Think of one word to change the world

your one word

What Is Your One Word? – This Principle Will Change Your Life!

Evan Carmichael explains how we all have one word that defines our life. When we find that one word, and live by it, the quality of our entire life changes.

What Is Your One Word? – This Principle Will Change Your Life! – Watch FREE On Youtube:

From the book “YOUR ONE WORD” Get it now on Amazon.
Speaker: Evan Carmichael

Transcript – What Is Your One Word? – This Principle Will Change Your Life! – (Motivational Speech)

I’m going to share a secret with you. A secret so powerful that once you discover it, every decision you make in your life and business will become easier. Doors will start to open where before you struggled to make any progress. You’ll finally feel like you’re living your life with a purpose instead of fighting the world around you.

Great leaders have used this secret to build powerful companies, spark important movements and create meaningful change, and now you can too.

Here’s the secret.

There is one word that defines who you are. There is one word that connects all the things in your life that make you come alive.

Think about the friends you have, the music you listen to, the books you read, the movies you watched, the companies you’ve worked for, the businesses you’ve started… Think about everything in your life now that you enjoy. They are all connected. Until you figure out what that connection is, you’ll never live up to your potential.

What’s your favorite song and what does it have to do with who your best friend or favorite book is? The answer is everything. And it can be boiled down to one simple, powerful word.

Great people can be described in one word. Martin Luther King Jr – equality. Oprah Winfrey – heart. Steve Jobs – impact. You________?.

If you want to break free from the chains of mediocrity and really make an impact, then it starts with finding your one word. You have to stand for something powerful and important.

On August 23rd, 1963 a quarter of a million people went to Washington DC to hear Martin Luther King Jr. speak at the Lincoln Memorial. How did he get so many people to come out? He didn’t have a newsletter or a Twitter account. He wasn’t making Youtube videos or using Google ad words. He didn’t have a website, didn’t use Facebook.

He didn’t have any of the tools that make it so easy for us today to reach people and start movements and yet 250,000 people came out. Why? Because he stood for something important. The cause he believed in touched people’s hearts and led them to action. It was so important that people willingly spread the word and promoted his cause because it was their cause too.

The process you’re about to go through is important. It’s one of the most valuable exercises you’ll ever do in your life. The results are life changing. We’re going to go over the five core questions:

Number 1: What makes you happy?
Number 2: What connects your happiness?
Number 3: What trait do you hate?
Number 4: What’s your constant?
Number 5: Is this really who you are?

And then we’ll discuss the four limiting beliefs that hold you back from doing something great:

Number 1: It’s too bold.
Number 2: What do you think?
Number 3: Someone else is doing it.
Number 4: It’s too simple.

Have an open mind. Be honest with yourself and eliminate all distractions for the next few minutes. Let’s go.

If you want to achieve success, start with what you happy before worrying about what your one word is. Think about everything that makes you happy. Start by making a list. Just write down what comes to mind and don’t worry yet about where it leads. You get lost in happiness and make your list. Here are a few questions to get you started:

What is your favorite movie?
What is your favorite book?
What is your favorite song?
Who is your best friend?
What is your favorite quote to live by?
What kind of people do you like to hang out with?
Who was your favorite boss?
Why are you with your significant other?
Who was your favorite teacher?
What do or did you love most about your parents?
What activities make you come alive?
What do you look forward to most in your week?
When was the last time you felt overwhelmingly happy?

Answer these questions and add whatever else comes to mind that makes you happy. Fill the page with happiness and feel the energy that comes from it. This is where the magic starts to happen.

You have your page of all the things that make you happy, right? If not, do it now. It’s important. Don’t just watch another video. I want you to take action.

There’s one common theme that connects all the things that make you happy. You may have many reasons why Mrs. Jones was your favorite teacher. There could be 10 things you love about your favorite movie that people you hang out with have lots of different personalities, but there is one theme that unites them all. One thing they together share. This is a connective tissue that will make all your future decisions easier. This is the powerful mantra that will give you a sense of purpose and help you change the world for the better.

This is your one word. Find the common theme in the list of things that make you happy and write it down. If it doesn’t pop off the page the next to each of the things that make you happy, write why you like it? You’ll notice a pattern that emerges. Some words will come up over and over again.

Take the words you’ve used most commonly to describe your happiest moments and group them together. If you can’t get it down to one word yet, don’t worry. Just try to get the final list from this exercise down to five words or fewer. Now we’re making progress.

Some people get their one word immediately. They have their one word and they’re ready to apply it. If that’s you, congratulations. For most people, the process is long and requires digging deeper. You may have written down multiple words and steel feel unsure how to narrow them down to just one.

Does it have to be a verb? Can it be a noun? How about an adjective? The answer is any of them. Verbs are often the easiest because they are action oriented. You might want to inspire the world or make an impact or contribute or shine or love, but it doesn’t have to be a verb. For example, maybe your heroes, your grandmother, Jane, so you try to live a life inspired by her. Jane becomes your one word.

You can also combine multiple words that may seem like they’re not related into a more meaningful one word that unites them. For example, if you love adventure, but you also value caring for others, maybe your one word becomes hard, which you would define as following your heart adventure and being heartfelt towards others caring. You take two seemingly unrelated words and bring them together to form your one word like heart, to better define who you are and what kind of life you want to live.

This is a process. You may have picked the word, but you’re not confident that it’s right. You may feel that what you chose is too big, too daunting, too scary. If that’s you, keep watching. We’ll figure it out together.

If you don’t know who you are, then start by thinking of who you aren’t. Going negative helps a lot of people clarify their search for their one word. Think of all the things that make you unhappy and make a new list. Write down the people you can’t stand being around, the tasks you hate doing, the movies you never want to see, the things that make you dread going to work.

Make a list of everything in every one that makes you unhappy. Make it real. Make it painful. Nobody is judging you here. If you can’t stand the thought of seeing aunt Suzie at Christmas, put her on the list, but be careful…
This is not a list of your fears or your limiting personal beliefs. It’s a list of the traits that you are truly allergic to that just bring you down and that make you unhappy.

The list is the start, but the power is in seeing what connects them and Susie, the boss you hated most, the people you despise being around the task you dread doing, they too are all connected. What theme binds them together when you’ve got it? Think about the opposite to find your one word. For example, if you’re negative team is neglect. Your one word might be care. If it’s discouraged, your one word might be inspire, destroyed turns into create, hates turns into love and so on. Your one word is not a new year’s resolution. This is not deciding on a ward because you were inspired by your speech that you heard or seminar you attended.

It’s not picking a word to be the person your parents or friends want you to be. Your one word is a constant. It has always been with you and will always remain. It’s who you are and always have been. Think about your favorite movie from 10 years ago or from when you were a little child. You’ll still like that movie today. You’ll still like it in 20 years, even though the special effects don’t seem as great and the technology is dated because that movie means something to you. It represents a theme that is at the core of who you are. So is your one word.

Your one word isn’t something you get bored of or grow tired of. It’s always there and always will be.

If you’re still trying to decide what your one word is, look at your list of things that make you happy and think back to 10 years ago, which word best describes who you were back then?

Think about how you imagine your life in 20 years. Which word best describes who you’ll be?

Then many things will change with time, your opinions, your environment, your family, your friends, but your core value, your one word doesn’t change if you’re still having a hard time finding your constant. Think back to your parents. There’s a reason psychologists ask their patients to talk about their relationship with their parents. Now I’m no psychologist, but I have found fairly consistently that someone’s one word often has roots back in their childhood and with their parents. Quite often the core values you have today come from your parents. They shaped the way you see the world, how you should treat others and what you consider good and bad behavior. If your mother was carrying and she might have taught you to care for others care. If your father was resourceful, he might have instilled resourcefulness in you.

Resourceful. The opposite can also be true. You might have seen something in your parents that you never want to embody, so you take on the opposite of their values. If your mother had a gambling problem and constantly risks, every paycheck she earned, you might seek the opposite of risk security. If your father ran out on you when you are young and was never there for you growing up, you might crave the opposite of unreliable, dependable. Spending a few minutes thinking about your parents and the mark they left on you could reveal the answer to finding your one word. You can build a life and business around security or dependable, just as much as you can around belief care or resourceful. You’re parents impacted you in positive and negative ways. Having an awareness of their impact can set you up for future success.

