…not no singing, and began to sing.&nbsp; That helped for a while, and then my arms started to get tired….and Alan looked at me, and started to sing. Alan was a beautiful piano player, but he couldn’t sing….the most beautiful sounds came out and my arms lifted. </p><h2>I didn’t have to do it alone….</h2><p>
I could get support. It remains one of my biggest lessons in life…</p>

<h2>I couldn’t do it alone, but together, with the other 29 volunteers, we did….</h2>

<p>There’s an activity that we do that involves gluing a broken plate back together, then decorating in memory of their loved one. It’s a tough activity…</p>

<p><b>hot glue gun + broken plates with sharp pieces + 9 year olds= potential for anything to happen.</b>&nbsp; </p>

<p>But there’s something strangely magical that happens for the kids&#8230;and us too.<br />
It’s a reminder. </p>

<p>We all have wounds, some deeper than others. Wounds that when taken care of, heal and leave a scar. A scar that over time, softens, yet is always a part of us…we keep going.</p>

<p><br />
60 kids &amp; 30 volunteers showed up on Friday.&nbsp; 90 people emerged on Sunday…and in the words of Israel Kamakawiwo “I see friends shaking hands saying, “how do you do? They’re really saying, I…I love you.</p>

<p>90 of us….a little more healed.</p>

<p><br />
Special thanks to the <a href="http://www.moyerfoundation.org/programs/camperin.aspx" title="Moyer Foundation">Moyer Foundation</a> for sponsoring Camp Erin &amp; the Wise Women from <a href="http://www.ridges.fairview.org/Community_Health/grief/c_275922.asp" title="Fairview Youth Grief Services">Fairview Youth Grief Services</a>who put it all together…Jenny, Lisa, Katie &amp; BJ. </p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>What do Al &amp;amp; Edna have in common? </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/what_do_al_edna_have_in_common/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.56</id>
      <published>2010-06-22T01:30:07Z</published>
      <updated>2010-06-22T02:54:08Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<h2>The world lost 2 amazing people last week</h2>

<p><b>Al &#8216;Doc&#8217; Hixon &amp; Edna Saffy</b> didn&#8217;t know each other. Or at least, I don&#8217;t think they did.&nbsp; Edna lived in Jacksonville, FL&#8230;.Doc lived in Daytona Beach, Florida. They lived about an hour and a half apart. As it turns out, 
</p><h>it doesn&#8217;t matter where you live, you can make a mark on the world</h2>

<p><a href="http://www.news-journalonline.com/news/local/west-volusia/2010/06/16/al-hixon-veterinarian-who-gave-back-to-others.html" title="Al Hixon">Al Hixon</a> lived a remarkable 92 years. He is survived by his wife, Martha, a bunch of children, grandchildren &amp; great-grandchildren. Al did a lot of amazing stuff. Read the article his daughter Kathy wrote and you&#8217;ll see&#8230;What I remember most about Al was his heart. I&#8217;m not sure, I&#8217;ve ever met anyone with a kinder heart than Al. When I was a kid, and we stayed over at the Hixon&#8217;s, I always felt safe. Not because the doors were locked, I doubt they were back then. It was the love in that house, and from Al and Martha&#8230;.. </p>

<p><a href="http://jacksonville.com/news/metro/2010-06-20/story/renown-human-rights-activist-edna-l-saffy-dies-75" title="Dr. Edna Saffy">Dr. Edna Saffy</a> lived 75 amazing years. She is survived by her husband Grady and her brother Ralph. Edna was an activist. With the kind of courage and strength that could fall the biggest giant.&nbsp; Edna fought for human rights. All human rights, which is what made Edna a pure gift to the world. She believed, and through her actions, made sure every voice was heard, in a city that didn&#8217;t always appreciate difference. That <i>never</i> stopped Edna.</p>

<p>
</p><h2>Al &amp; Edna made a difference in the world.</h2><p>
The world where they lived, in the city where they lived, in the community they loved.&nbsp; <br />
They were both a gift to the world and will be missed. <br />
<b>Peace be with you both~</b>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>The Lizard Brain </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/the_lizard_brain/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.55</id>
      <published>2010-05-20T18:00:28Z</published>
      <updated>2010-05-20T19:08:29Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><i><b>Dear Lizard Brain,<br />
You lose this time. I just sent my manuscript to my editor. I admit, I sat for a long time thinking about hitting the send button. You tried.&nbsp; You tried hard to give me a multitude of reasons why I shouldn’t send it. “it’s too short”, “really, you’re not a writer”, “what if she thinks I’m a wacko?”, “what if it’s just pure crap”. I ignored you instead. I hit send, and I’m still here. So…go back to sleep lizard brain, until I really need you….cheers, Missy</i></b></p>

