25 Signs of Maturity – Got Any?

Humble and Kind

25 Signs of Maturity

The last couple of days, I’ve been frustrated about something and considered speaking to the “person” responsible for the situation to point a few things out.  However, I knew that conversation would solve nothing.  And, that, no matter how I phrased things, it sounded  immature.  Then I wondered what maturity is anyway.  I found this blog “25 Signs of Maturity: How Mature Are You?”  Take a read.  Seems it’s Ok to be frustrated but ….

25 Signs of Maturity: How Mature Are You?

Do you think there is a certain age at which maturity sets in? Could it be 20? 40? 70?

In my personal experiences, I’ve observed that age has little or nothing to do with it. I have met young people who are mature well beyond their years, and I’ve known older folks who act childish, only thinking about themselves.

So the question is:

What are the character traits that show maturity?

And do “mature” people exhibit them 100% of the time?

Well, I’m not sure that we can be mature in every situation that presents itself to us because we are always growing and learning as human beings, and I’m pretty sure that all of us have been guilty of at least some of these negative behaviors at least once in our lives. That being said, by considering these 25 tell-tale signs, perhaps we can be more aware of the interludes in which our whiny, adolescent self rears its immature head…

1. Realizing how much you don’t know.

2. Listening more and talking less.

3. Being aware and considerate of others as opposed to being self-absorbed, self-centered, and inconsiderate.

4. Not taking everything personally, getting easily offended, or feeling the need to defend, prove, or make excuses for yourself.

5. Being grateful and gracious, not complaining.

6. Taking responsibility for your own health and happiness, not relying on others to “fix” you or placing blame for your circumstances.

7. Having forgiveness and compassion for yourself and others.

8. Being calm and peaceful, not desperate, frantic, or irrational.

9. Showing flexibility and openness as opposed to resisting, controlling, or being unreasonable.

10. Helping yourself, not just expecting others to do it for you out of a sense of entitlement.

How are you doing so far?

11. Doing good deeds even when there is nothing in it for you other than knowing you helped, being selfless.

12. Respecting another’s point of view, beliefs, and way of life without judgment, not insisting you are right, belittling another, or using profanity or violence to get your point across.

13. Sharing your good fortune with others.

14. Being able to turn the other cheek without wishing harm on another.

15. Thinking before acting and having good manners, not going off half-cocked, lashing out, or being rude.

16. Encouraging and being supportive of others.

17. Finding joy in the success of someone else, not envy or criticism.

18. Knowing there is always room to grow and improve and reaching out for help.

19. Having humility and laughing at yourself.

20. Recognizing that which does not work in your life and making an effort to do something different.

Feel like I should put a link to Tim McGraw’s song Humble and Kind

21. Passing up instant gratification in favor of long term benefits.

22. Accepting, liking, and loving yourself, not needing someone else to “complete” you.

23. Standing up for fairness and justice for yourself and others and choosing to do the right thing.

24. Making sacrifices for the good of others without resentment.

25. Not clinging to materialistic items or bragging.

I’m sure there are probably other signs, but this list covers at least the majority of them. I know we can always do a better job displaying our mature sides. I also know that, by doing so, we lift each other up through our example. What’s most important, however, is seeing the negative side of our behavior and knowing we must do something positive to change it…And that, my friends, is WISDOM.

So, how mature are you?  Let us know how many of the 25 you do.

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Special Olympics Penguin Plunge – Narragansett RI – Wow

Special Olympics Penguin Plunge – Narragansett RI – Wow

At noon yesterday, we had a “what the heck” moment. We learned the Special Olympics Penguin Plunge was happening nearby. So we thought we’d see what it’s all about. And, we sure did. All of us have probably seen the news stories on New Year’s Polar Bear Plunges around the world every year. You see a handful of people jump in the water and quickly out. Then say “OMG who would do this?” Well we learned the answer today. They do it for charity.

RI Special Olympic Penguins plunged in groups and as individuals. All participants needed to raise at least $500 to take the cold dip.

This year they raised a minimum of $125K, from our estimate, for RI Special Olympics. One group raised $20K. Wow!

The History and Event Details

For the last 42 years, RIers have raisied $3.2 million to support 3,900 RI Olympians annually through this event. RI Special Olympics is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year; and this is one of its largest fundraisings.

About 2000 people plunged this year. Take a look at the kickoff of the
Special Olympics Penguin Plunge. There were others who jumped in from other spots on the beach too.

In they go … Video courtesy of Chip

Ready Set Go

Isn’t that amazing. And some people stayed in the water for more than a plunge. That still had us saying, “OMG who would do this?”

The organizers give you a safety sheet when you pull in to make sure everyone is plunging responsibly.

It was 56 degrees on Roger Wheeler Beach on Tuesday. Last year it was 1 degree.

