Some of my favorite posts

Some of my favorite posts

uncle, tshirt, rev kane

I prefer the simple things and I love walking in the countryside, or going camping… but simplicity is hard. It’s easier to over-complicate things. ~ Bill Bailey

So currently I’m on vacation in the desert hiking and camping, so a little bit of a lazy post tonight, some of my favorite posts with an emphasis on my Appalachian Trail posts, it was six years ago that I was struggling with my first weeks on the trail.

https://revkane.com/2020/05/30/three-questions-and-some-thoughts-from-anza-borrego-state-park/

https://revkane.com/2019/05/07/happiness-on-the-road-anza-borrego-state-park/

https://revkane.com/2020/11/19/appalachian-trail-happiness-my-favorite-little-hiker/

https://revkane.com/2020/06/05/remembering-the-appalachian-trail/

https://revkane.com/2020/04/01/appalachian-trail-happiness-acceptance-is-the-way/

https://revkane.com/2020/03/11/appalachian-trail-happiness-my-best-readers-favorite-posts/

https://revkane.com/2021/01/29/remember-the-sweet-things/

https://revkane.com/2020/12/13/the-joys-of-traveling-solo/

 

 

 

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Sometimes, Happiness is Avoidance

Sometimes, Happiness is Avoidance

happiness

Happiness depends on ourselves ~ Aristotle

Here at the Ministry of Happiness we have talked often about the necessity of facing your issues and dealing with them straight on. This is almost always the option and particularly at the times when we least want to do it. So for the truly important things in life that are diminishing your happiness this is still my best advice.

However, there are small things in our lives that can suck away our happiness and for many of them it would take more energy to confront them, than it would to simply avoid or ignore them. One way I’ve done this in my life over the last year has been to avoid the news. This was not an easy thing for me, I’m a news junkie, I like to know what’s happening and have some deeper understanding of the why of the world. A female friend once joked, you’re the only guy who I ever leave alone in a hotel room and when I come back he’s watching the news instead of sports.

Watching the news however was doing less to inform me that it was to inflame my emotions and annoy me. So, I essentially banned news channels from my viewing habits and have chosen to get my news from less inflammatory sources. Something else that wasn’t easy! My go to news sources include the New York and Los Angeles Times, the BBC and my absolute favorite news source, The Christian Science Monitor. I find that the Monitor does a good job of analyzing the news without much spin to the left or the right. Of course the tradeoff is, that unlike CNN or USA Today you don’t get new headlines every 20 minutes but you do get more depth.

I will still scan through the headlines on CNN but if I want more in-depth reading I’ll dig into the web for the information. I have to say that this change has made me less politically oriented and less likely to jump into political arguments on social media, again a very good thing as all of this has lowered my stress level which increases your happiness.

The inspiration for this piece came today from a very conscious decision to walk about 2 minutes out of my way to avoid having to face an employee. This person is utterly fragile, prone to exaggeration, passive-aggressive and any contact just fuels her fire for drama and conflict. So sure, I walked a few extra steps, but in doing so got a little more exercise, lessened my stress and had a happier day, hope you’re having one to my friend.

~ Rev Kane

 

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Happiness & Natural Quiet

Happiness & Natural Quiet

Copy of ireland first bryce shots 598

A moment of silence is not inherently religious ~ Sandra Day O’Connor

Today I want to talk about quiet which in itself sounds a bit contradictory.  The other night I was at a meeting and the facilitator decided to start the meeting with a couple of minutes of silence.  At first it was very strange, sitting in this room, most of the people unknown to me and just sitting there my mind wandering.  Then I turned inward, took a deep breath and relaxed and just sat for a minute letting things from the day go.  In thinking back about this today I was reminded of a fabulous hike I took once in Tennessee.  My friend Andrew and I were working together at Oak Ridge National Lab on a project that was focusing on environmental values.  Andrew and I often hiked together and usually took very interesting hikes, one particular hike we took had a single purpose, to hike far enough out to actually find some natural quiet.  This is not as easy as you might imagine, natural quiet means that the only sounds you can hear are the sounds of nature.  No dogs, no cars, no planes, trains or automobiles.  Our hike was a bit arduous but finally we had gotten into a valley where we thought we had found our quarry. We’d basically hiked out onto a piece of the Appalachian Trail.

