Steps to Preventing Bullying: A Graphic

Steps to Preventing Bullying: A Graphic

The first component is Cognitive. We must understand what bullying is so we can recognize it when we see it. The second component is Emotion. Unless our emotions are engaged, we will not be able to step beyond our own self-consciousness to take action for others. The key emotions are empathy – being able to […]

Resources & Activities for International Peace Day

Resources & Activities for International Peace Day

What is International Peace Day?  The International Day of Peace, or as it is often titled, World Peace Day occurs on September 21st every year. This day is officially dedicated  to world peace, and the elimination of war and violence. The day was established in 1981 by the United Nations as a way to bring world attention […]

Develop Empathy: Pathways Taken

Develop Empathy: Pathways Taken

How do we develop more empathy?  What does it look like? by Tim Wolcott Develop Empathy through Trust Empathy is grounded in mutual trust.  James Baldwin called for faith in the “evidence of things not seen”.  He believed we should live life with the assumption that a sense of decency might yet live in the […]

Empathy & the Politics of Tenderness

Empathy & the Politics of Tenderness

It is almost impossible to grow up.  Most people just get older — Maya Angelou An essay by Tim Wolcott Empathy can be crushed Rancor for the ‘other’ has long been an effective tool of the Right to mobilize supporters.  In their plans, empathy is to be avoided at all costs. Many adults, harboring unresolved anger and mistrust, […]

Why questions are more important than answers

Why questions are more important than answers

If someone told you, we learn more from asking questions than finding answers, would you believe them? According to the ideas of Socrates as passed down to us by Plato, it is only through continual questioning and refinement of our ideas and thoughts in discussion with others that we discover the true nature of what […]

The Rhythm of Compassion: A Book Review

The Rhythm of Compassion: A Book Review

       For most of my life I have felt uncomfortable ‘in my own skin’.  It seemed logical since I was raised in a family that encouraged non-conformist thinking.   Eventually, I realized that the root of the discomfort was an egotistical mindset that simultaneously created my personal alienation as I strove to ‘save the […]

Misplaced Priorities: What are you doing to protect your children?

A book review of Sandra Steingraber’s Raising Elijah  by Tim Wolcott A great book is sometimes difficult to read.  However, the author often propels you along its enlightened path using earth-shaking examples that strike home.  Such is the case with Raising Elijah, the story of how toxic chemicals are affecting our children. Ms. Steingraber’s empirically-based, maternally-centered thesis […]

Nonviolent Resistance: Twice as Effective as War

Post by Tim Wolcott I financially support and post pieces on independent media, because I believe mainstream media is part of how militarism remains entrenched in our society.  So when I learned from a recent presentation by Kevin Martin, President of Peace Action National, that The Washington Post published January 18, 2016 an article by […]

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month

  We March by Shane W. Evans is a book about standing up for justice written for our youngest children and for early readers. The soft pastel illustrations show a family as they wake up early in the morning, prepare for the day, and then join thousands of other people for the August 28th, 1963 […]

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month

Oh, Freedom  by Casey King and Linda Barrett Osborne with a forward by Rosa Parks Rosa Parks says, “To live is to have stories.” This is a book of stories about real people who participated in the Civil Rights Movement. The stories are told through interviews done by children. Each child interviews a person, often […]

The Predator: A Play about War and Peace

The two act play The Predator by Jack Gilroy was first presented at Georgetown University in 2011. Since then it has been performed in many venues from New York to Georgia.  The play presents four women each with a different viewpoint on the role of the military, on the military conflicts our country is currently engaged […]

5 Resolutions for a More Peaceful World by Teach Peace Now

5 Resolutions for a More Peaceful World by Teach Peace Now

Over two thousand years ago, Chinese philosopher Lao-Tse showed us the way to peace in the world. Based on his thoughts, here are our Teach Peace Now’s 2016 resolutions for a more peaceful world. May they speak to you as they do to us. One There must be peace in the heart. If there is to […]