<h2>What’s a lizard brain?</h2><p>
It’s a small part of our brain, at the base of our skull. It’s real, and its sole purpose is to help us survive. That was a really important part of the brain at a point in our evolution. It’s really important, if say, you are in a tornado, or lost in the woods. Or maybe you need to run really fast and get away from a bear. Now, those are circumstances that require survival.&nbsp; But, how often do those happen? Once in a lifetime?</p>

<p>Today however, the lizard brain hovers quietly, waiting to be needed.&nbsp;  The problem is what the Lizard brain considers ‘needed’ and you consider ‘needed’ are a very different beast.&nbsp; Who knew that writing a letter would be a threat to the lizard brain. 
</p><h2>Lizard&#8217;s love fear</h2><p>
That’s because, Lizards have a keen sense of smell.&nbsp; They and can sniff out fear, even before you realize it.&nbsp; Fears that quite possibly have been lingering with us, tucked away in our subconscious since childhood.&nbsp; Fear of being rejected, fear of being laughed at or maybe being ‘the last one picked’ for the kickball team. </p>

<p><br />
When I tell someone my story about 50 letters the typical response is at first positive, then immediately, the person who start a list of reasons why they couldn’t write a letter.&nbsp; “What will they think?”, “If I write mom, I have to write dad,”“they probably won’t remember me,” “I don’t even know where they live now” “what if they think it’s silly”.&nbsp; If any of these sound familiar, keep reading.</p>

<p>When I started holding small informal stitched gatherings, I would begin by telling my story, and then give people a blank piece of paper, a pen and a stamped envelope.&nbsp; Everything they needed. Inevitably, there would be at least 1 person, who would use their paper to start a list of people they would write to. Several others would sit there, restlessly contemplating their escape from the room and at the right moment close their book and walk away.&nbsp; </p>

<p>Fear makes a Lizard Brain very happy.&nbsp; </p><h2>Fear of rejection. Fear of being different. Fear of being laughed at. Fear of  you fill in the blank.</h2>

<p>Today, in a moment, I stared down the lizard brain, and won.&nbsp; I’ll take that small victory…</p>

<p>Want to learn more about lizard brain?&nbsp; Pick up <a href="http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/" title="Seth Godin's latest book Linchpin">Seth Godin&#8217;s latest book Linchpin</a> It&#8217;s a great read&#8230;.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>And the winner is&#8230;... </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/and_the_winner_is/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.54</id>
      <published>2010-05-12T15:58:38Z</published>
      <updated>2010-05-12T17:05:39Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Sanu Patel-Zellinger!<br />
She is now owns an advance copy of <a href="http://www.deliveringhappinessbook.com/" title="Delivering Happiness!">Delivering Happiness!</a> </p>

<p>Here was her response, that got THE biggest laugh from kids:</p>

<h2>I want to read Delivering Happiness because……..I want to learn how to make a hippopotamus laugh.</h2>

<p>&nbsp;</p><H2>What can we learn from Sanu?</h2>

<p><i>Read the question:</i> <br />
I got some very intellectual responses. Great if it’s your dissertation for your MBA. Not so much if you are making a kid laugh!</p>

<p><i>Go head and be yourself:</i> <br />
“Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken” <i>Oscar Wilde</i></p>

<p>That’s what Tony Hsieh did…and it worked for him.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Delivering Happiness </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/delivering_happiness/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.53</id>
      <published>2010-05-03T15:28:13Z</published>
      <updated>2010-05-03T16:37:14Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Sometimes, I think there is a universal concept that floats just above the clouds all around the world. <br />
Sometimes, if you are tall enough, not in height, but in spirit, I think you can read the message. </p>

<h2>I think Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos got the message</h2>

<p><b>IF</b> you find people that are Passionate. <b>IF</b> you take care of People. <b>PROFITS</b> follow.</p>

<p>His new book, <a href="http://www.deliveringhappinessbook.com/?utm_source=Delivering+Happiness+Blogger+Program&amp;utm_campaign=1541a00d6a-Blogger_Book_Giveaway4_29_2010&amp;utm_medium=email" title="Delivering Happiness">Delivering Happiness</a> is a great story. It’s Tony’s story, and…</p>

<h2>Wait, you don’t have the book yet?</h2><p>
<i>Because it’s not released until June 7!!!!</i></p>

<h2>BUT, you could win an advanced copy!</h2><p>(I’ve read it and it’s worth it!!) </p>

