Monthly Archive for October, 2010

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An Introduction To A New View on Love, Workshop Two.

Hello SuperForest!

If you remember, about a month ago SuperForester Jon posted about a workshop he was running in LA! Well this Sunday there is going to another LA based workshop! I know I told you I was volunteering at LeaderShift 2010 next week, but I will also be working at this workshop! So come to this too LA based SuperForesters! Here is the information on this workshop:

What if awakening was the context of all your relationships? What if conflicts were acknowledged as a chance to heal collective wounds? What if your mission was to BE LOVE in any situation?

This one day introductory course will train you in three distinctions: BEING, CLEARING, and ACKNOWLEDGEMENT. This course is intended for anyone who is interested in the practices of Cafe Gratitude and it is recommended as a prerequisite for the Sacred Commerce workshop. In this Intro to a New View of Love course, Ryland Engelhart (Manager of the upcoming Cafe Gratitude LA) and Erin Ross (LA Cafe Gratitude workshop organizer) will share tools and insights that have transformed their life into a sacred exchange.

Sounds awesome right!? It would be great if you could come! As I said before I would love to meet some fellow SuperForesters!

Here is a link for signing up!

I hope to see you this Sunday, I promise it will be a blast!

Much Love,

Mathew

Jenni Rempel Interviews SuperForester Jackson at Zero One


Interview with SuperForest Jackson at Zero One
Uploaded by jremps. – Explore lifestyle, fashion, and DIY videos.

SuperForester Jenni paid a visit to Zero One, made this great movie, and interviewed me.

Check out Jenni’s great blog!

Big Internet, Small World

The concept of COINCIDENCE has come up before on SuperForest.  That strange occurance when the six degrees of life suddenly smack together in one place.  Jackson posted epically about his personal coincidence explosion last month (which is well worth revisiting).  And I don’t know how many of you out there have had such chance encounter(s), but they seem to have always been a staple of my life.

I’ve run into middle school friends in basement jazz bars in Florence; literally bumped into a water polo colleague from Hawaii in front of the skull of the oldest human being in New York’s Natural History Museum; reconnected with a classmate from San Salvador, Brazil on a secluded Hawaiian beach on which we were the only people. Coincidences like these rarely surprise me much anymore.  I’ve embraced them as part  of the wonderful, mysterious way in which we are all connected .

But never have I randomly stumbled upon a small world coincidence via the internet.  Never before today.

Here’s how this came to be.  I was doing a google image search for a story Aaron and I are developing, looking for photographs of Old Hawaii.  Which was search number.  Ancient Hawaii was google’d next.  And so on until 8 pages down on my “Vintage Hawaii” search I found this:

And this:

(photos via coconutsandcoppertone)

And my jaw dropped five feet and the drool did spilleth into a pool on the floor.   Because what I was looking at, of all things was not only the one “not vintage Hawaii” photograph in the entire search, but was in fact photographs of people I and you SuperForesters all know and dearly love.

The incandescent Augustine and Mea!

Original tenants of Zero One.  Humans extraordinaire.  And as Jackson just informed me today, proud parents of a beautiful baby girl NAIA!

What a surprise, what a joy to stumble upon them in this context.  I felt as if I’d found a secret left just for me, a virtual message in a bottle reminding me that friends are never far, and that the world, no matter how big, or how fast we grow, only gets smaller.  Today I mean that in the best of ways.

Congratulations Augustine and Mea on your new life.  May it grow as beautiful and radiant as yourselves and the land you tender with respect and love.

US and South Africa Moving Toward Giant Solar Projects!

Hey SuperForest

It’s a good news week for solar energy!

First up, California:  the U.S. Department of the Interior approved yesterday the 1GW Blythe Solar Power Project to be situated on 28.4 square kilometers of desert managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) west of Blythe, California – the largest solar energy project ever to be built on U.S. public lands (factsheet available here). According to the DoI, when constructed, the Blythe Solar Power Project will produce enough electricity to power 300,000 – 750,000 homes.  Negotiations continue with the US Department of Energy to secure federal loan guarantees, but the company is confident that the project will begin before the end of 2010 – and if the political will is there, then I’d anticipate that the guarantees will follow.

The project will use parabolic trough technology, where long rows of curved mirrors concentrate sunlight onto a fluid in a central receiver, which is then used to heat water vapor, which in turns drives a turbine (diagram!).