What you might ask if my one word is money, it’s not. If you think it is, you just haven’t found out what truly makes you come alive. Now, don’t get me wrong. Money is great. Money lets us do amazing things. We need to make money to stay alive and the more money we make, the more we can build. But understand this money is a tool, not a core value. It can help take you where you want to go, but it’s not the driver. There is always something deeper behind the need for money and until you figure that out, you’ll always limit yourself. Money comes from providing value. If people aren’t willing to pay you for what you’re doing, you’re not giving them enough value. On the flip side, the way to make a lot of money quickly is to provide a lot of value quickly.

Why do you love money so much? Say your dream is to make enough money in the next year to travel around the world. What you’re really seeking isn’t money. It’s adventure experiences or excitement. What most people do is set a money goal then try to figure out the fastest way to reach that money goal they take on business opportunities that they aren’t excited about because it promises to move them closer to their money goal. They tell themselves they don’t care what they do within reason as long as it brings in the money because that’s their real goal. They say it doesn’t matter, but it does matter. Money comes from giving value and if you don’t have the love for your business and you won’t put in the crazy work that’s needed to provide that value, you’ll quit as soon as it starts getting hard and the idea of working hard at something you don’t like just so that you can live the life you want at some point in the future is crazy to me.

Start living that life now saying that money is your one word is a crutch. You just haven’t dug deep enough inside yourself to discover who you really are. For all of this to work, you have to be brutally honest and real with yourself. This isn’t about who you should be or hope to be. It’s not about what your family wants you to be or what your culture tells you to be. It’s about who you really are and leveraging that to build a purposeful and happy life for yourself. It’s about living your version of your life and following your dreams, not theirs. If you keep living in a world where you can’t be yourself and you’re constantly striving for this ideal life of someone who isn’t who you actually are, you’ll never be fulfilled. You don’t have to be ashamed or afraid of your one word. It’s who you are and it will guide you for the rest of your life. Look at your one word and ask yourself, is this really deep down who I am? If your answer is yes, you’re ready to move on to build something awesome. If you answer no, go back and try the exercises again. Sleep on it, reflect on it in the shower. Go for a walk in, think about it. Meditate on it.

John Paul Dejoria, his parents divorced when he was two when he was nine he sold newspapers and Christmas cards door to door to help his family when his single mother wasn’t able to support him anymore. He was sent to live in a foster home in Los Angeles where he joined the gang and we’re his high school math teacher told him he would never succeed at anything in life. His later jobs included being a janitor and an insurance salesman. Today he’s a billionaire.

Oprah Winfrey was originally named Orpah, but people mispronounce it so often that she kept the name Oprah. She was born to an unmarried teenage mother who worked as a maid. She spent the first years of her life in poverty and was so poor that she often wore dresses made out of potato sacks and the local kids teased her about it. She was molested by her cousin, uncle, and family friend when she was nine at 13 she ran away from home and at 14 had a child who died prematurely. She is currently North America’s first and only multibillionaire black person.

When Abraham Lincoln was nine years old, his mother died from an illness. He was formerly educated for less than one year. He gave all the income he earned to his father until he was 21 the first love of his life died when he was 22 or three of the four children he had died before they reached adult hood.

His wife was eventually committed to a mental health asylum, and he suffered from melancholy, now referred to as clinical depression. In his political career, he was defeated eight times, trying to be everything from a congressman to senator to vice president. In 1860 he won the election to become president of the United States and is now considered to be one of the greatest presidents in American history. How did their stories compare to yours?

It’s hard to imagine that you had less support than John Paul Dejoria had fewer resources and Oprah Winfrey or more personal setbacks, and Abraham Lincoln, you have in this video and inside you the tools you need to succeed. It’s up to you. Act Boldly for your sake and the world’s belief.

your one word


There is one word that defines who you are. Find what it is and your life will change forever.



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We might not be able to change the whole world all by ourselves, but by making small improvements in our own lives and inspiring other people to do the same, a snowball effect may occur that can positively affect our planet in time.

So, what are the things we can do to bring positive change to the world?

Table of Contents

  • Change your attitude
    • Be more optimistic
    • Think before you speak
    • Smile
    • Forgive
    • Make the day, don’t let the day make you
  • Thinking process for developing an idea to change the world
    • Step 1
    • Step 2
    • Step 3
  • True change happens at the center
  • Changing the world is about changing yourself
  • Change the way we think about the world
  • It starts by effecting a single person
  • Setup a mission-based organization
  • Improving the world will take effort on many fronts
  • Choose quality goods
  • No act is too small to create change
  • Take a vacation that saves the planet
  • Everyone can play a part in changing the world one step at a time
  • Change happens when we shift a behavior
  • Be kind and spread non-judgmental love
  • Helping someone else through their pain
  • Changing the world isn’t easy
  • Start by doing the right thing
  • Personal demonstration and a lifetime commitment are the keys – no skills required
  • Supporting and empowering others
  • Making a big impact can start with just small actions
  • Education and reflection are key
  • Know yourself
  • Take risks
  • Volunteer at your local animal shelter
  • Recycle
  • Frequently Asked Questions
    • What is the most important thing to consider when trying to change the world?
    • Do I need a lot of money or influence to make a difference?
    • How can I ensure that my actions have a positive impact?
    • What are some examples of people who have changed the world?
    • How can I measure my impact when trying to create change?
    • How can I work with others to effect change?
    • What are some examples of successful efforts to create positive change?
    • What potential challenges can I face when trying to effect change?

Phil La Duke

phil-la-duke

CEO and Global Business Principal Safety Consultant

Change your attitude

You are part of the world so if you change, the world changes, albeit a tiny bit. But sometimes a seemingly insignificant change that you make in your life can have sweeping consequences.

For example, about 10 years ago I came to the realization that I didn’t like what I had become. I traveled a lot for work and was always grumping about delayed flights, bad service at hotels and restaurants, and being ripped off by the policies of rental cars. I was miserable both while traveling and at home.

One day, I got sick of listening to myself and made a commitment that every time I complained about something I would find three things to compliment with the same vehemence. It was tough at first but I pushed through it. I found myself so desperate to find 3 people/things to compliment that I started heading off problems.

I greeted hotel clerks with a cheerful smile and asked how their day was going where before I would snarl at them. After someone did a particularly good job, I would ask to see the manager. The manager would always come out expecting a big complaint, and it would freak him or her out when I would praise an employee for the service provided.

It made them feel so good that I felt good. I imagine it made them feel so good that they were treating people better. Then it became a habit with me. I have had airlines upgrade me because I offered my seat to a wheelchair-bound passenger. Hotels upgrade me because I made their day. People smile at me when I meet them on the street. And most importantly I am happy.

Be more optimistic

Optimism is a skill and needs to be developed. Humans tend to default to pessimism because it prepares one for the worst. But the worst case scenario is seldom the most likely scenario and pessimism makes you see the world as a bleak and predatory landscape.

Developing positive thinking helps you to become more resilient and strengthens your immune system. Optimism is contagious and the change it brings can be tremendous.

Think before you speak

Do you have a family member, friend or coworker that has made a real mess of their lives? Are you tempted to tell them that it is their own darned fault? Don’t. Before you speak (especially when giving advice) ask yourself these questions:

  • Is it true? Too often we see a situation through a lens that may not be all that clear, in other cases we make assumptions with no evidence as to their efficacy.
  • Is it kind? “The truth hurts” goes the old adage, but this needn’t be the case. When we are sharing our opinions on the actions or situation of another we can be honest without being insulting or unkind.
  • Is it necessary? Do you have a friend who is fat? Do they know they need to lose weight (or quit smoking, or whatever)? If they know they need to change something in their life then you telling them that they need to change it isn’t necessary, it’s rude and intrusive and you should keep your opinion to yourself; in these cases, it’s usually about you being aggressive and wanting to feel better than trying to be helpful.
  • Is it invited? If a person doesn’t ask your advice don’t offer it. If a person wants to know what you think they will ask you to tell them. Just because a person is going through a difficult time is not an invitation for you to run your mouth.

Smile

Smiling makes other people happy and puts them at ease. Happy people treat other people better and the world gets better.

Related: 19 Best Books on Happiness and Joy

Forgive

Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself. Whether it is to forgive your own self or someone else, learn to do so. If someone cuts you off in traffic forgive him or her.

You have probably cut someone off without meaning to, or maybe you did mean to because you were rushing to the deathbed of a loved one. Don’t let a random stranger control your mood.

Make the day, don’t let the day make you

You are a human being and how you react to the things that happen to you is completely within your control. Choose to be kind to strangers, charitable to the needy, and nice to people whether they deserve it or not.

If you make these changes you send ripples through the whole universe and who knows what great things will come from the positive energy you exude.