<p><b>It’s easy.<br />
1. Finish this sentence “I want to read Delivering Happiness because……..<br />
2. Email it to by May 6, 2010.<br />
3. The finalist will be selected based on the <i>amount of laughter</i> when read to a 4 &amp; 7 year old, and your book mailed to you.<br />
4. The final response will be posted on May 10, 2010</b></p>

<h2>Have fun!!!</h2>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>My Daughter Joined the Circus! </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/my_daughter_joined_the_circus/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.52</id>
      <published>2010-04-29T19:22:58Z</published>
      <updated>2010-04-29T20:45:59Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><b>I am a proud parent.&nbsp;  Really proud.&nbsp;   I’m warning you that if you aren’t in the mood for gushing, you might want to skip this post!</b></p>

<p>My daughter is 7, born into a family of extroverts.&nbsp; Well, I’m a functioning introvert, but that&#8217;s just as bad. This is quite challenging for her sometimes, since she is the exact opposite. Clearly, exiting the womb, as an introvert.&nbsp; I’m sure, that if she could have talked when born, she would have said <i>“I was doing just fine where I was…why can’t I just stay here?”</i></p>

<p>So, can imagine our surprise, when last year, we attended the summer show that <a href="http://www.circusjuventas.org/15/index.php/performances/summer-show" title="Circus Juventas">Circus Juventas</a> puts on every year, where she announced 
</p><h2>&#8220;I&#8217;d like to join the circus.&#8221;</h2>

<p><b>What! </b><i>The circus?</i> Are you kidding me? And her simple reply, yes.</p>

<h2>Why in the <b>WORLD</b> would an introvert want to join a circus?</h2><p>
and perform in front of, oh, say, 500 people at a time? Maybe it’s because all the introverts I know are adults, and by the way, if I asked any of them if they would do it, their answer would be a bold <b>NO!</b></p>

<p>So, last fall, she started going once a week to practice, under the big top.&nbsp; If you haven’t been to this place, it’s got to be on your list of things to do. It’s very cool. The first semester she took a class called circus experience, and got to try something new every week…trapeze, German wheel, hoops, silks, trampoline, juggling, you name it. The next semester, she was still excited and got to choose a class to focus on a skill. </p>

<p>I was secreting hoping for juggling, because it’s done on the ground.</p>

<p>
</p><h2>She chose side by side trapeze, off the ground.</h2>

<p>I was surprised at first, and after I thought about it, decided if I was doing it, that’s what I would have picked! </p>

<p>Every week, we pile in the minivan and head off to St. Paul for class.&nbsp;  My 4 year old and I sit in the back, and watch all the kids practice. I must admit, I have been irritated on more than one occasion, while in stuck in traffic, wishing secretly that she’d change her mind…but, she didn’t. And now I’m glad….because, 
</p><h2>Under the big top, she has been learning:</h2>

<p>1. <b>Self confidence:</b> That she <i>CAN</i> do things that scare her. I can’t tell you how many people that know her, comment on how confident she is becoming.<br />
2. <b>Strength, Physical &amp; Mental:</b> When not at the circus, she’s on the monkey bars at a park, until her hands blister. She is completely at home on the monkey bars, almost like breathing air.<br />
3. <b>Mistakes are ok</b>: She falls off the bar, and guess what, just gets back up. No negative self talk, no processing why she fell, she just gets back up, and keeps going. That&#8217;s a skill that&#8217;s gonna come in handy&#8230;</p>

<p>Last night, was her 1st performance, and I was holding back tears. Proud tears, for a little girl, an introvert, who continues to face her fears, and “smile &amp; style”. </p>

<p>I am glad, my daughter ran off and joined the circus, and it’s one of the best things that have happened in her life.&nbsp; </p>

<h2>It really does take a village, or in this case, a circus, to raise a child.</h2>

<p><b>Thanks Circus Juventas, for making the world a better place~</b></p>

<p><i><b>p.s. I STRONGLY recommend seeing the show this summer&#8230;July 29-August 15.&nbsp; If only for a few hours, you can escape the day, imagine yourself flying threw the air, and join the circus.</i></b></p>

<p>
</p><h2>Special Thank You&#8217;s to:</h2>

<p><b>Dan &amp; Betty Butler,</b> for your vision to start this non-profit 16 years ago and now is the largest circus school in the country. (And for hanging out at FSU, one of my colleges!)</p>

<p><b>Marissa Dorschner</b>, for coaching Ellie, and helping our little introvert figure out the world and do things she didn’t think she could do.</p>

<p><b>Kasey Scarpello</b>, for answering the same questions, over and over, with a smile. Administrators are the life blood of any organization, and you are no exception! </p>