Penguin Plunges are like a box of chocolate … you never know what you’re gonna get.

More Than Plunging

But there was more than plunging. There was fun music (personally I danced some…Chip swayed). Tents with opportunities to participate. We bought hats and tee shits.

There was a costume contest. Buses for different groups participating. Biker groups participating. Tailgaters. I will not say what some of them were drinking. Perhaps hair of the dog? It is the day after New Year’s eve.

The one thing missing was any visible corporate sponsor. No Dunkin Donuts tents with hot chocolate, nuttin’. The Free Masons had some signs around though.

Meet a Plunging Hero

But there were so many bright spots, that it didn’t matter. Meet the man below, Wayne Meunier of Warwick RI.

He has plunged for Special Olympics for 36 years of the 42 years of the RI Penguin Plunge . Each year they have a pin. You can see them all on his hat.

He casually walked in alone (as many people did). Plunged, dried briefly and got in his car and went home. We caught him in the parking lot and congratulated him. He was nice enough to tell us about himself.

All I can say is we were humbled and impressed. Chip wants us to try dipping in the Atlantic for the RI Special Olympics Penguin Plunge next year. It is for a good cause, so who knows.

Here Are A Couple More Pictures –
RI Special Olympics Penguin Plunge

Best Costumes From Our Perspective
Penguin Family … The Family the Plunges Together Stays Together

The Polar Bear Plunges and Penguin Plunges both benefit the Special Olympics. I think Polar Bear Plunges are for National Special Olympics and Penguins are for state programs. Hundreds of events take place on lakes, rivers and oceans around the world.

Happy New Year!

And take the plunge in 2019. Whether in resolution or passing it forward. Hugs.

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A Penguin Story

A Penguin Story

I saw this image in November and thought it was adorable.  I have been looking for a place to use it in the blog during the holidays.  Since I could not find a way to work it in, I’m writing a blog/short story about Penguin Carolers.

The Story Begins

Four penguins, Southie, Emperor, Glazier, Lifer, were swimming away looking for food and caught a large wave that pushed them pretty far out to sea.  There are a lot of penguin predators once you get out that far.  And, not being able to see land wasn’t helping them gain their sense of direction.

Luckily they were together, because if they were alone, they’d be shark bait for sure.  So, there they were, out to sea, looking for predators.  That was no fun.  Every blip in the water made them jump.  Was that a leopard seals, fur seals, whale and shark.  Ahhhh.  They were freaking out.

Great, this is exactly what they needed.  They had a families to feed.  Their only job at the moment was to go out, grab some chow and bring it back to the family.  Their wives were not going to buy this wave story.

Let’s just pick a direction and go for it, was Southie’s idea.  His name alone gave him confidence he’d head in the right way.

That’s when Glazier saw the hump of a whale.  “Great, just great.”  He indicated the hump and the penguins began to dive and flutter.

“Cut the splashing,” was Lifter’s advice. But the whale got closer.

As the penguins began to say their prayers and write their wills, they noticed the whale approaching them was a Baleen whale.  Not a meat eating whale at all.

Were They Saved?

The Baleen whale, who went by Jolene,  approached them; and asked what the heck they were doing so far out to sea.  They told the wave story; she didn’t buy it.  Why was the truth so hard to believe?

Emperor decided it was time for him to take control of the situation.

“Does it matter how we got here?” he asked.  “What matters is how we get home.”

You gotta admit, he had a good point.

The four penguins tried to describe the coast, snow and rock formation that they came from.  However, the whale only could find his way based on his sense of smell; and the penguins couldn’t describe the smell of their rocks.  At least not in a way that helped Jolene.

“I’m going up North,” she said.  “You can hitch a ride on me.  You’ll be safe.  As long as you don’t mind me diving down every so often, we’ll find a safe place for you to land.”

So, off they went. Within a day, it started to get warmer.  This concerned the penguins.  They were used to it being 4°F, falling as low as – 58°F  with winds that gust up to 124 miles per hour.

They were sweating bullets.  The farther north they went; the warner they felt.

The good news is, they started to see land.

How Warm is Too Warm?

The Baleen whale was feeling it was getting warm too.  She was ready to head South again.  But, she wanted a little rest. Leaving the penguins not far from shore, she headed to some cooler water.

Being a conscious breather, she has to remember to breathe, even while sleeping.  Jolene and her family normally rest quietly in the water.  Some like to sleep vertically; others like horizontally.  Jolene liked to sleep vertically.  Jolene and her family sleep alone in their pod.  Some others sleep while swimming slowly next to another animal, but this wasn’t her thing.  Anyway, the penguins are too small to help in this respect.

Off Jolene went.

What’s Happening on the Shore?

