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The Goodletter
The good life: live it, be it, do it.


Thursday, August 2, 2001
www.goodthings.com


A few favorite goodthings from Bokary Guindo of Rome, Italy:
Returning home to my family at the end of each day's work. Taking a shower. Relaxing in front of the TV with a cup of peanut cereal in milk and honey. Watching world news, sports, stocks, and the money market. Listening to people in every social stratum voicing out the needs for better security, justice, freedom, and the good things of life.
What are YOUR favorite goodthings? Read more favorite goodthings.


In this week's issue:
[GoodLetter] Under Sail
[Readers Respond] A Robyn's Nest full of goodness
[Good Gravy] Kate Rusby's Little Lights -- White Squall -- Gretchen Legler's All the Powerful Invisible Things -- plus a new Good Photo
[The Upshot] Let the canvas carry you to a better place
[Housekeeping] Subscribe/unsubscribe and other tools for your back pocket


Under Sail
When your job brings wonder to the eyes of children in places you once only dreamed of, it changes the way you feel when you wake up in the morning.


Dear GoodLetter readers,

The sun was just beginning to set, the sea breeze actually raising goosebumps on my arms as Roy and I walked down the beach on rugged, jungly Malekula Island, Vanuatu, him shouldering two styrofoam fishing boxes full of school books, me hefting a roll of 14 National Geographic laminated wall maps. We were heading for the school where Roy teaches many of the 198 students from four villages around Malekula, a large and still fiercely traditional island in the Vanuatu group, just on the western edge of the South Pacific. As we walked, barefoot brown-skinned children in various states of ragged dress seemed to fall out of the palm trees leaning over the sand to walk behind us. Shy at first, they responded quickly to an encouraging smile and were soon walking by my side holding on to my hand, my arm, my shorts or shirt, beaming smiles that would light up New York City. I couldn't help smiling as I thought, "This is my job!"

I am the director of a charitable organization called WorldWise, Inc. Our mission is to broaden the cultural understanding of children worldwide through our educational Web site and to provide for some of the educational needs of children living on isolated islands around the world. By partnering with the 180-foot sail training ship Picton Castle, the only Tall Ship currently engaged in round-the-world sail training voyages, we have been able to carry books, school supplies, and our wonderful National Geographic maps to some of the most remote islands in the world, including tiny Pitcairn Island, Palmerston and Puka Puka Atolls in the Cook Island group, and Vava'u and Ha'api Islands in the Kingdom of Tonga.

People have often asked me why I do what I do. After all, I get horribly seasick in the calmest waters. Why would I choose to sail around the world for a living? It's because of moments like we had in Malekula. Or in Tonga where the teachers at one school said we were an answer to their prayers. When I see the eyes of a Rarotongan student light up as she steps foot on the ship's deck, when I get to spend a day helping teach nine students at the Palmerston Lucky School, when I get an excited question about life on the ship from an eager student following our Web site, everything becomes worth it. It's a way for us and the ship to give back to the people who give so much to us when we visit their islands.

Roy and I and our posse of children left the books in an empty classroom of the sparsely furnished, ill-equipped school. As the children leapt for my newly freed hands, laughing as they pulled me down to stroke my straight, light brown hair, I knew that we would remember our visit to Malekula with happiness for the rest of our lives. It is my hope that through WorldWise, the people of Malekula, and of all the places we visit, will remember us and the Picton Castle the same way.

Kate Menser (e-mail Kate)

During her extensive travels, Kate has discovered that the best cure for seasickness is sitting under an apple tree. When she's not sailing the world's oceans, she's gazing over the ocean off Cape Cod. This is her first contribution to GoodThings. [ Check out a few of Kate's favorite goodthings ]

[what did you think of this goodletter?]


TALK ABOUT IT
Do you have a creative way of bringing good things to your community and the world? Share your stories.

LEARN MORE ABOUT IT
::WorldWise, Inc.
::The tall ship Picton Castle

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
Do something remarkable on your next vacation. Get involved in helping schoolchildren worldwide:
::WorldTeach
::Cross-Cultural Solutions
::Creative Connections
::International Volunteer Programs Association

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Here's a goodthing: everyday, we add a new Good Grab on the GoodThings home page. We scan the world for good news and good ideas and give you a reason to keep checking back with us everyday. The August 1 "grab" is one of our favorites this week: it describes the remarkable success of the U.S. Postal Service's breast cancer stamp. Come take a look and tell us the goodthings you've found.



Readers Respond
Robyn Surdel of Tolland, Connecticut, wrote to share her goodthing:

"Since 1997, I have written, designed, and published a Web site called Robyn's Nest on parenting of young children. Since April 2001, I now host, direct, write and produce a public access television series on parenting by the same title, here in Connecticut.

With the help of my volunteer crew, we do a professional show on educational topics with esteemed guests from organizations such as the March of Dimes, the Hygeia Foundation, the Lyme Disease Foundation, and many more."

Learn more about Robyn's Nest and the organizations it's promoted:
March of Dimes
Hygeia Foundation
Lyme Disease Foundation

What organizations, programs, and ideas are inspiring you?

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The Upshot
WorldWise uses the power of the wind to bring good to ports around the world. But you can harness the wind for your own good, as well. Learn to sail!

Disabled:
Sailing Web
U.S. Sailing
Youth:
Broadreach
Tall Ship NewsWire
Women:
Womanship
Herizen
Tethy Offshore

THE UPSHOT. The canvas can do miracles.


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Good Gravy
Sail away with this week's Good Gravy! There's an ocean of good stuff this week. Be sure to click through to our Web site to see what we're reading, watching, and listening to and, while you're at it, share some of yours with us so we'll know what we're missing.

Music
Great New Music! Little Lights Kate Rusby (2001). British folksinger Kate Rusby "Courted a Sailor" and then some. Her new album Little Lights is no less than a beacon in the fog. Read the review.

Movies
Great Movie Rental! White Squall (1996). In 1960, a group of high school boys take to the high seas during their senior year for a dose of discipline and perspective. They encounter the ocean at its worst, humanity at its best. Read the review.

Books
Good Reading! All the Powerful Invisible Things: A Sportswoman's Notebook Gretchen Legler (1995). In this collection of essays, Legler goes into the woods and fundamentally rethinks her view of both the wilderness and herself. Read the review.

Good Photo
New on our Home Page! Yes, that's the tall ship Picton Castle and the current home of the nonprofit WorldWise! Come see the new photo on our home page and be sure to click it to get the rest of the story.

GoodThings on Public Radio
Have you been checking out the summaries of our favorite public radio stories? Here's a sample from this week's Morning Edition on National Public Radio:

New "Inca" President
Alejandro Toledo is the first person of indigenous descent to be elected president of Peru. To commemorate the milestone and to bring a fitting conclusion to a campaign that focused on the preservation of native Peruvian culture, Toledo began his administration with a grand ceremony in the heart of the country's Incan past. In a move demarginalizing Peruvians with his background, he received traditional Inca blessings at Machu Picchu and at another site near Cuzco. Still, his greatest challenge may be bringing economic opportunity to those same people. Visit our site to listen to this story and to see what else has been on the radio this week.


Want to share some Good Gravy of your own? Tell us what you're reading, watching, or listening to and why you think it's good.

Housekeeping
To SUBSCRIBE to this HTML version, send a blank e-mail to join-goodletter-html@list.goodthings.com.

OR SUBSCRIBE online.

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CONTACT us at information@goodthings.com.



Copyright 2001 GoodThings, Inc. All rights reserved, but we love it when you forward the GoodLetter with abandon.

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