Thinking process for developing an idea to change the world

Here’s a simple thinking process for discovering and developing an idea to change the world:

Step 1

Create an original idea that you are passionate about – and that you think has the potential to change the world. How? Use one of the following five, idea-thinking strategies:

  1. Continually ask yourself, “What’s the problem?”
  2. Adapt or leverage a new technology to address/solve a problem.
  3. Find ways to help people self-actualize.
  4. Save people or institutions money.
  5. Save time or increase the speed or efficiency of something.

To help you discover an initiative you are passionate about, start by creating a long list – of at least 10 – but preferably 25 areas or areas in which you would like to change the world.

Do you want to change the world with:

  1. A new app that makes commuting easier.
  2. A national restaurant concept that helps improve communication between family members when eating out.
  3. A new hydroponic, agricultural process that helps feed the world more economically.
  4. A service that helps older people or retirees get jobs.
  5. A non-profit that enables aspiring artists to get their notice around the world.
  6. A new type of adventure service (real or virtual) to aid former drug addicts in their recovery.

Step 2

Once you have your arena in which you would like to change the world, use a variety of creative thinking/brainstorming techniques to develop your idea further.

One technique you could try is the wish technique where you wish for the “impossible,” and then try to figure out how to make your impossible wish real.

Another technique is the silly idea technique. Come up with not good ideas but silly ideas in your area of interest/passion and use that “silly idea” to inspire an original, practical idea.

A third is to use a whiteboard in your office – and every day – post preliminary ideas, areas for further research, questions, etc. that could ultimately trigger your “big idea” to change the world.

Step 3

With a specific idea you are passionate about bringing to the world, do some inexpensive research to further vet and develop your idea. Talk with friends, family, business associates, even cocktail party acquaintances about the following:

  1. What they think of the idea.
  2. If they have any contacts that could help you either finance or help you learn more about the need for.
  3. The potential impact of your idea on the world.

To further crystallize the idea – and make it easier to communicate with others who might want to help you bring your idea to the world – create a billboard for your idea. Your billboard should have a benefit headline, visual, and reason-to-believe or call to action.

Example: A service that promotes mindfulness in classrooms.

Headline: Mindfulness training in classrooms… it’s time!

Visual: Kids in a classroom with their eyes closed and thought bubbles of different course material.

Reason to Believe: Teachers report a 30% increase in test scores among heir students taking mindfulness training. 

Dr. Mary Jo Podgurski

Mary Jo Podgurski

Author | Sexuality Counselor | President & Founder, Academy for Adolescent Health, Inc.

True change happens at the center

Each person is unique and worthy; each person is born with the capacity to create, to learn, and to make positive change. How to change the world?

As a child, I hungered to change the world. I dreamt of traveling to foreign lands and establishing equity. I was caught up in a hero journey script, where one person took on evil and injustice and the world turned into a loving, safe place.

I was a teen in the sixties, so Martin Luther King and the Kennedy brothers inspired me – until their deaths when I realized standing for change in the world can be dangerous. Undeterred, I jumped headfirst into work for social justice.

It was my papa, a man without formal education, yet blessed with outstanding wisdom, who set me on the right path. First, he told me, you change or improve yourself.

Create an identity that welcomes all to you. Work to respect all, even those people who disagree with you. Live your message, because just saying it means little if your life doesn’t reflect your words. After you get yourself right, spread your message from your core – to your family, to your friends, to your co-workers, to your community.

For the last 50 plus years, I’ve focused on making change where I am. I bloom where I am planted. Young people are my focus, my mission, and my reason for teaching. In them, I see hope for real change. I envision a future based on respect and acceptance, not judgment and hate. Our kids are all right.

My motto is #EachPersonIsAPersonofWorth. Between 1988 and 2013, my staff and I taught over230,000 teens quality sexuality education focused on respect, consent, and sexual health.

We’re still teaching. We made a real change in our small community by lowering teen pregnancy rates, but more importantly, we created a culture of respect that transformed teens into ambassadors for respect.

One changes the world one person at a time. Create internal change and spread the message. Create and maintain leadership succession and sustainability.

No mission is about one person – do not seek fame or fortune, but dedicate your life to change that goes on in a legacy after your death.

As I tell my team, it’s not about us. It’s about change that makes the world a better place, One Kid at time TM. If one young person’s world is changed for the better, and that one young person passes on a change to one more person, we have a ripple that makes lasting change become reality.

Margaret Paul, Ph.D.

Margaret Paul

Psychologist | Author | Relationship Expert | Co-Creator, Inner Bonding®

Changing the world is about changing yourself

It’s about moving out of fear, anger, anxiety, and depression and into the peace, love, and joy that results from learning to love yourself.

Loving yourself isn’t about taking a warm bath or getting your nails done. It’s about learning to take responsibility for your feelings – for learning to stop abandoning yourself with your self-judgments, addictions and blaming others – and learning to treat yourself like someone you love.

Related: How to Love and Accept Yourself as You Are

When you abandon yourself, you then project your anger outward, which is what is causing the problems on our planet. When you judge yourself, you judge others. When you think you are not good enough within, you then project that out, which causes racism, sexism, the need for power over others, and greed.

People who are emotionally abandoning themselves try to fill up externally instead of realizing that it’s only love that fills and brings joy.

Each of us has the choice each moment regarding our intention, and there are only two intentions to choose from:

  • The intent to control.
  • The intent to love.

It’s choosing the intent to control that is destroying relationships and destroying our planet. It’s time to choose the intent to learn to love yourself and share your love with others.

When you learn to truly value who you are as a unique expression of the Divine which is Love, and you know yourself to be love in your soul, then you can see the love that is in each of us. As we each learn to love ourselves and fill ourselves with love, that love overflows and we want to share it with others.

Our world would heal if each person was focused on learning to love themselves and then extend their love to others and to the planet.

Change the way we think about the world

Move! When we move our bodies, we change the way we think about and relate to our own world.

Becoming more aware of our own bodies, our kinesphere, and the people in it can lead to greater empathy which can reduce violence and enhance compassion. When we know how our words and actions truly impact others we think twice before “pulling the trigger”.

Being mindful and bodyful is within everyone and with awareness and practice, we can make the world a better place.

It starts by effecting a single person

I truly believe that everyday people can change the world by understanding that it starts by effecting a single person as opposed to a large aggregate of individuals.

A good way to begin is by approaching your colleagues, family, or friends, and ask yourself how can I provide some value to these people? It could be as simple as sending them an article that relates to a conversation you previously had or congratulating that person on a recent success.

Related: Building Strong Work Relationships

By building this momentum of good deeds and thoughtfulness, more and more people will be attracted to you. You’ll soon realize that as this number grows, your ability to make a change on a greater scale will easily be accomplished.

As a personal anecdote, I remember starting out as a new attorney with a solo practice. As time progressed, word spread of my firm’s quality work and soon I was making a change within the legal realm. I’m confident this is because I provided value to my clients and colleagues.

Setup a mission-based organization

The single most powerful thing you can do to change the world is to build a company, a nonprofit, a movement, or some other organization. One person can only do so much alone, but by rallying others to your cause you can magnify that change dramatically.

Setting up this mission-based organization requires a lot of thought. History is littered with well-meaning attempts to change the world that went off the rails. Here are some things to consider:

  • Sustainability (especially financial sustainability, which is an advantage for creating a purpose-based company).
  • Culture of the organization (especially getting the right key people involved early and making sure that culture flows from the top).
  • Implementation (a clear actionable path to achieve specific, measurable results is far more powerful than a fluffy vision without an operationalized plan).
  • Long-term vision, including growth plans.
  • Structure to ensure that the sustainability, culture, implementation, and growth endure beyond you.

Improving the world will take effort on many fronts

Right now, I think most of us would agree that the world is not in good shape and that we seem to be heading in the wrong direction—perhaps irreversibly. There are numerous reasons, ranging from climate to resources, to politics, to economics, to prejudice.

One big problem—and the one I’m focused on—is that we’re in the midst of an epidemic of incivility.

Literally an epidemic. It’s been shown that rudeness and unkindness are contagious. Just like the measles. According to researchers at the University of Florida, rudeness spreads like a cold or the flu—it’s passed from one person to the next until masses of people have it.

Not only do people who are subjected to rude treatment themselves subsequently behave rudely, even those who only witness rudeness succumb to rude behaviors. This explains so much about the state of our world these days. We are experiencing a fast-growing epidemic.

But there’s good news from science, too: kindness is equally contagious.