Swimming toward the shore, the penguins saw these pink and tan animals.  They walked on two legs like them; and even splashed along the water.  They made sounds that had more tones than they did.  At first it was strange.  Then it became interesting.

Their sounds changed from ones with lots of stops between them to sounds that were smooth and all linked together.

The penguins really liked it.  Some of the sounds were fast and spunky.  Others were soft and calming.

They swam closer.  They watched closely.  Glazier was paying closest attention of all.  He tried to mimic the sound.  After a few tries, he got it.

In his excitement, he clicked and cawed at his friends telling them how to make the sounds.

After a half hour, they were all able to make the smooth sounds too.

As they listened, the penguins heard more and more sounds.  They listened and looked around, taking everything in; capturing every detail of the area and animals.  There were strings of lights. Two-legged animals had colors over them.  Some were bright at the bottom and fuzzy around the rim and at the top.

The animals making the most sounds held flat weeds in front of them.

They felt they may have stumbled into a celebration.  It looked fun.  Everyone was so happy.  Maybe it was some kind of holiday.

Being penguins, they really had no sense of time.  And, being so far from home, they really didn’t know all the customs of the holiday.

“Should we show this to the quins when we get home?” asked Lifer.  All agreed this was something everyone would enjoy.

“Wait until the wives get to see this,” said Southie.

If only they can find their way home.

Warmth was finally taking over.  They couldn’t take it anymore.  Jolene Baleen showed up.  Thank goodness.

“Who would of thought going North would be warm verses cold,” Emperor said.  “I mean it was only two days of swimming, wasn’t it?”

“Jolene, did you know going North would be warm versus cold?” asked Southie.

There’s No Place Like Home

“Normally, I swim much faster and am in cooler waters in just a few days,” she said.  “This is highly unusual, but it feels like heading back South is going to be best for everyone.  Maybe with calmer waters, we will find your home.”

She was ready to head back; and so were the penguins.

Sure there were many twists and turns, but in 72 hours, they had found the penguins rocks.

“Why didn’t you say, this was the place where the seaweed smelled sweet, the air smelled like volcanic ash and the shore smelled phosphorus?” asked Jolene.

“Well, most of Antarctica has no scent.  The glaziers and objects hold their aroma because of the cold,” said Lifer.  “Next time, we’ll know.”

“Next time?” everyone said.  “There won’t be a next time. There’s no place like home.”

After thanking Jolene, they swam as fast as they could to their shore and rocks.

When they landed on the shore, the other penguins were happy to see them.  It was time for the male penguins to return to the females and meet their babies.  Then the woman would leave the kids with their dads and head off to find more food.

Upon returning to their colony, the wives heard their story and were pretty skeptical of the whole thing.

Then the penguins grabbed their seaweed in their flippers and began to make the sounds they learned off the shore in the place that was warm.

They stood with pride and made smooth sounds and bouncy sounds for an hour.  This had the other penguins and their new babies in awe.

So, their story was true.

A Note from MPG

Hope you like the picture too.  If you liked the story, share it with a friend or just let us know.

Minimalism – Little Pink Houses?

Minimlism is the future

Minimalism – Little Pink Houses

Every now and then, there is talk about minimalism.  This is closely followed by the image of tiny houses.  So I have some questions. How hard is it to go minimal? And, is John Mellencamp right?  Will there be little pink houses for you and me?

What is Minimalism?

Defining it is half the battle.  The short answer is that minimalism is personally defined.  I guess that means what’s minimal to you is different than what is minimal to me.

The broadest definition includes reducing the number of possessions, people and ideas you bring into your life.  It’s a complete simplification of your universe.   Quality over quantity.

If you have a 10,000 sq ft house, then minimal to you is living in a 5,000 sq ft house.   For me, it would be moving to a tiny house.

When I think of the minimalist movement, I think of people living off-grid in a rural area.

But, then, if you think of it more; it’s also people in big cities that have limited space.  They have to make decisions of what ‘must haves’ they need handy.

Millennials Are Thinking Minimally

Apparently Millennials are really embracing this idea.   This makes sense as stats show they are waiting longer to have kids, buy houses, etc.  They grew up with everything, but now see other things are more important.

Off the Grid

We watch all the shows on Alaska, people building houses in the deep woods or high hills, tree houses and tiny houses. Yes, that’s Chip’s influence.  Those and the Weather Channel.  I didn’t even know WC had reality shows.  What ever happened to ‘weather on the 8s?’  This leads us to tiny houses.

Pink Tiny Houses

Most of the tiny houses shows have me saying to myself, “how can they do that?”  Yes, it’s less expensive than a regular house.  It’s portable in most cases.  It can be great for one person and OK for two.  However, little kids could provoke a challenge.