A project of this size will clearly have an impact on the local habitat – to mitigate this the project has been subject to extensive environmental review and BLM is requiring the developers to provide funding for more than 8,000 acres of desert tortoise, western burrowing owl, bighorn sheep and Mojave fringe-toed lizard habitat.

This announcement comes on the heels of the approval earlier this month of the first five renewable energy projects ever on public lands – Imperial Valley Solar Project, Chevron Lucerne Valley Solar Project, Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System and the Calico Solar Project, all in California; and the Silver State North Solar Project in Nevada.  As BLM Director Bob Abbey says:

“With the approval of the Blythe project, the solar projects approved on BLM public lands in the last few weeks have the potential to generate up to 2800 megawatts of renewable energy. That’s enough to power up to 2 million homes … We have truly arrived at America’s new energy frontier.”

And! in more good news, the Guardian reports that South Africa is to unveil plans this week for what it claims will be the world’s biggest solar power plant – a 5GW project using giant mirrors and solar panels across an initial 9,000 hectares of state-owned land in the Northern Cape province.  The project would aim by the end of its first decade to achieve an annual output of 5GW of electricity – currently one-tenth of South Africa’s energy needs.  In a country which is currently dependent on coal-fired stations for most of its power, and one in six people still lacks electricity, this is a huge deal!

An estimated 200 foreign and domestic investors will meet this week in Upington, Northern Cape, with a view to funding the hugely ambitious solar project. A master plan will be set out by the US engineering and construction group Fluor. This follows a viability study by the Clinton Climate Initiative, which described South Africa’s “solar resource” as among the best in the world.

One of the sunniest 3% of regions in the world, the Northern Cape is South Africa’s largest province – and one of the poorest – but the hope is that the solar park would create a “solar hub”, regenerating the local economy.

We’ve seen the eye-opening infographic showing the surface area required to power the world via solar power alone. As Jonathan de Vries, the project manager and a special adviser to South Africa’s energy minister, said:

Solar power isn’t a panacea that will cure all but it’s a part of the solution, and a very important part.

State projects on a large scale are surely an important step toward that solution. And a little friendly international competition to invest the most in solar energy? That’s something I could get behind.

Love

P

The Man (or Woman’s) Guide to Love: “Preston”

Good Evening, SuperForest!

This is Preston. He’s 25 years old. And although you might think he isn’t nearly old enough to have solid understanding of what love is or be in a position to give advice about love to other people, that’s totally untrue. Because he’s quite the genius. And in one minute, he drops all sorts of knowledge on the subject. As a side note, one minute was also all it took for me to totally swoon over this guy. (hehe)

The Man’s Guide to Love is a nifty website that is chock full of videos intended to provide various pieces of advice about love “from men to men”. But similar to the mannerisms and workings of a concept as big as “love”, the knowledge most of these brilliant individuals in the featured videos share transcends gender entirely. So obviously women can find much value in them, too.

Visit the site whenever you get a free moment. It will make you smile. That’s a promise.

Love!
C

Leaders Causing Leaders: Leadershift 2010

Hello SuperForest!

Next week there is going to be a huge gathering of awesome cats from around the globe sharing their experiences at the communal table. The event itself is the LEADERShift 2010 conference presented by Leaders Causing Leaders! The whole idea behind it is to have leaders share their experiences, and then to learn about tools we can use to go out and lead. Each of us are leaders already, and the conference will help some realise their current potential, or give others grand new ideas to implement in their own workplace, home, website, etc. As it says on the website itself the conference’s goal is:

To Awaken the Leader Within.

Leadership is a defining characteristic of any generation. Where it is created, innovation and change become real possibilities.

We’re assembling leaders and visionaries, creating exhilarating panels from technology to social entrepreneurship to spirituality, arranging and hosting seminars and workshops with some of the great teachers of our time and celebrating this experience together with a  Saturday evening conscious music festival.

Now does that not sound awesome or what!? Workshops will be held throughout both days to expand yourself and learn.

So when is all of this exactly?

November 6th & 7th (a Saturday and Sunday, with the concert Saturday night)

Where?

The Long Beach Convention Center in Long Beach, CA

Here is a list of a few of the amazing speakers who are going to be attending just to get you excited too!

The SPEED of Trust author Stephen M. R. Covey

Author of bestselling A Long Way Gone, Ishmael Baeh

Cafe Gratitude/Sacred Commerce founders Matthew & Terces Engelhart

Third generation yogi and master-teacher of Humanology and Kundalini yoga and meditation, Guru Singh

AND SuperForest favourite Jason Mraz will be there, sharing his love and music as always.