We settled down and laid back against our packs and for a half an hour enjoyed just the sounds of nature.  It was incredibly calming and wonderful at least right up until the 747 came screaming overhead, at which point we both burst out in laughter.

The link below can provide you some more information on the idea of natural quiet and our national parks:

http://nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/gtr/gtr_nrs-p-14/79-manning-p-14.pdf

Since that hike in Tennessee I have been fortunate to find other places of natural quiet during my travels in Utah, Alaska, Nepal and Scotland and each instance is etched in my mind like a precious jewel.  But we don’t need to travel the globe to gather the benefits of silence.  It’s important each day, (preferably at the beginning or end of each day, best at both), to take five minutes and just sit quietly and let the world melt, just another little tool on your quest for happiness.

But I’ll tell you what hermits realize. If you go off into a far, far forest and get very quiet, you’ll come to understand that you’re connected with everything. ~ Alan Watts

Other Posts You Might Enjoy!

Great Hikes & Treks

Happiness is Taking Risks

Fear is Killing Your Happiness

Happiness is a Choice

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Happiness Moments: Storms and Rain

Happiness Moments: Storms and Rain

thunderstormLet the rain kiss you. Let the rain beat upon your head with silver liquid drops. Let the rain sing you a lullaby. ~ Langston Hughes

So a little writing experiment for the blog. I’ve been wanting to find a way to do some free writing as practice. And I’ve been wanting to capture the moments in my life that have brought me true happiness. I need that little pick me up right now with everything going on in the world and no real chance to travel. So, some writing about happy moments in my life, hope they bring you a little happiness too.

I love the rain, there is nothing more calming and relaxing to me then to lay in bed and listen to the rain hitting the roof.  When I was a child we had a large picture window in our living room.  It had a shelf in front of it and when I was a small child and there were thunderstorms, which in the Northeast we had plenty of, I would sit in the window inside the curtains and watch the storms.  I especially loved watching lightning at night, as the bolts would crack across the sky over the mountains it always looked to me like our very universe was cracking open and showing us the tiniest glimpses of alternate dimensions.  I read a lot of science fiction as a kid.

But it wasn’t just the lightning, the thunder was amazing.  Literally feeling the air rumbling with sound to the point you could feel it vibrate through your body was always amazing.  I grew up in Washington Irving country, the nearest bridge to my childhood home was the Rip Van Winkle.  So early on I was told the story that thunder was just the sound of dwarves bowling in the mountains, I always loved that explanation, it brought an almost cartoon wonder to nature.

In the summer as a kid, you could feel a storm coming.  First the day would be incredible warm and close, then you’d start to smell the rain on the air.  The smell is a combination of ozone, rich soil and is utterly distinctive.  That would put you on edge and as soon as you felt that first hard blast of cold air come down you would head for home, a covered porch, a doorway and the rain would explode into a downpour.  Then you’d wait for the really important part, the pause, storms would ebb and flow and after the initial raging downpour it would slow to a light drizzle and we would all head back into the street.  We always had Popsicle sticks in the summer and you would race to the gutters.  I lived on a street that ran downhill towards the river for several blocks and the water would come flying down the gutters, especially if a sewer got blocked and we would drop our Popsicle sticks into the raging gutter rivers and race down the street with them, slipping down and plucking them out right before they’d get sucked into the next sewer grate.  It was the most ridiculous bit of fun as a child.

Later in life I would be reminded of those days while teaching Ecology courses.  When we covered water quality assessment we would do a lab on how we evaluate streams and rivers.  A component of those assessments would be determining the flow rates of those systems.  Now there is lots of fancy equipment that exists to measure flow rate in a stream or river, but these were entry level courses and we didn’t have huge budgets.  So we did a lot of really simple methods.  To measure flow rate we would split the students into groups of two.  We would measure the distance between the students and then to get the rate, it’s a simple matter of calculating how quickly the water flows that distance.  We’d do that by by tossing an Orange in and timing how long it took to cover the distance.  It was no Popsicle stick but it did the trick.

Rain, like everything has its positives and negatives.  The one time I didn’t like rain was on the Appalachian Trail when it would rain so often, over so many days that you would spend a week or more completely wet.  Even a day in town wasn’t enough to dry out all of your gear.  At one point, being wet and cold for twelve days I almost quit the trail.  Happily I didn’t, but three months later in a massive storm I would destroy my left knee and have to quit.  It seemed like rain was always part of the trail experience.