It begets more kindness. When we’re kind, we inspire kind behavior in others, and they, in turn, inspire others. The effect ripples out beyond our awareness. Whether we extend kindness, receive kindness, or merely witness kindness, the result is the same: it acts as a catalyst for more kindness. Pretty soon, the world is changed.

So, we have a choice of which contagion we want to spread. We are more likely to choose wisely if we recognize this and start asking at every interaction: Do I want to expand rudeness, disrespect, and incivility, or do I want to replace it with compassion, respect, and cooperation?

If we pay attention and consider both who we want to be and what sort of world we want to live in, we will start changing the dynamic and restoring civil discourse. It sounds easy, but it’s not. It takes practice and it takes paying attention.

We can further counter the epidemic of incivility and start changing the world by learning to absorb an insult without retaliating and to hear harsh words and not hurl them back. These small acts will slow the reverberation of unkindness. It’s hard to do, but it gets easier with practice.

Improving the world will take effort on many fronts. This is just one of them. But it’s a big one!

Choose quality goods

I say that by buying quality goods for the rest of your life, you will change the world. It may not be noticeable, but you will be doing your part. And not just with leather bags, but with shoes and toasters and couches and fishing poles, etc.

Quality is good for the environment. Buy nice or buy twice. If everyone bought bags that lasted twice as long, then we would have half as many bags in landfills. If everyone bought shoes that lasted twice as long, then we would have half as many shoes in landfills. Half as much mining for the metals and half as much oil used to make the synthetics.

Quality is good for the poor. They spend far more money on buying low-quality goods over and over again. A general rule of thumb, if you pay twice as much, it will last ten times as long and you’ll save a ton of money.

Quality is good for the makers. Factories who produce low-quality goods are often abusers of their people. India has an estimated 18.5 million slaves. China has 3.5 million and most of them are making low-quality goods. And if they’re not slaves, they are desperate people with no options but to work in horrible conditions for peanuts.

High-quality companies care about where their goods are made and who makes them. Low quality low priced companies generally don’t want to or care to know. It’s not a good deal unless it’s a good deal for everybody.

When people ask me why my leather bags are so expensive, I tell them that they’re asking the wrong question. They should ask why theirs are so cheap. Buy quality and change the world.

No act is too small to create change

Anyone can do something to help change the world. No act is too small to create change. With that said, here are a few ways we can do to help make change a better place to live in.

  • Be kind. Kindness is contagious. Once you do an act of kindness, the person you showed kindness will mostly do the same to other people. It’s like a domino effect. Being kind is as simple as helping someone in need.
  • Spread happiness. You don’t need to do so much to make other people happy. By way of greeting the saleslady in your favorite shop or praising your subordinate at work for a job well done is enough to make someone happy.
  • Be a law-abiding citizen. The laws are there for a reason. They help keep any community or country to stay organized and orderly. Follow the rules, follow the laws and you will help a lot in creating a better world.
  • Be respectful. Respect the elders, respect every single person around you.
  • Keep it clean. With the emerging problems in the world today, particularly the environment, you are helping a lot by simply keeping your surroundings clean. Put your trash on the right places and go green.

These are just five of the many simple things you can do to help make a change. Do your part. By doing your part, you are not only changing the world for yourself but for generations to come as well.

Take a vacation that saves the planet

The way we vacation matters. Some travel budgets go right into the pockets of big business – but some help save the world. We can have a fabulous travel vacation and help climate change and change lives for the better all at the same time – simply by how we chose.

We are not necessarily talking “home shares,” those are fast becoming big business, too with investors buying multiple homes for the purpose of short-term renting to tourists – and destroying once peaceful neighborhoods. And we are not talking about the minimum wage for the hotel maid.

Where do you want to go? The islands? Mountains? Interested in culture? Beautiful nature? 

Related: 32 Best Travel Books of All Time

Here’s one example:

Puerto Rico: Have authentic experience instead of the same-old of a corporate-owned look-alike resort. Enjoy the peace and serenity of a fully outfitted treehouse in a lush rainforest garden. Listen to coquis sing and a waterfall’s gurgle, watch rainbow-colored birds and butterflies from your deck.

Eat delicious meals made from garden ingredients. Be close to the beaches, a national forest, and the fabulous art and culture scene of old San Juan.

The treehouses were hand built in the traditional way by a local artisan family who continues to manage and tend the regenerated rainforest garden (a failed agriculture scheme had rendered it clear cut and barren for 100 years).

After hurricane Maria destroyed the gardens, they rebuilt without government help. Your vacation allows those families and their extended families and the community to continue the recovery. And the regenerated rainforest adds life to the planet’s “lungs” absorbing carbon and helping to balance the causes of climate change.

When you chose with care, your week of relaxation helps save a little section of the world.

Anywhere you go, from Bali to Brazil or from Namibia to New York, there are vacation opportunities that economically benefit the community and the environment.

Look for experience providers that follow “responsible travel” practices – you will be helping to save the planet, and having a great vacation, too.  

Everyone can play a part in changing the world one step at a time

Examples abound from picking up litter in your neighborhood to volunteering at a local food bank or women’s shelter to reading to children at the library to visiting with the elderly on a regular basis.

It does not take any special skills or training just a desire to pitch in and time commitment to make it a priority. Every community has nonprofit organizations doing great work on the ground and all of them are under-resourced so giving them your time and/or money is a huge help.

Whether you want to help children, animals, the environment or people with special needs, just ask around your local community and you will find many ways to change the world. It starts with you.

There are things we can actually do to change the world:

  • Stay mindful. Worrying about the past or the future isn’t going to change either.
  • Be solution oriented. Instead of complaining about what should be, think about what is, and ask yourself, “What is something positive I can do about this?
  • Be empathetic. Walk a mile in someone else’s moccasins. Think about what their experience must be like and how they are feeling before reacting.
  • Find gratitude. There is always something in every situation for which we can be grateful – even if it’s only that we have the strength to get through it.
    Related: 18 Things to Be Thankful for (The Ultimate List)
  • “Think globally, act locally.” No matter how big an issue is, if many individuals play their part, significant change can be accomplished.

Change happens when we shift a behavior

If you’re feeling really stuck on what you can do, the first thing to know is that change happens when we shift a behavior, structure or belief in the system.

And that everyone’s sweet spot is that intersect of your unique mix of talent, skills and interest and that little part of the system you can nudge. For example, if you are a photographer, maybe it’s taking images of a subject that shifts a belief we have. Or maybe it’s taking your design skills and creating better signage or equipment that shifts a behavior.

Change can happen through these small shifts, so it’s not about trying to take on a huge problem but to collaborate on these small shifts through the intersection of your unique skills and talents.

Much more simplified, whether you care about climate change, poverty, equity, inclusivity or another global issue, you can introduce the conversation of things you really care about to your circle of family and friends so you start to create the awareness.

Find your tribe and collectively raise your voices and demand changes to policies and regulations that may be keeping systems in place. And finally, choose to live more sustainably, eat less meat, make your home more energy efficient and choose an electric vehicle.

Andrea Travillian

Andrea Travillian

Lifestyle Transformation Coach | Aspirify

Be kind and spread non-judgmental love

Changing the world is easy, most would laugh at this. However, there is one simple thing you can do, and it costs nothing and very little time.

Be kind and spread non-judgmental love. Especially in our modern world people feel alone. By being nice and loving, you can change someone’s day. It does not have to be major. Smile, say hello, talk to the cashier without your phone out. Listen to your kids and spouse. Just be there for people. If we all did this the world would be dramatically different.

Helping someone else through their pain

On a personal level, I have developed the M.E.N.S. Network. M.E.N.S. stands for Mentoring, Encouraging, Nurturing, and Strengthening. I have also published a book titled The Plan, which takes the concept to a whole new level.

How I change the world is through this process: setting aside my priorities, entering into someone else’s struggle, and walking alongside him or her on a path of restoration through mentoring, encouraging, nurturing, and strengthening that person.

I find thinking about helping someone else through their pain is the best way to take my eyes off of myself and change the world… at least the world that I live in.

Changing the world isn’t easy

There are a lot of people with competing viewpoints and a limited amount of time, energy and resources. It may feel hopeless to attempt to do anything.

I have noticed that most people use the government as their way to donate to charity. They think that their taxes are enough to change the world (or at least their country). People will vote for the government to open charity programs. If the law does not pass, they stop trying to help.

I believe that this is a flawed approach to changing the world. I don’t believe that doing the bare minimum civic duties is going to change anything. We need to get out there, get our hands dirty, and do it ourselves.