For a list of all 100 and more speakers at the conference click here!

This is going to be a wonderful experience, SuperForest! If you can make it either day that would be amazing!

Click here to check out times and ticket prices!

Need more of a reason to go? I myself will be there, and I would love the chance to meet any SuperForesters out there! I will be volunteering for the whole conference, and I am super amped up about the whole thing! So be sure to check it out, and make your way down! I really hope to see a few of you Saturday and Sunday of November 6th & 7th!

And for any of you SuperForesters who live in the L.A. region of California I am going to ask a favour of all of you! Below is a poster for the event, and we want to get the news about this conference out there! Could you all copy and print the flyer (using recycled paper if you can of course!), and then post around your neighbourhoods or offices? *Click on the image below for the full sized version!* If you can do that then I will send a BIG thank you your way! Everyone organising the conference will be super grateful!

Any of you SuperForesters who aren’t in the greater L.A. area, but know of a friend or family member that might be interested, please pass on the word! Beyond that I can only send love and gratitude to you all, and hope to see a few of you there!

Much love SuperForest,

Mathew

How To Be Happy (Part II)

In 2007, the wonderful Jackson posted a blog titled How To Be Happy. And I thought it was awesome. I’ve decided to prepare my own version in light of the things I’ve been thinking and feeling lately. Here it is: my formula for happy.

1. Every night before sleep, muse on all the great stuff in your life

I am well fed, have a loving family, supportive friends and generally see the good in everything. I see this as cause for a personal party in my head every night before bed. And sure, like most, I’m also known to fall prey to that old dog self-comparison and sometimes wonder why so-and-so has it so much better/easier/sweeter than me. But that’s only 20 per cent of the time and I can live with that. This evening, I’m grateful for a nice email I received earlier today, daylight savings allowing me to walk home under a sky of blue, and the kick-ass leftover jambalaya I had for dinner.

2. Stretch after waking

This feels so good and is a speedy way to kick-start each day.

3. Be bold!

Despite how difficult I find this, I can usually rummage up the guts to compliment people on things I like about them. It’s particularly challenging to compliment a near stranger, but doing so feels great! Past examples include: “Hey! I really like the way you tell jokes”; “I love how readily you come up with solutions”; “You’re so open and willing to share”. Is it bad that I might enjoy giving compliments more than the receivers?

4. Cook your own meals

Nothing helps me unwind more than making ingredient lists, chopping vegetables, experimenting with spices, setting the oven timer and scooping something steamy onto a plate. Nourishing yourself with homemade grub (Aussie slang for food) is absolutely ace. Sure, sometimes recipes (or my methods) fail me, but the next attempt is always better.

5. Clean. Get rid of useless crap

Less is best, I say.

6. Stop second-guessing what others think of you

I do this. A lot. My derailed train of thought sometimes comes up with crazies like, “Such-and-such thinks you’re a total fool!”; “That person on the train just looked at you a little funny. There’s probably a less mobile person on the train who needs your seat. That person thinks you’re selfish!”. Whether or not these imaginings are true is utterly irrelevant. You know you’re a good person, with good intentions. These unhelpful thoughts that sometimes creep in do not serve you, so dump ‘em and be on your way.

7. Serve others

I believe I first stumbled on this wisdom while listening to a priest deliver his homily, and I remember lingering over the idea for a while afterwards. How nice, don’t you think? To make it your business to seek out ways to help your peeps (ie your fellow humans). Figuring out ways I can be of service to others – holding a door open, listening to someone’s worries, walking a friend home – has given me so much to be happy about. I like to picture a world where we’ve all got each other’s backs.

8. Joke. Laugh. Tease. Poke fun. Show off.

If you ask me, silly is a one-way path to happy. It’s inside all of us. It doesn’t die when you hit the double digits. I still love a good fart joke, tap people on the shoulder then duck as they turn to see who it is, and make up the bestest nonsensical songs about my boyfriend. Silly is the quality I most admire in others.

9. Blog often

I’m Gen-Y, so sue me! Seriously, though, my wee contributions to SuperForest have cranked my happiness meter to new heights. I think it’s something to do with feeling part of a really incredible group of folks, plus feeling part of a wider, global community thanks to the interaction I’ve had with all you SuperForesters around the world who I may never meet face-to-face. Blogging here gives me a sense that I have a place, that my issues are the same as yours, that we dream the same dreams.