But that negative is balanced out by the sweet memory of a date in Knoxville, Tennessee.  We had decided to go to a sushi place and were far too focused on each other to pay any attention to a weather forecast.  We found a parking spot a couple of blocks from the restaurant and just as we were about to get out of the car, the sky opened up in a complete downpour.  Of course, we had no umbrella and the only cover available was the dog towel in the backseat.  You know you’re smitten when you’re willing to run down the street in the pouring rain under a stinky dog towel just spend time with someone.  It was ridiculous, we were soaked, we had an amazing dinner, the kind of night where the waitress feels the energy and plays along with you, then understanding the situation and leaves you alone until it’s time to go home.  We walked slowly, happily back to the car in the rain that night, I really like the rain.

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Web Resources for Appalachian Trail (AT) & Other Hikers

Web Resources for Appalachian Trail (AT) & Other hikers

happiness, appalachian trailIn an effort to continue to beef up my Appalachian Trail (AT) resources page on the Ministry of Happiness site I decided on a snowy afternoon after shoveling to take a little walk around the web and add to the list of sources I’ve already provided.  I’ve split the list into general hiking and AT specific lists. I hope these are helpful, they have helped me in my preparation for my upcoming thru-hike, have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

Appalachian Trail

 

The Appalachian Trail Conservancy – the place to start, facts, history, trivia and lots of good basic information about the Appalachian Trail

White Blazes.net – THE discussion board for AT related anything

Required Smoky Mountain Backcountry permits – gotta have one, here’s how you get it.

Thru-hikers guide to the White Mountains – enough said, good info.

Maine AT club – Baxter State Park/Katahdin information

More Baxter/Katahdin info – The park’s site

Appalachian Trail and Ultralight Gear List – My favorite gear list written by Bruce “Buck” Nelson  There are a lot of gear lists on the web, I just prefer this one for the focus on ultralight and the gear links.

Backpacker magazine – makes both lists because there is always a wealth of information to go through, great tips, gear reviews, etc…

Trail Journals – A site you can get lost in for a long time, a huge collection of archived and active trail journals being written by long-distance hikers

Backpacking Lightweight – great resources on traveling with a lighter load

Hiking Trail, Hiking Tips, Hiking Trips – the AT section has some good basic information about doing a thru-hike.

 

General Hiking

All Trails – this site is what I wish Trails.com was, community driven, good information and reviews about hikes, you can up your membership and get better maps but the free access is awesome.

Hiking for her – A site dedicated specifically to issues women face while hiking

Section Hiker – great site with a lot of information and happily a handy index

American Hiking – a pretty general site with info about hiking possibilities, volunteer opportunities etc…

Backpacker magazine – makes both lists because there is always a wealth of information to go through, great tips, gear reviews, etc…

BackpackerTV – Dig YouTube, love hiking, where here’s nothing but videos about backpacking, how to’s, locations, travel journals anything you could want. Really dig this site, great videos, good quality, fast load speeds.

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An Ode to the Ides of March

An Ode to the Ides of March

hiking, appalachian trail

Rev Kane on his first day on the Appalachian Trail

The Ides of March are come, but not gone. ~ William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar

I had an incredible English teacher in high school, his name was Francis Sullivan, Sully he was called.  He taught me how to be a better writer, he expanded my reading universe, he showed me culture that honestly I might not have otherwise been exposed to in my life.  By example, he taught me more than a Bachelor’s Degree in Secondary Education ever did.  He also introduced me to the works of William Shakespeare something that I’m eternally grateful for.  The gateway was Julius Caesar, as a 14 year-old kid the murder scene in that play was a great way to get me interested in Shakespeare and the Soothsayer’s prediction of beware the Ides of March always resonated with me, and locked the date March 15th into my head.

March 15th has massive significance in my life.  I’m the only grandchild my maternal grandfather really got to know, he died when I was five and my sister was only 3.   His birthday is March 15th, my cousin, the Smoochy Monster, who I’ve written about was also born on March 15th at 3:15 in the morning.

March 15th for many years has also had another significance for me.  In the California Community College system there is a thing called a March 15th letter.  If your district isn’t going to renew your contract for the next year, they have to inform you on March 15th.  So ending, what turned into an 11 hour workday today, without receiving a March 15th letter is always a slight bit of a victory.  Especially given that I’m someone who comes straight at things, who doesn’t suffer idiots and has a tendency speak truth to power, making it another year is always a relief.