For example, say there is a bill proposed that would help disabled people. The law would increase everyone’s taxes by $1 and use the money to open a charity. The vote is lost by 40% to 60%.

Typically, the next years of bills and elections would be spent fighting for this cause. However, let’s say the 40% in favor of the law all donated the $1 to charity and pitched in a little. They would make a far bigger impact on the world than their failed voting efforts.

Voting and political action are not enough. Changing the world does not require the permission of our leaders. It can be accomplished by regular people working together. Let’s get out there and make a difference!

If you want to change the world, don’t wait for your leaders and society to come around to your cause. Get out there, help people, and donate your time and resources.

Start by doing the right thing

Everyone thinks that to change the world you have to have superpowers. You have to be unique. You have to have something everyone else doesn’t have. The truth is we can all change the world!

We can all make where we live a better place by doing the right thing- whether it’s picking up garbage, helping out our neighbor, holding the door open for a total stranger. Going the extra mile helps everyone. It gives you a sense of pride and for others, that there are still good people out there in the world. You will influence them to do better themselves.

The people you see changing the world or who you look up to, they do the right thing daily, overtime with consistency which adds up to great things, movement.

People like us want to change the world, not just talk about it! Be your own superhero! Start doing the right thing!

Lori Ramas

Lori Ramas

Workflow & Systems Specialist, Relezant

Personal demonstration and a lifetime commitment are the keys – no skills required

You don’t need a degree or very much practice to change the world. Whatever really matters to you whether it’s cleaning the ocean, making people laugh, saving animals, or recycling if you don’t embody what you believe in, it won’t make a difference. No matter if you’re doing business or just taking a personal stand for something, ultimately, people will look at you not just your work.

So I invite you to check in with yourself and see if you are demonstrating a lifestyle that aligns with what matters most to you. This is a critical part of changing the world that not everyone touches on.

It’s not just about the actions you take, although integral, it’s also about who you are, what you demonstrate to the world, and that you do it again and again over time.

If you think of the most famous people or your heroes you can see that they clearly showed the world by example and stuck with it. So get involved with something that lights you up and makes your heart swell, I guarantee you even if you do need a certification or to study something, it won’t be hard and it won’t take long.

Supporting and empowering others

I used to think that one person couldn’t change the world, the way I saw the size and quantity of what can be considered a “problem” in today’s modern societies. However, after some deep exploration, I have found that one strategy has changed my life (and hopefully others around me as well!)

I believe all we have in the world is the love we share with one another. That’s the only thing that matters, to me, and I would imagine to most. Deep respect and treasure of the traits and personalities that make people unique are what gives me life and hope for the future.

Related: Why Is Hope so Important in Life?

Every small act of support, understanding, and kindness is a drop in the puddle of life, and the more love you drop, the stronger the waves of the ripple effect. I try to listen, appreciate, enjoy and help other people every single day.

If anything, it’s changed my life. I feel happier, more grateful, more connected and in tune with the environment and the humans around me, more capable of love and appreciation. My world has opened through supporting and empowering others to find their own happiness and truth, and I hope theirs has too.

Making a big impact can start with just small actions

I know this sounds like a quote to put on a cute kitty poster, but really it’s that simple and can also be fun! In fact, I offer you a challenge to get started.

Have you heard of the #TrashTag Challenge? In short, we find an area that’s covered in trash, take a before picture, clean the area, take an after picture, then challenge our friends to outdo our contributions.

We did a small area at the Sanford Riverwalk in Florida for some adorable ducks! When I say “small area”, I mean it took us less than thirty minutes to clean! To push the challenge further, we even made a video to show how simple it was to do some good!

Now here’s the bigger impact of it: let’s say three friends decide to take on your challenge then three of their friends take on their challenge. Because of your small contribution, you would have started a cleaning chain full of motivated challengers, and I can vouch that this is one challenge that I don’t mind losing to others!

David Garcia

David Garcia

Journalist | Communications Professional, Find Courses

Education and reflection are key

Changing the world is not as difficult an endeavor as it may seem. When we think about old social conventions with clear examples such as gender equality, we realize that what was normalized in the past now appears outrageous over time for modern society.

This doesn’t happen magically. It is up to us as citizens who influence progress. We rely on values that drive our lives, behaviors, decisions, and everything we do. If we are aware of these values, we can stick to those that will benefit us and others.

Values will drive all kind of actions, both voluntary and involuntary, helping to foster change.

For this to happen, education and reflection are key. We can engage in both activities in many different ways. When watching movies, playing games, reading books, living experiences, or interacting with people we expose ourselves to situations where education and reflection take place whether consciously or unconsciously. If we act according to our positive values everyone can influence this process and have an impact on others and the world we live in.

Know yourself

I started craving change at 9, inspired by the trauma and depth psychology books that were readily available in our home. As was knowledge, my environment lacked empathy and human qualities. I saw very early that a lot was wrong with this planet so I wanted to use my intelligence and strength to heal it.

Over the years, I have studied psychology, fashion, social sciences, business, tech, qigong and everything else I could get my hands on to source a solution. I dug deeper and deeper to find a way to eradicate what I consider the basic problem we have, the one root cause of all problems: the lack of true self-knowledge, a lack of individuation.

Know yourself, and all darkness fades. All wars and separation become unnecessary, as do their side effects, like poverty. My approach to solving the problem of stimulating mass individuation was first aimed at a unique band concept devised at age 19, which, after many trials and tribulations failed.

I had trained my body and mind, helped many people, networked and studied business to prepare myself, but could not find people who shared in my vision. Eventually, I developed autoimmune because the stress and adversity I faced in music, in business and generally from others was unbearable, and was knocked out for a few years.

Two years ago, I had to reorient completely. Now I am trying to bring the same values and strategy into a tech project, an empathy app that connects people at a very deep level.  Its hard and complex work, but I feel I am going somewhere.

These are things you can actually do:

  • Accumulate as much useful knowledge as you can.
  • Get as healthy and fit as can be, and train your mind to deal with adversity even of the unimaginable kind.
  • Don’t expect anything but hard work. If you really want to change things, you will have to fight much adversity, and will probably make enemies- even if that is the last thing on your mind. Change usually requires a change of the status quo, which rarely comes about without friction.
  • Train your inside, train your outside, and draw circles. Find your crowd, and use marketing to speak to them.
  • Prepare for emergencies, have a database with emergency contacts, and save up if you can.
  • Learn to run a business, learn to build an app, learn to sing like a pro. Whatever it is, use it as a platform to communicate change.
  • If you feel insecure, do something small. Pick up litter, paint a wall, adopt a rescue animal. No matter what.. just do it. Every little thing counts, and together, we can move a mountain.

Deirdre McKay

Deirdre McKay

Artist | Wellness Advocate | Author, “Gifts of the Animals and Gifts of the Seas

Take risks

After many hours, days and years of being preachy and trying to push my ideas onto people, I’ve now resigned myself to a more “sit-back and do my own life” attitude to change the world, it seems, actions often do speak louder than words.

Friends sometimes say they admire my path of trying new life and work opportunities or making travel part of my life and learning, and of making my art, wellness, writing and experiences a priority. Or they say, “you are so lucky that you can travel.”

But the truth is, I’ve had to make my own “luck”, and endure stress and skimping, living on a budget, going without things like new wardrobe pieces, eating out, and more so that I can travel.

I’ve even ventured into the unknown and seemingly unstable territory of living without a home so that I can live on the road. I did the latter by renting out my condo to finance my travel so I can experience more of the world!

To me, changing the world means touching individuals and creating lasting and meaningful things that keep on giving – in my case art and children’s books with messages. My messages are of appreciating the beauty and the paradise we live in – and appreciating the gifts of animals, oceans, flowers, family, culture.

I’m an educator, mom, friend, artist and book author. I teach yoga indoors and outdoors, and the beach yoga I guide my students through is another way of appreciating our landscapes and natural resources and also “earthing” and “grounding” – which has been scientifically proven to heal our bodies and reduce inflammation.

When I see my son experiencing and taking risks – whether it is living a farm life, studying software engineering, traveling to Africa – I support him. He is tasting the flavors of the world.

Struggles are for learning, and my struggles and career redirections inspired personal growth.

I hope to inspire others to take risks. To try things that help them grow and integrate all their loves into their lives – arts, movement, scientific or mathematical interests, family experiences or whatever makes them glow and smile.

Volunteer at your local animal shelter

Mahatma Gandhi said, “The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.

Three years ago, my daughter and I started volunteering at our local animal shelter, mostly because my daughter was having health issues and loves animals so we would go spend time with the shelter animals.