One of the cool things about these homes is the innovation that designers put into economizing space and not compromising needed functionality.

I love the people who look for stainless steel appliances.  Only because the HGTV shows have the same desire whether they are buying at the beach, in the Caribbean or any other city in the world.  Americans priorities don’t compromise, internationally or minimally.

Can You Park Your Tiny House Anywhere?

Nope.

Although some municipalities are warming up to the idea of tiny houses within their building codes.  Normally, they don’t put up a fuss if you are putting the house on property you already own.

But, here’s my favorite part.  Tiny Houses have there own communities.  It’s like Airbnb for Tiny Houses.

tryittiny.com

One is tryittiny.com. This site is all about renting or trying a tiny home.  Within 150 miles near me there is only one place to rent a tiny home.

If I go up to New Hampshire, there are four farms that will let you park your house on their land for …. about $300 a month.   If you want waterview or lakeside, it’s 650/month.

In this instance, you have a home that will cost btw $45,000 to $125,000, plus a rental fee.  Just sayin’.

From what I can tell, if you select the whole US for options, there are about 19 states you can park or try a home.  One is Hawaii … aloha!

Tiny House Hosting on FaceBook

With, 11,000 followers, they help connect tiny house owners with landowners.  So it’s match.com for tiny homes.

Other Websites

mytinyhouseparking.com – gives list of tiny house communities you can live at.  From what I can see, they have about 50.  With most being in the Upper West coast, Texas and Mid-Atlantic.  That surprised me, I thought the Mid-West would be well represented.

This one also provides guidance and resources to start your own tiny home community.

tinyhomebuilders.com – they share four categories, where to buy tiny houses, finding builders (which there are more of than communities), tiny house communities, individuals interested in buying, selling or renting.

In the Tiny House World – Good Behavior Counts

The Tiny House communities don’t just take anyone.  You need to qualify as a decent human who embraces the minimalism lifestyle.  And, of course, there is the possibility of a credit or background check.

Extreme Minimalism – Living with only 15 items

This topic just keeps getting better and better.  As we said above, everyone defines minimalism in their own way.  However, there are extreme minimalists.

Before, I share the list, it includes a ton of technology items.  Again, wrong assumption, but expected an extreme Minimalist to have two sticks and a flint to make it high tech.

The technology list includes: cell phone, head phones, universal charger, laptop, camera and GoPro.

Others: backpack, workout clothes, socks, sunglasses, one change of clothes (clothes on your back, plus one to travel), somewhere/thing to sleep, water source, money and ID.

I’d add a first-aid kit and flares, but that’s me.  I’m guaranteed to fall and get lost.  Probably should add a compass too in case my phone isn’t connecting.

Reducing the People in My Life

Reducing possessions is no big deal to me.  However, reducing the number of people in my life is much harder.  I have 29 first cousins and another ton of second cousins.

All are married or committed and have kids and some of their kids have kids.  I’d have to weed out over 550 people that are family.  That doesn’t even count Chip’s family.

As for friends, over time they reduce themselves mostly because of logistics vs friendship value.

Now what?

Statistics are saying by 2030, most people will be living some form of a minimalistic lifestyle.  Thirty percent will be in tiny houses and off grid.

So, what happens to all the houses that people used to live in?  And what type of work do the transient minimalists do?

If you go on Indeed.com (employment website) and type in minimalism, 25 job opportunities pop-up.  Most are technology and marketing.

Other people feel going minimal allows them to follow their passions vs be tied to a structured job.  Maybe US minimalists will work like some Europeans who work for 6-8 months and travel and explore the rest of the time.

Also, there is the expectations that technology (even in manufacturing) will be changing constantly.  So. lifetime learning and frequent retraining will be the way of moving forward.  Not sure how that will impact the minimalist lifestyle.

The way it appears is that money also is less important than lifestyle.

I know two people who live this lifestyle.  They say it is the most freeing and carefree way to live.  Each make a decent living.  One does work a little and hike a little each year.  The other lives in a tiny home and spends the rest of his time fully integrated into society.   On weekends, he does live more natural.

Live in Abandoned Big Home, Tiny House or Stay Where I am?

In all honesty, I think I could make any of these work.

The idea of people abandoning their large home to downsize dramatically is interesting.  If minimal is the new culture, no one is interested in buying the big home.   I wouldn’t mind giving living in a 10,000 sq ft home for a month and see if it suits me.  May feel like Logan’s Run. (Hmm)  It’s good to go against the populous once in awhile.

The tiny house, could be fun for awhile, but the only way it has long-term comfort is if you rarely want company or want to be mobile.  I guess it would make it easy to relocate for work.

Stay where I am also has some comforts.  Packing is a pain.

What would your definition of minimalism be?  Tell us what you think.

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