Finally, and the reason for the picture on this post, I started my Appalachian Trail Adventure six years ago today.  It’s amazing that much time has gone by, it was one of the most amazing experiences of my life and I miss it every day.  So for all of these reasons, the Ides of March are very, very special to me. Have a happy Ides my friends. ~ Rev Kane

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Great Quotes & Good Laughs

Great Quotes & Good Laughs

01Laughter is the sun that drives the winter from a human’s face ~ Victor Hugo

So for my fun Friday post I’ve gotten a bit lazy this week and am posting a little early as  I’ll be traveling for the next couple of days, so a greatest hit run of pasts humorous and quote posts, enjoy and have a happy day my friends ~ Rev Kane

Funny Internet Memes

Kids explain the meaning of Christmas

Funny baby memes

Funny baby memes part 2

Weird News & Evil Clowns

Happiness is Laughter: Pranks

 

Quotes, Quotes & More Quotes

Happiness Quotes

Inspirational Quotes about Life & Happiness

Quotes about Happiness, Gratitude & Kindness

Inspirational Quotes from Thich Nhat Hanh

The Poetry & Wisdom of Khalil Gibran

The Wisdom of Paulo Coehlo

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Don’t let disappointment steal your happiness

Don’t let disappointment steal your happiness

disappointmentWhen you have put all your faith in man and continue to be disappointed, don’t you hope there is something out of there that is not of human element? ~ Natalie Cole

I grew up an angry young man, well into my twenties I lived with a constant anger raging inside me.  That rage marinated inside me, soured and turned to depression which led to me becoming an alcoholic and an addict.  I fought bouts of severe depression well into my thirties.  Many of you reading this know this story, it was what led me to first research happiness, and eventually led to the creation of this blog, The Ministry of Happiness.  I can truly say this journey, and the work I undertook on myself over that time, has made me a much happier person.  It’s been many years now since I’ve had to live constantly with that knot in my stomach that accompanied those feelings and I’m thankful every day for that.

This last year has been hard on everyone, not only have people died and others had to suffer through the loss of people dear to them, it’s not just been about working from home, homeschooling our children.  It hasn’t been just about wearing a mask, washing your hands constantly or the ever present smell of hand sanitizer.  It hasn’t just been about not seeing friends, or not visiting restaurants or amusement parks.  It hasn’t been just the lack of hugs, or seeing smiling faces or the deferred vacations.  It has been all of those things and more that have made this past year hard for people, there has been an extra level of stress and pressure on already busy and stress laden lives.  That extra pressure has unfortunately revealed some unfortunate things about people we know.

The truth is I can handle all of that, most of us can, we know this, most of us have handled it while retaining a functioning life.  For me, as hard as all of that has been, what has truly gotten to me over this time is the disappointment I’ve felt in my fellow man.  What this year of pandemic life has revealed about all of us, is what our true core values are and how we act upon them.  This year has revealed in many ways our selfish nature as humans, our lack of willingness to be inconvenienced, our me first attitude.  Honestly, what have people done with all of those hundreds of rolls of toilet paper that they hoarded over the last year?

I’ve never been someone with a deep well of faith in humanity.  I’ve seen too much horror over my lifetime to believe the platitudes that are often thrown out about how people are basically good.  Let me be clear, I’m not saying that there aren’t good people, there are, there are a lot of really good people.  Unfortunately, as we’ve seen time and time again over the last year, people can be selfish, mean and unconcerned for the welfare of others.  The default position for most people is I get mine, then if I have time, I’ll worry about others.

The only time I’ve truly felt a high level of faith in humanity was during my time hiking the Appalachian Trail.  The hiking community and the community around and supporting the hiking community were utterly amazing people.  When you’re walking for six months in the forest with no facilities, or the normal support, or the conveniences of society you have to depend on each other.  Kindness abounds in the hiking community, even more so there is a whole community of folks who support the hikers in so many ways.  The best of them, trail angels we call them, are people who just plain give.  When you’re on the Appalachian Trail people provide food, rides, places to stay, I was even asked if I needed money from someone I’d only talked to for a few minutes one afternoon.  These people do this just to support the hikers, sure they live through you a little vicariously, but they give so much.  A fellow hiker, fully sick with Norovirus, was taken into a person’s home and taken care of for a week.  This was a complete stranger who took an incredibly sick and contagious person into their house out of pure kindness and caring for others.  So I know we’re capable of being that way.  I’ve been thinking a lot about the Appalachian Trail this weekend, March 15th is the sixth anniversary of the start date of my journey that I detailed in my book Appalachian Trail Happiness.