10. If you’re fortunate enough to have both your parents around, show ‘em lots of love

Only as an adult have I realised how much this means to parents, to be shown love by their kids. Growing up, my parents both noticed something lacking in me, and would urge me to “use my heart more”. Though I was incredibly defensive and upset at first, I soon took onboard their advice and have learnt how this is done. My old man was diagnosed with lung cancer just last month. He’s in great spirits and despite how scary it all is, I’m hopeful he will be okay. It makes me happy knowing that if something does happen, he knows how much he is loved.

Please share your own personal how-tos for happy in the comments. I’d love to hear about them.

April

Select Your Thoughts, Dear Readers

Dear SuperForest,

The following is a great find from Intent.com. It’s about choosing your thoughts and how, in instances where you have ones you really wish you hadn’t, you can decide to merely view them from afar, like a person standing at a train station, yet not necessarily hopping aboard for the ride.

Take it away, Patricia Moreno!

‘You have to learn to select your thoughts the same way you select your clothes every day… Now that’s a power that you can cultivate.’ Richard from Texas.

This is a line from Eat, Pray, Love that is in complete alignment with the practice of intenSati.  In intenSati, we are encouraged to replace our negative thoughts with positive ones. In class, we get to actually practice acknowledging the negative thoughts and fears and doubts that come up for us, but then choose not to believe them.  Thoughts are not real!  Just because we think something doesn’t make it true.

I love this line from Eat Pray Love because it demonstrates something practical we can do to overcome our negative fears.  Literally, like how we choose our clothes everyday, or how we choose what we are going to eat, or how we choose what route we are going to take to get somewhere, we can choose to believe or not to believe our thoughts. We can begin practicing being aware of the thoughts that come up telling us we can’t do it, or we’re no good, or whatever negative fears and worries come up, and just noticing them, and letting them float on by without selecting one to believe.  I encourage you to try it.

When the negative thought, doubt, fear, or worry comes up (which it will!) just see if you can sit with it and observe it. Watch it like you are watching a billboard. And as you are watching it you can just choose not to believe it. Really, it’s that simple!  Give it a shot …”

You can find the article in full here.

April

How To Make A Book Planter

Good day, SuperForest!

Grab two old books and some seedlings or an already-grown plant (preferably of the teeny size) and get ready to have some do-it-yourself fun.

The delightful blog Cottage Hill has posted a new tutorial detailing how to make a book planter (see above).

You liiiike? If you do, then you might also appreciate these Recycled Tire Planter Boxes, posted by the lovely Jackson.

April

Happy 3rd Berfday SuperForest!

SuperForest, today is your third birthday. Thank you so much for all the wonderful things that you’ve brought into my life. Thank you for all the SuperForesters out there. Thank you for Team SuperForest.

Thank you so very much!

Love and Aloha,

Jackson

Thrizzle yizzles!

Happy 3rd Birthday, SuperForest!

Good Morning, SuperForest!

Today is your birthday! We’ve been excitedly preparing for this day for a few weeks now and in light of these preparations, I’ve had the chance to reflect upon dozens and dozens of brilliant moments that brought us to this one right here. Three years isn’t too long of a time, but in spite of this you’ve continuously grown and adapted. And I probably speak for everyone when I say we’ve grown and adapted with you. Throughout these years you’ve given us countless sources of inspiration and hope. You’ve encouraged us to step out of our comfort zones and take action toward the things we believe in. You’ve brought people together and forged friendships.

In celebration of your third birthday, we decided it would be fitting to bring together much of this community in the creation of a Humanifesto video. Volunteers from across the country and across the globe contributed video clips of themselves reciting portions of the document we all have come to love throughout the years. I pieced together these clips with the help of SuperForesters Iman and Jeremy, we included music by SuperForester Michael from Austria, and eventually, we all created this:

I’ll admit, I started the process without having a clue of what I was getting myself into. I had never used iMovie before, I had little to none control over most factors including whether people would participate and meet their deadlines, sound quality, picture quality, video format they submitted the file in, or even the manner in which they pronounced and dictated their words. But in the end, as SuperForest always has a way of working, it all came together quite seamlessly.

I want to thank, from the bottom of my heart, all of the incredible people that contributed in any way, shape, or form, to the creation of this video. I could never really fully express how special this entire process was for me but what I can tell you is this. I’ve seen the video well over 80 times and I still find myself awestruck after every viewing. It must be because this charming five minute video is a fine example of what we are capable of as SuperForesters and an even better tribute to what we’ve already created: A team. A beautiful and potent community.