I’ve always loved animals but always thought that I would rather spend my charitable donations on programs that help people. That is until my shelter experience helped me realize how much animal charities actually do help people.

Since I started volunteering at the shelter, I’ve become super sensitive to the amazing impact that animals have on our emotional health and well being. Our shelter experience helped my daughter’s physical and emotional health improve more than any medical treatment she received. They make the world a better place.

So when it comes to changing the world, a simple thing to do is a volunteer at your local animal shelter, or foster pets (which we’ve since done), or adopt.

Going to the shelter for even a few minutes to love on the animals makes a huge difference for those animals, and it is a wonderful mental health booster for the volunteers as well, in turn, making the world a brighter place.

Recycle

In this era, there is only one thought that stands out and it is “think globally, act locally”.

Recycle. The single most important thing you need to start doing. Then comes the saving of water. You waste a lot of water, no matter when you read this. Don’t load your dishwasher with less than half of a load.

Don’t let the water run when you are brushing your teeth. Use public transportation. This way you save money and help the planet. This is the most basic things you can start doing!

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most important thing to consider when trying to change the world?

The most important thing to remember when trying to change the world is that even small actions can make a big difference. It can be easy to feel overwhelmed by the magnitude of our problems, but every positive action, no matter how small, contributes to the greater good.

By focusing on our goals, working with others, and staying true to our values, we can positively impact the world around us. We must be patient and persistent in our efforts, recognizing that real change takes time and requires sustained effort.

Above all, we should never forget why we are working for positive change – to create a better future for ourselves and future generations.

Do I need a lot of money or influence to make a difference?

No! While financial resources or relationships can help accelerate progress toward certain goals, they are not necessary for creating meaningful change. Many successful movements in history were started by people who were passionate about their cause and willing to work hard for it.

How can I ensure that my actions have a positive impact?

Research and educate yourself about the problem you want to address.

Collaborate with others to create a more effective solution.

Measure the impact of your actions and adjust as necessary.

Listen to feedback from those you are trying to help.

Be patient and persistent in your efforts.

What are some examples of people who have changed the world?

Mahatma Gandhi led India to independence through nonviolent civil disobedience.

Rosa Parks sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott and helped advance the civil rights movement in the United States.

Malala Yousafzai advocated for education for girls and survived an assassination attempt by the Taliban.

Greta Thunberg brought global attention to the urgent need for action on climate change

Bill and Melinda Gates have dedicated their fortune to improving global health and fighting poverty.

How can I measure my impact when trying to create change?

Measuring results can be challenging, but it is essential for evaluating progress toward goals and making informed decisions about where to focus efforts. Depending on your objectives, you can use different metrics to track progress.

For example, if you are working on environmental issues, you could track changes in carbon emissions or ecosystem health over time. If you are working on social justice, you could track changes in policy outcomes or public opinion polls related to your cause.

How can I work with others to effect change?

Look for like-minded individuals or organizations that share your goals and explore ways to work toward common goals. This could mean teaming up for specific projects, sharing resources or expertise, or simply supporting and encouraging each other.

What are some examples of successful efforts to create positive change?

Countless examples of successful movements and initiatives have brought about positive change throughout history. Some notable examples include:

The civil rights movement in the United States helped ensure that black Americans were legally protected.

The women’s suffrage movement, which won the right for women to vote in many countries around the world.

The global effort to combat HIV/AIDS by increasing awareness, research funding, and access to treatment.

The movement for renewable energy sources as a means to combat climate change.

These successes demonstrate the power of collective action and sustained efforts toward a common goal.

What potential challenges can I face when trying to effect change?

Creating meaningful change is rarely easy—there will likely be obstacles and setbacks along the way. Potential challenges include:

Resistance from those with a vested interest in maintaining the status quo.

Lack of funding or resources needed to achieve goals.

Burnout and fatigue from sustained effort over time.

Difficulty in building consensus among various stakeholders.

~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

Dead-Poets-Society-1

If you were able to go to dinner with one famous, creative soul, living or dead, who would it be? To me, that will always be Professor Tolkien, but today the whole internet would, without missing a beat, answer, “Robin Williams, of course.” I’ve been reading article after article and liking post after post across all of my social media platforms in regards to his death. His struggle with depression as of late became too difficult, so they say. He got tired of fighting his demons, another one proclaims. I keep reading these things thinking the information will change, but it doesn’t — one of the most inspirational people of our age is gone.

“But only in their dreams can men be truly free. ‘Twas always thus, and always thus will be.” ~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

As I stated before, the internet is, as a whole, showing how upset the world is about the death of Robin Williams. Not only do I see posts stating the news from a neutral standpoint, but I see posts of sadness. I see also posts galore about how it’s just a celebrity. We didn’t know him. We weren’t his friends. We aren’t his family. What right do we have to post all these things about his life? To remember in ways that we would not if he weren’t so famous?

“I stand upon my desk to remind myself that we must constantly look at things in a different way.” ~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

These are all valid points, nevertheless. But this is how I see it — he was an artist. Acting is, was, and will always be another form art, regardless of modern celebrity culture. It is okay for the masses — his fans — to mourn the loss of an artist. This is as true today as it was back when all we had of artists were paintings — and when those paintings became famous, those artists were long gone to the world in many cases. Regardless of what the dissenting opinion is, so many people are mourning the loss of a great talent in the acting world — myself included. I grew up watching many of his films — anything from Aladdin, Hook, Bicentennial Man, Patch Adams, Flubber, Robots, August Rush, Night at the Museum, A.I., Man of the Year, Jumanji, Mrs. Doubtfire, Awakenings, Good Will Hunting  — to What Dreams May Come. And, of course, as the quotes on this post will remind you — Dead Poets Society. There are so many films that I enjoy to this day and some more urgently recommended now that I should watch, but Dead Poets Society takes the cake, I think. The film is not a comedy, though nevertheless, Robin Williams’s character, John Keating, speaks words worthy of staying. I write tonight with quotes from his character in remembrance of great talent — of an artist able to act out some screenwriter’s work to the best of his ability, and thus help bring to life a masterpiece.

“We don’t read and write poetry because it’s cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for.” ~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

The first time I saw this movie was in my High School creative writing class. I remember that only a few of us were engaged enough to be upset that the bell would inevitably ring half-way through the film. I don’t remember if we saw the end of it in class or not, but it captured my interest in a way that — back when renting movies at a store was a thing — I pleaded to rent that one and to see the end of the movie. I just watched it again tonight, and as per usual, I cry when [Spoiler Alert — highlight text following bracket to read] Neil Perry commits suicide due to severe depression. His answer to his father’s question, “What is it you feel?” was “nothing.” That’s the part that always gets me. The movie was always important to me — it was one defining piece of art in a series of things that showed me being my authentic, creative self was more important than anything else. At the time, I wanted to be spirited away to art school. At the time, I figured I wanted to be an art teacher. At the time, not only was I acing my English courses, but also immensely enjoying Creative Writing. At the time, I thought it was a hobby, placed behind all of the visual arts that I had been elbow deep in. Even placed behind my participation in choir.

“You must strive to find your own voice. Because the longer you wait to begin, the less likely you are to find it at all.” ~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

Sometimes, I look back to all that. I hit a rough patch just after high school, where I did not get spirited away to college. I spent almost a whole year moping about it. Thinking just because I had missed this particular train, another one would never find this station I waited at. I would cashier at the local grocery store for the rest of my life and lose an opportunity I had only ever held on to by a thread. That was the statistic, right? Most kids who don’t go directly to college never make it there. And I kept believing that was me, too. And I stopped painting. I stopped singing in the shower. I stopped reading so much. I stopped writing. I stopped writing. Until that time, that never matter much to me. It wasn’t the game plan, even though I began writing at a stupidly young age. (That’s a post for a different day.) It was writing that brought me back out of the shadows I had cast for myself, in one way or another. And I have that class and this movie to thank for reminding me, after the fact, that my words and ideas most definitely can and will change the world. One day. Provided I just keep writing.

“I SOUND MY BARBARIC YAWP OVER THE ROOFTOPS OF THE WORLD.” ~ John Keating {Robin Williams} (Dead Poets Society, 1989)

It took a long time to recover from the setback I faced in the year before I started college. It took all four years leading up to a point in my life where I could stand proudly in front of an audience and perform my poetry, even while shaking from the fear of my words not being anything short of embarrassing. Sound familiar? Looking back at the movie, John Keating helped Todd Anderson in a similar way — to close your eyes to the words and laughter of those who would scorn you and just speak the words that are within you. And at the end, his classmates were stunned to silence at what he made up on the spot. They clapped. His words made a difference.