<p>To all of the coaches, who come from all over the world, USSR, Mongolia, Morocco, Chile, China, India, to share their talent with our kids….<b>Zina Avgoustova, Jason Burnstein, Tim Carlson, Risa Cohen, Zacc Fricke, Chimgee Haltarhuu, Mostapha Hassouni, Jeff Kasper, Charley Mason, Bat Nyangar, Lili Rancone, Amy Sackett, Sun Yan Hong, Zhang Xu, Rachel Butler, Lena Gould…and the student coaches Maria Balogh &amp; Joey McEachern.</b></p>

<p>To the administrative folks: <b>Nicole Lahoz Arne, Emily Janssen, Rhiannon Fisk, and Kim Thompson. </b> Like the inside of a clock, you make things tick, without you, there would be no circus.</p>

<p>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>If Kid&#8217;s ruled the World </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/if_kids_ruled_the_world/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.51</id>
      <published>2010-04-07T17:48:58Z</published>
      <updated>2010-04-07T19:14:59Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Yesterday, I went on my 1st field trip with my 1st grader. We went to the <a href="http://www.thebakken.org/" title="Bakken ">Bakken </a>. It&#8217;s a pretty cool place and a great example of a guy with a vision and a passion for something&#8230;it just happen to be electricity.&nbsp; <a href="http://www.earlbakken.com/" title="Earl Bakken">Earl Bakken</a>. Everyone&#8217;s got a story&#8230;and his is pretty cool.</p>

<p>As I stood there, with all the other moms&#8217; and 2 dad&#8217;s&#8230;.i was wondering what the heck I was suppose to do! I&#8217;m still a rookie at this stuff&#8230;the mom stuff, field trip volunteering stuff&#8230;I hate to admit it, but I was reallly nervous. I&#8217;d rather speak in front of 10,000 people&#8230;now that&#8217;s easy!</p>

<p>I was &#8216;assigned&#8217; 4 kids, one of which was mine. Thank goodness&#8230;she pretty much just told me what to do. (not sure where she get&#8217;s that from!) Go this way, these are my friends, sit here&#8230;.she&#8217;s gonna be fine when she grows up&#8230;.</p>

<p><br />
On our 1st stop, we had a volunteer from the museum teaching us stuff about magnets &amp; electricity.&nbsp; Before we got started, she asked for some &#8216;rules&#8217; from the kids. Here&#8217;s what they came up with:</p>

<p><b>1. Don&#8217;t do bad stuff<br />
2. Don&#8217;t touch stuff you&#8217;re not suppose to<br />
3. Be Safe<br />
4. Don&#8217;t run in the museum<br />
5. Listen</b></p>

<p>I love it when I get to learn from the simplicity of kids. I wrote these down, and thought, yep, I think it&#8217;s a pretty good list. </p>

<p>If kids ruled the world, I don&#8217;t think it would be any less complex, but I think the simplicity &amp; in the moment spirit in which kids live, would make day to day living a whole lot easier&#8230;and fun.</p>

<h2>What have you learned from a kid today?</h2>

<p><i>p.s. My favorite quote from the day was from a student&#8230;&#8220;my friend touched an electric fence he wasn&#8217;t suppose to. He got shocked. He had a smudge on his face. He liked the smudge.&#8221; I couldn&#8217;t stop laughing!</i>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>3 things I learned this week </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/3_things_i_learned_this_week/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.50</id>
      <published>2010-03-31T19:29:47Z</published>
      <updated>2010-03-31T20:38:48Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to the blogging world Michele Elin!&nbsp; Michele has a passion for many things, including living big, dreaming big.&nbsp;  This is a guest blog post by Michele, who is making her way through life, with life, in life.&nbsp; Check out her <a href="http://dreamvive.blogspot.com/2010/03/its-never-too-early-or-too-late.html" title="Blog">Blog</a> and Thank You Michele, for sharing your thoughts with the world.</p>

<p><b>1. Figure out who you are and who and how you want to be. Write it down. I stared with five things. Add, cross off as you go.<br />
2. Ask people. Send out a quick email text asking people for 3 words to describe you. I was surprised by what I got back.<br />
3. Tell people. Give back. Make sure you tell people what you see in them – It’s another way of saying thank you.</b></p>

<h2>Here I am</h2><p>
in the middle of the night, thinking. I&#8217;m thinking about people that have made a difference in my life. Missy came to mind as one of them. <br />
It really seems kind of silly. We don&#8217;t really know each other, but last week we had a chance to grab a cup of coffee.&nbsp; She was telling me what she had been up to in the last year and I really tuned in to her talking about her struggle to find her lost identity in the absence of a &#8220;job&#8221;. We all naturally default to our job title when asked what we do. We don&#8217;t naturally say we&#8217;re a parent or a great friend or a spouse or a listener or an energizer or we&#8217;re a connector of people. We define ourselves by our jobs. </p>