In spirit of celebrating this community, I’m going to ask anyone that is reading this a huge favor. Please share this video or a link to the SuperForest blog with everyone you know or think may be interested. Blog it. Tweet it. Put it on your tumblr. Share it with all your friends on Facebook. We’ve already come together to create this video, let’s make sure we share it with as many people as we can and ensure they get the message of love and good manners. Let’s see if we can get “superforest” trending on twitter, let’s see how many people we can share it with on Facebook, let’s get thousands of views on YouTube, let’s work together as the brilliant community we are and show the world what we’ve got.

Happy Birthday, SuperForest. We love you very very much.
And Happy Birthday to each and every one of you SuperForesters as well! Because this is a day to celebrate all we’ve achieved, all we are capable of achieving, and all we are sure to achieve together in the future.

In love and gratitude,
Team SuperForest

Businesses We Love: Unified Field Bank

The 4th member of this series, and last. Tomorrow is the big day. Get excited! For the first three posts click 1st, 2nd, 3rd.


As the fundamental recalibration of our global economy continues, there is an urgent need to develop, example and mainstream an utterly new structure for the essential relationship between banks and their communities.

-Unified Field Bank

SuperForest!

Today I share with you a new kind of bank. This bank is the Unified Field Bank, who say they form of “sustainable community partnership banking.” Have you ever heard of Café Gratitude or Blend Apparel? If you haven’t check these guys out! And if you have you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about. Both Blend and Café Gratitude use a similar business model. They believe in a community friendly business that is run in a healthy way. It is important for workers to feel comfortable at work. It is a community within a community, so to speak. And through that they reach out to their larger community.

This is exactly what the Unified Field Corporation want to achieve as well. I was fortunate to meet the founder of this company, David Rose, and let me tell you his mission and story are amazing. The bank will offer customers full transparency of their operations. Here are their three main goals:

Sustainability
The Unified Field Bank model applies leveraged fractional reserve bank investment and transparent operational models to accelerate the amount of capital available to build the 9 components for a sustainable community

• Organic Local Food Systems
• Renewable Energy
• Affordable, Green Built Housing
• Water Quality and Availability
• Resource Recovery (Zero Waste)
• Transportation
• Communication
• Education and the Arts
• Wellness

Transparency
Depositors and financial services customers are the foundation of the bank’s ability to apply fractional reserve leveraged financial powers to their potential, yet the community is usually not aware of how the bank investment potential is being applied. UFB’s must invest ONLY in local sustainable infrastructure projects while remaining transparent in all their investment and operating practices.

Education
A significant portion of UFB’s investment banking return is channeled out to the community through financial incentives on savings, bank sponsored business and community outreach programs, technical assistance and learning programs to businesses committing to the quadruple bottom line.

Education will also be available from Unified Field Media in the form of interactive lessons and learning tools, documentaries, podcasts, community generated content, and a knowledgebase to further personal and community sustainability.

Wow right! They even offer a whole page about how their business exactly works. They have everything you could ever want to know about a bank on their site. When I spoke with David he told be that he was changing banking, but just how banking is run. He said banks have such a powerful influence in their communities , but don’t choose to use it. This new bank company will be active in their communities. As they say themselves:

UFC has met and talked with representatives from dozens of communities across the country, including State Bank Commissioners, Bank Presidents, investment bankers and financial advisors, community leaders, state and local legislators, community planners, council members, farmers, retired people, parents, architects, lawyers, design and sustainabilty educators, producers of major national conferences, school teachers, accountants, investors, social media and marketing consultants, filmmakers, artists, storytellers and visionaries, people working in the service industries, business people and professionals of all kinds, poets, publishers, physicians and healers, authors, philosophers, humanitarians and change makers. From these initial interactions a short list of about two dozen communities have emerged with serious interest in starting banks as early adopters of the system.

Interest from most of these communities is also in projects to be funded through the bank such as organic agricultural farm and business incubator parks, sustainable lifestyle retail and educational centers, renewable energy retrofits, vertical farms, green housing projects, resource recovery parks, new local and regional transportation and communication systems, wellness lifestyle centers and educational support for complementary currency, and more.

It is truly unbelievable what these guys are setting out to do! And the curious ideas of what they may accomplish and change in their communities. It is super exciting what Unified Field Corporation is doing. And if you have interest in seeing them in community be sure to tell you local leaders! For more info go to website, here.