I am sitting here, only days away from starting my fifth and final year of undergraduate college work. I’m working as hard as I can to achieve a goal I thought I could never achieve. I aim towards graduate school and even beyond that. I am half way through my novel and have more brewing in my brain. I write poetry in a tiny notebook on the bus ride to campus and in between classes. I aim to be a professor, one day, even if it is not an immediately achievable goal. Even in the dim state of this economy and the terrible odds stacked against such a career these days — that will be the end result. I know it and I will make it so. All of the mentors and teachers that have helped me become… well, me so far are the inspiration. They’re the ones who believed in me and still do even when I find it difficult to believe in myself. I want to be that. I want to be what they are to me. What John Keating was to his class. To let them know that they, too, can change the world when they are their true and authentic selves. Let nobody dim the light of their creative souls. I just gotta keep following the path that I am on. I have to cherish each amazing achievement and learn from each terrible fall. I have to navigate all the bumps in the road and understand that not everything is meant to bring me down. I’ll get there some day. I will. I just have to keep living — really living — as best as I can in the mean time.

carpe-diem-seize-the-day

 I close my post with this: A heartfelt thank you to Robin Williams, for his light and for his ability to portray some of the most inspirational characters film of my time has produced. Rest well.   7.21.19518.11.2014

Below you will find our collection of inspirational, wise, and humorous
old changing the world quotes, changing the world sayings, and changing the world proverbs, collected over the years from a variety
of sources.

We must become the change we wish to see in the world.
Mahatma Ghandi

I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples.
Mother Teresa

If you want to change the world, pick up your pen and write.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

You really can change the world if you care enough.
Marian Wright Edelman

Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.
Leo Tolstoy

If there is no transformation inside of us, all the structural change in the world will have no impact on our institutions.
Peter Block

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.
Margaret Mead

Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.
Nelson Mandela

I tried to change the world, but I was outnumbered.
unknown

Making one person smile can change the world. Maybe not the whole world, but their world.
unknown

We have it in our power to change the world over.
Thomas Paine

I wanted to change the world. But I have found that the only thing one can be sure of changing is oneself.
Aldous Huxley

As one person I cannot change the world, but I can change the world of one person.
Paul Shane Spear

Change your thoughts and you change your world.
Norman Vincent Peale

Be what you are. Do what you love. Speak what you feel. Don’t hide your humanity. Celebrate it. Embrace it. That is how you change the world.
Vironika Tugaleva

I can’t change you and you can’t change me, but together we can work to change the world.
Germany Kent

When you inspire one person you have already changed the world.
Sabina Nore

To change the world, one has to ignore its residents.
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

We can change the world one thought at a time, one child at a time, one family at a time, one community at a time, one city, one state and one country at a time.
Bryant McGill

The ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.
Steve Jobs

If you think we can’t change the world, It just means you’re not one of those that will.
Jacque Fresco

Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.
Rumi

No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world.
Robin Williams

I choose to believe I can and will change the world with my words and thoughts.
Rod Williams

Things don’t have to change the world to be important.
Steve Jobs

In order to change the world, you have to get your head together first.
Jimi Hendrix

Every great dream begins with a dreamer. Always remember you have within you the srength, the patience and the passion to reach for the stars to change the world.
Harriet Tubman

God is calling you to change the world one life at a time and one small step at a time. Begin today where you are.
Dillon Burroughs

If you don’t like the way the world is, you change it. You have an obligation to change it. You just do it one step at a time.
Marian Wright Edelman

It is not great men who change the world, but weak men in the hands of a great God.
Brother Yun

I’m not saying I’m gonna change the world, but I guarantee that I will spark the brain that will change the world.
Tupac Shakur

Your voice can change the world.
Barack Obama

The world can only change from within.
Eckhart Tolle

Can we change the world? No, but hell, we can all try.
Rupert Murdoch

I can’t change the world. I have to to fix me.
Nijou Phillips

I am not here to change the world. I am changing the world because I am here.
Lisa Wilson

Let the world change you and you can change the world.
Che Guevara

We can change the world and make it a better place. It is in your hands to make a difference.
Nelson Mandela

If your life changes, we can change the world, too.
Yoko Ono

The only way we can change our world is to take responsibility for our part in it.
Rachael Bermingham

If you’re changing the world, you’re working on important things. You’re excited to get up in the morning.
Larry Page

Changing the world is not easy, but its pursuit will change you profoundly.
Leroy Hood

People can care about changing the world. But what gets them to act is pressure and social reward.
Joe Green

We change the world not by what we say or do, but as a consequence of what we have become.
David R. Hawkins

My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we’ll change the world.
Jack Layton

Let us pick up our books and our pens. They are our most powerful weapons. One child, one teacher, one book, and one pen can change the world.
Malala Yousafzai

Vision without action is merely a dream. Action without vision just passes the time. Vision with action can change the world.
Joel A. Barker

I still believe that if your aim is to change the world, journalism is a more immediate short-term weapon.
Tom Stoppard

Choose your corner, pick away at it carefully, intensely and to the best of your ability and that way you might change the world.
Charles Eames

We think it is complicated to change the world. Change comes little by little. Nothing worthwhile can happen in one generation.
Andrew Young

None of us has the power to make someone else love us. But we all have the power to give away love, to love other people. And if we do so, we change the kind of person we are, and we change the kind of world we live in.
Rabbi Harold Kushner

Let the streams of life flow in peace. / Turn from violence. / Learn to think for a long time how to change the world / How to make it better to live in.
Quetzalcoatl

How lovely to think that no one need wait a moment: we can start now, start slowly changing the world! How lovely that everyone, great and small, can make a contribution toward introducing justice straightaway.
Anne Frank

If you want to change the way people respond to you, change the way you respond to people.
Timothy Leary

We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already; we have the power to imagine better.
J.K. Rowling

The way to change the world is through individual responsibility and taking local action in your own community.
Jeff Bridges

Policies are the rules of the world we live in. Changing the world means changing the rules.
Makani Themba-Nixon

Your thoughts, your evolving answers to the important questions are what will give you interesting lives, make you interesting people capable of changing the world
Amy Tan

The world does need changing, society needs changing, the nation needs changing, but we never will change it until we ourselves are changed.
Billy Graham

Oh, you, you may not see it now / But I believe that time will tell / How you, you are changing the world / One little heartbeat at a time.
Steven Chapman

Far away, away, fading distant lights / Leaving us all behind, lost in a changing world / And you know that these are the days of our lives remember.
Anthony George Banks

And now it feels like we just can’t stop anymore / Even if we tried / We’re not changing the world / We’re making it right / Whatever you want in this only life / Can we just be proud tonight / ‘Cause again we cross the starting line.
Bert Andre Poncet

I say the world is changing / Not today, nor yesterday / Everyone’s eyes are open / They can see clear, ooh.
Mark ANthony Myrie

Restless / I am so restless / And this changing world / Leaves me speechless.
Bernard Sumner

To live to feel the earth in motion / I can see there’s much hope in changing this world / But no one’s listening / We’ve been living our lives so long in denial / Like whispers to the wind.
Daniel Winter Bates

As you discover changing times / You must have the strength to endure / As you discover changing world / You can’t be guessing, you must be for sure / In these ever-changing times / You must learn to stand up on your own.
Bernard Taylor

This changing world, this changing scene / Where is it taking us, what does it mean / As long as we’re certain of each other / We know we don’t have to be afraid / These changing times we rise above / We have no time for them, we have our love / And love is the only thing that still remains the same / Through all this changing world.
Dana Suesse

I believe it’s time that women truly owned their superpowers and used their beauty and strength to change the world around them.
Janelle Monae

You can make things happen. You’re in control of change.
Dyllan McGee

Remember, each one of us has the power to change the world.
Yoko Ono

The ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world are the ones who do.
John McAfee

The way to change the world is through individual responsibility and taking local action in your own community.
Jeff Bridges

I’m not going to change the world. You’re not going to change the world. But we can help — we can all help.
Cristiano Ronaldo

I think we can only ultimately change the world by example and by fearlessly embracing what could happen.
Genesis P-Orridge

No one person can change the world, but one and one and one add up.
Sylvie Guillem

It’s certainly my honor to be able to, hopefully, change the world a tiny bit, one mind at a time.
Jodi Picoult

You’re going to change the world? Well, go ahead and try. You’ll give it up at a certain point and change yourself instead.
Philip Johnson

I am crazy and bold enough to think that I CAN change the world — one poem, one book, one heart at a time…
Adiela Akoo

No matter who you are, what you have been through, where you come from and where you are going, there are certain things that we all share as human beings.