<p> 
</p><h2>I&#8217;ve always thought</h2>

<p>the self-awareness journey was about your consciousness of you. When talking to her, I started to wonder how much others&#8217; perceptions should and/or could inform your own<br />
consciousness. Would any of you that know Missy say that she is lacking in identity? <br />
 </p>

<p>I&#8217;m not saying that our perceptions are correct, and I know the old saying ‘your perception is reality.’ I wonder how much the composite of your perceptions of Missy is at all close to her perception of herself. </p>

<p><br />
I&#8217;ve long been fascinated by the question of what people see when they look at me. Would those perceptions change what I think about myself? Should they? Is it important to know how much difference there is between my self-perception &amp; others perception of me?</p>

<p>
</p><h2>I’m not really sure&#8230;.so I’ll just keep exploring</h2>

<p><b><i>Life’s just a journey with a bunch of steps that I’ll keep taking.</b></i><br />
 </p>

<p>
</p>]]></content>
    </entry>

    <entry>
      <title>Floating in my Head </title>
      <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="/letters/floating_in_my_head/" />
      <id>tag:50letters.com,2010:/8.49</id>
      <published>2010-03-22T15:48:53Z</published>
      <updated>2010-03-22T17:06:54Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Missy Durant</name>
            <email>melissadurant@msn.com</email>
                  </author>

      <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p><b>This is a Guest Blog post by <a href="http://twitter.com/DanielGutierrez" title="Danny Gutierrez">Danny Gutierrez</a>.&nbsp; He&#8217;s a husband, a dad, a raised-in-Peru foodie, who loves life.&nbsp; He&#8217;s also a church planter &amp; co-pastor of <a href="http://www.whybloom.com/" title="Bloom">Bloom</a>. When I read this story, I sat in tears. The kind of tears that are nourishing, not draining. Thank You Danny, for sharing this amazing, heart touching story.</b></p>

<p><br />
Two days in a row is what it took for me to recognize there was more to my reflections then simply another string of pleasant thoughts. </p>

<p>I have a friend that kept coming to mind earlier this week. More specifically, it was the awe I felt as I watched the current chapter of his life unfold that held my fascination. My friend should be dead. It should be over for him. I have known about him for a while, yet not really connected with him on a meaningful personal level until recently as his life, that seemed to already be at rock bottom, sprung a trap door and took him to a new low; a low that his family was even wondering if he’d recover from.</p>

<p>I remember sitting on his hospital bed, looking into the eyes of a man who has lived many years of pain who wondered if this was how it would all end. And in the last couple months I’ve seen a man who manifestly decided that it was not over. I’ve seen a man allow something bigger than his fears, uncertainties, his past hurts, to pick him up and help him put his life back together.</p>

<p>And my mind kept playing the last series of events over and over again. The lance-armstrong-esque determination my friend was displaying to reclaim life while moving forward had me awestruck. </p>

<p>And then a non-original thought hit me, one that this important work has brought to many of our attention. Tell him how thankful you are for him.</p>

<p>My friend is not on Facebook, twitter, or email. And I felt like simply telling him in person would come across a bit canned. Of course! What else do you say to a man whose life is being so radically changed?</p>

<p>So I pulled out a pen and a sheet of paper, an envelope, a stamp, and a physical street address and I began sharing how thankful I was for his strength and his courage, and what that all meant to me.</p>

<p>And I realized that the thank you is what acknowledged that I had made the inspiration my own. It was now a gift he had freely given me. </p><H2>It was like the inspiration that had floated around my head for two days settled somewhere in my soul</h2><p>
when I signed my name to that letter. And now I know that the thoughts surrounding all of this will never be fleeting since they are enshrined on that note that he has in his possession.</p>

<p>The letter, and more importantly the sentiment, is a matter of our relational history now. </p><h2>My life is richer</h2><p>
for knowing this man. </p><h2>My hope for life more robust</h2><p>
having witnessed him take the outstretched hand of his Maker to sit up from a bed of pain he has been laying in for years. </p>

<p>Missy asked me to consider sharing what I learned from writing this last letter. </p><h2>I learned</h2><p>
<b>There are <i>SO MANY</i> life changing and free gifts swirling around our heads, laying at our feet, lingering in our past, that can become ours if we just receive them and say… Thank you.</b></p>



<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content>
    </entry>


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