Have a great day SuperForest. Much Love,

Mathew

Thursday’s Inspiration Information — Zach Bonner

All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking.”  Friedrich Nietzsche

When I was twelve years old, the greatest feat I had accomplished was beating Sonic the Hedgehog all on my own, without the help of my brothers.  I remember my world feeling very small and self-contained.  Life existed in proximity to who I could talk to, where I could walk, and what I as an eleven year old boy could (or was allowed) to do.  Everything else, the world at large, was a vague periphery that perhaps one day I would get a better view of, once I grew several inches in height and a few layers in maturity.  I was, in short, a normal twelve year old.

Now meet Zach Bonner — age twelve.

In his short life, Zach has accomplished more incredible philanthropic feats than most adults ever even dream of achieving.  Which is exactly Zach’s philosophy, don’t just dream it, do it.  It all started in 2004, when Hurricane Charlie ripped through his hometown in Florida, destroying homes and devastating the community.  Zach couldn’t stand the site of people destitute and suffering, so he took his little red wagon and took it door to door in his neighborhood, collecting clean water for the victims.   After four months, Zach had collected 27 pickup truck loads of water.  He was only six years old .

When two more hurricanes rolled through, Zach kept on rolling his wagon to the point where his family needed to establish a foundation for all the monetary donations Zach was taking in.  They named it Little Red Wagon Foundation, after the local moniker he had received around town.  Unlike most boyhood obsessions, Zach’s passion for helping people in need didn’t pass into some other fad.  Instead it grew and exploded.  Zach started organizing Christmas parties for homeless kids living in Florida and Lousiana.  He teamed with the national charity StandUp for Kids, to collect 400 “Zachpacks” — backpacks  filled with donated food, school supplies, and toys which he then distributed to homeless children.  He handed out X-mas presents to Hurricane Katrina victims.

In 2006, Zach has received the  Presidential Service Award from President George W Bush.  He was only eight.  The following year he organized an event to raise awareness called “24 Hours”, where students in high school simulated being homeless by staying in separate boxes for 24 hours.  And Zach was only just getting started.

“When you pray, move your feet” — African Proverb

In November of 2007, Zach launched his most ambitious awareness-raising campaign — My House to the White House.  The idea was powerfully simple, Zach would walk the 1,225 miles from his house in Tampa to Capitol Hill in Washington D.C.  All to raise awareness and funds for homeless children.  He completed the journey in three legs,  raising over $25,000, lots of media attention and speaking directly with several U.S. Senators.  He spent his nights in Washington sleeping at the Sasha Bruce emergency shelter.

When asked why he’s so passionate about helping the homeless, Zach speaks with maturity beyond his years: “After you’ve met these kids, seen what they’ve gone through… it’s really hard NOT to help.” And once he set his feet in motion, it became impossible for Zach to stop.  This past March he left his home in Florida once again with an even bigger goal in mind.  Walking everyday, 17-22 miles, through burning desert and pouring rain, Zach determined he would walk the 2,478 miles across country to Los Angeles; all the while, passing out gift cards to people in need and raising awareness for the cause of homeless.  He coined the mission “March Across America.”

On September 14, 2010 Zach completed his 178 day walk, stepping onto the Santa Monica Pier with hundreds of fans and supporters, including Elton John who donated $50,000 and Michael Guillen, the CEO of Philanthropy Project, who selected Zach’s story from a pool of 6,000 candidates to make a $5 million movie, entitled The Little Red Wagon. After gazing out at the Pacific Ocean sweeping beneath him under the pier, Zach had this to say…

“There’s an ancient Chinese proverb: ‘A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.’ Most people don’t walk a thousand miles, or 2,500, but what it really means is that we all need to take that first step to get something big done.  If I’ve helped even one homeless child, I hope I’ve accomplished that.”

Zach is a shining example that you don’t need money or resources, connections or means to truly accomplish great deeds.  You don’t even need age.  In Zach’s own words:  ”Kids are never too young to make a difference.  You are never too old or too young to make a difference.  Don’t let anyone stand in your way.  Find something you are passionate about and just do it.”

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve dreamed big thoughts, set myself a goal of starting a charity or mentoring a kid.  Getting involved in the community… practicing what I preach.  And then time lapses, excuses accumulate, and life moves off in multiple self-serving directions.  Good intentions are so easy, transforming them into direct action so hard.  And then you encounter someone like Zach, who challenges every limiting convention that holds us each back. This incredible twelve year old who shows us that taking action is actually very easy.  It just requires taking that first step.  And then following with another.  And another.  And another…

And never stopping until the work is complete, the grand goal reached.