We all want to reach our goals and be successful in life. We seek care and love from others. But most of all, we all want to live in a better world.

Quotes about Changing the World

Here are some of the most famous quotes about changing the world that can start a spark in your heart and inspire you to take a step forward.

1. “Change your thoughts and you change your world.” – Norman Vincent Peale

2. “The world can only change from within.” – Eckhart Tolle

3. “In a gentle way, you can shake the world.” – Mahatma Gandhi

4. “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs; ask yourself what makes you come alive, and then go do that. Because what the world needs are people who are alive.” – Howard Thurman

5. “Let us remember: One book, one pen, one child, and one teacher can change the world.” – Malala Yousafzai

6. “No matter what people tell you, words and ideas can change the world.” – Robin Williams

7. “Change will not come if we wait for some other person, or if we wait for some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” – Barack Obama

8. “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.” – Albert Einstein

9. “I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples.” – Mother Teresa

10. “If you want to make the world a better place, take a look at yourself and make that change.” – Michael Jackson

11. “Every great dream begins with a dreamer. Always remember, you have within you the strength, the patience, and the passion to reach for the stars to change the world.” – Harriet Tubman

12. “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead

13. “Help young people. Help small guys. Because small guys will be big. Young people will have the seeds you bury in their minds, and when they grow up, they will change the world.” – Jack Ma

14. “It’s a philosophy of life. A practice. If you do this, something will change, what will change is that you will change, your life will change, and if you can change you, you can perhaps change the world.” – Vivienne Westwood

15. “Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.” – Leo Tolstoy

16. “One of the great liabilities of history is that all too many people fail to remain awake through great periods of social change. Every society has its protectors of status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. Today, our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change.” – Martin Luther King Jr.

17. “You are educated. Your certification is in your degree. You may think of it as the ticket to the good life. Let me ask you to think of an alternative. Think of it as your ticket to change the world.” – Tom Brokaw

18. “You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” – Richard Buckminster Fuller

19. “Act as if what you do makes a difference. It does.” – William James

20. “I wanted to change the world. But I have found that the only thing one can be sure of changing is oneself.” – Aldous Huxley

21. “Imagine all the people living life in peace. You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one. I hope someday you’ll join us, and the world will be as one.” – John Lennon

22. “There’s always a story. It’s all stories, really. The sun coming up every day is a story. Everything’s got a story in it. Change the story, change the world.” – Terry Pratchett

23. “I’m not saying I’m gonna change the world, but I guarantee that I will spark the brain that will change the world.” – Tupac Shakur

24. “In order to change the world, you have to get your head together first.” – Jimi Hendrix

25. “If you think we can’t change the world, it just means you’re not one of those that will.” – Jacque Fresco

26. “History shows us that the people who end up changing the world – the great political, social, scientific, technological, artistic, even sports revolutionaries – are always nuts until they are right, and then they are geniuses.” – John Eliot

27. “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” – Nelson Mandela

28. “Never too old, never too bad, never too late, never too sick to start from scratch once again.” – Bikram Choudhry

29. “How wonderful that no one need wait a single moment to improve the world.” – Anne Frank

30. “We can change the world and make it a better place. It is in your hands to make a difference.” – Nelson Mandela

31. “The only way we can change our world is to take responsibility for our part in it.” – Rachael Bermingham

32. “A tiny change today brings a dramatically different tomorrow.” – Richard Bach

33. “The good inside of all of us is wrapped in a layer of apathy, and we forget how much potential we have within us, in each and every one of us, to change the world for the better for ourselves and our children, and thus to bring about oneness.” – Shari Arison

34. “If you’re changing the world, you’re working on important things. You’re excited to get up in the morning.” – Larry Page

35. “When the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace.” – Jimi Hendrix

36. “The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways: the point, however, is to change it.” – Karl Marx

37. “You change the world by being yourself.” – Yoko Ono

38. “Be what you are. Do what you love. Speak what you feel. Don’t hide your humanity. Celebrate it. Embrace it. That is how you change the world.” – Vironika Tugaleva

39. “The only people who can change the world are people who want to. And not everybody does.” – Hugh Macleod

40. “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.” – Charles Darwin

41. “Don’t underestimate the power of your vision to change the world. Whether that world is your office, your community, an industry or a global movement, you need to have a core belief that what you contribute can fundamentally change the paradigm or way of thinking about problems.” – Leroy Hood

42. “We must become the change we wish to see in the world.” – Mahatma Gandhi

43. “The power of human empathy, leading to collective action, saves lives and frees prisoners. Ordinary people, whose personal well-being and security are assured, join together in huge numbers to save people they do not know, and will never meet… unlike any other creature on this planet, humans can learn and understand, without having experienced. They can think themselves into other people’s places… we do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.” – J.K. Rowling

44. “When you do nothing, you feel overwhelmed and powerless. But when you get involved, you feel the sense of hope and accomplishment that comes from knowing you are working to make things better.” – Pauline R. Kezer

45. “To say that on a daily basis you can make a difference, well, you can. One act of kindness a day can do it.” – Betty Williams

46. “Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I am wise, so I am changing myself.” – Rumi

47. “Choose your corner, pick away at it carefully, intensely and to the best of your ability and that way you might change the world.” – Charles Eames

48. “The destiny of world civilization depends upon providing a decent standard of living for all mankind.” – Norman Borlaug

49. “Yes, it is love that will save our world and our civilization, love, even for enemies.” – Martin Luther King, Jr.

50. “If there is no transformation inside of us, all the structural change in the world will have no impact on our institutions.” – Peter Block

51. “The ones who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.” – Steve Jobs

52. “I believe it’s time that women truly owned their superpowers and used their beauty and strength to change the world around them.” – Janelle Monae

53. “The strongest bond of human sympathy outside the family relation should be one uniting working people of all nations and tongues and kindreds.” – Abraham Lincoln

54. “You really can change the world if you care enough.” – Marian Wright Edelman

55. “When we have inner peace, we can be at peace with those around us. When our community is in a state of peace, it can share that peace with neighboring communities.” – The Dalai Lama

56. “Keep constantly in mind in how many things you yourself have witnessed changes already. The universe is change, life is understanding.” – Marcus Aurelius

57. “The world hates change, yet it is the only thing that has brought progress.” – Charles Kettering

58. “The price of doing the same old thing is far higher than the price of change.” – Bill Clinton

59. “Seek the rapids, not the calm of the lake. Take the calm to reflect and prepare for the rapids. If we face permanent whitewater, we will see the need for and experience change.” – Peter Vaille

60. “Change almost never fails because it’s too early. It almost always fails because it’s too late.” – Seth Godin

61. “We have it in our power to change the world over.” – Thomas Paine

62. “I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough, we must do.” – Leonardo Da Vinci

63. “All great changes are preceded by chaos.” – Deepak Chopra

64. “It takes a different value system if you wish to change the world.” – Jacques Fresco

65. “If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.” – John Quincy Adams

66. “Things remain the same because it is impossible to change very much without changing most of everything.” – Ted Sizer

67. “Never forget that you are one of a kind. Never forget that if there weren’t any need for you in all your uniqueness to be on this earth, you wouldn’t be here in the first place. And never forget, no matter how overwhelming life’s challenges and problems seem to be, that one person can make a difference in the world. In fact, it is always because of one person that all the changes that matter in the world come about. So be that one person.” – Buckminster Fuller

68. “Art is not supposed to change the world, to change practical things, but to change perceptions. Art can change the way we see the world. Art can create an analogy.” – JR

69. “Whatever change you desire for the world, create that change in your own life. You are here for a purpose. Seek it out. Hunt it down. The greatest misery is to be purposeless. The great depression of our age is not economic, but spiritual. Our spiritual poverty is rooted in our purposelessness.” – Matthew Kelly

70. “When you believe in what you’re doing and use your imagination and initiative, you can make a difference.” – Samuel Dash

Final Thoughts

The world cannot change on its own. It takes time and needs a support system. What better support system does the world need than human beings living in it who are ready to make a change? So, do not wait for others to take action, be that person to lead the change for a better world.

As people always say, change starts within you, have the winning habit to be successful and be a great example to the society. Being a positive inspiration can go a long way, as it can be passed to other individuals that could carry the inspiration on to an endless chain of good change.

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