That memory has really been the counterbalance to my mood this weekend.  For the last few days I’ve felt that knot in the belly anger that I haven’t for so long.  It’s all about disappointment, a year of disappointment has just worn me down.  Disappointment in family and friends, disappointment in my job, all of it tied to the way people are treating each other, they way they’ve been treating me, the amazing lack of caring for others that I see all around me.  My experience in dealing with the anger, disappointment and the depression I faced in my earlier years has given me the tools and ability to bounce back from this.

This week I’ll get my second vaccination, I’m about to get my first vacation in a year, which will include several days in the Mojave Desert in Anza Boreggo State Park, one of my favorite places.  I desperately need this time in the crisp desert air, hiking under warm sunny skies and sitting around a fire at night under a curtain of stars.  This is one of the ways I get my mind and my mood right.  It’s important that we all develop these mechanisms.  Everyone’s remedy is different and individual to themselves, but it is imperative that you understand yourself well enough to know what works for you and get it when you need it.  So while tonight’s post is not uplifting, I hope you’ll take the time to consider what I’ve just written.  Find the way you reset yourself, invoke that self-care cure when you need it, this is the one time I want you to be selfish.  Have a happy day my friends. ~ Rev Kane

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My COVID Times Diary: One Year In!

My COVID Times Diary: One Year In!

embrace our painSo today it has been one full year since I began working from home.  There is a lot we could talk about tonight from the last year that was not good.  There’s been loss, frustration, apathy, depression, disappointment and so much more.  It’s been hard.  But tonight in a brief post I want to focus in, looking back on the good things that have happened over the last year.

First the big things, as I’ve discussed before, I’ve commented that people would either emerge from working from home as beat up caterpillars or beautiful butterflies.  I have been determined not to be a caterpillar.  One year in I think I’ve done pretty well.  I’ve achieved my goal of working on Spanish on Duolingo every day for the last year.  I made it my goal to lose weight, I’ve dropped 15 pounds over the last year and today I had my best blood sugar writing in two-years.  I’m still seven pounds from my goal weight, but I’m happy with the progress I’ve made.  It’s been easier to do while working from home, I can make good food and eat when I want, I can take breaks to workout during the day which makes it easier and more consistent to get my workouts in.

So there have been a lot of hard things, a lot of bad things over the last year, but there has been good as well.  I hope as you look back on your last year you can find your way to focus on good instead of the bad.  ~ Rev Kane

My COVID Times posts from the last year

https://revkane.com/2020/03/25/my-covid-times-diary-march-24th/

https://revkane.com/2020/03/27/my-covid-times-diary-anxiety/

https://revkane.com/2020/03/29/my-covid-times-diary/

https://revkane.com/2020/04/03/my-covid-times-diary-fear/

https://revkane.com/2020/04/16/my-covid-times-diary-inequality/

https://revkane.com/2020/04/22/my-covid-times-diary-the-great-pause/

https://revkane.com/2020/04/28/is-this-the-end-my-covid-times-diary/

https://revkane.com/2020/05/06/my-covid-times-diary-back-to-normal/

https://revkane.com/2020/05/13/my-covid-times-diary-living-our-values/

https://revkane.com/2020/05/26/my-covid-times-diary-a-little-levity/

https://revkane.com/2020/05/27/my-covid-times-diary-a-new-day/

https://revkane.com/2020/06/01/my-covid-times-diary-the-highs-and-lows/

https://revkane.com/2020/06/16/my-covid-times-diary-accepting-death/

https://revkane.com/2020/06/24/my-covid-times-diary-acceptance/

https://revkane.com/2020/06/28/my-covid-times-diary-a-socially-distant-graduation

https://revkane.com/2020/07/07/my-covid-times-diary-silver-lining/

https://revkane.com/2020/07/15/my-covid-times-diary-new-world-road-trip/

https://revkane.com/2020/07/21/my-covid-times-diary-do-we-get-it-now/

https://revkane.com/2020/07/28/my-covid-times-diary-good-news/

https://revkane.com/2020/09/02/my-covid-times-diary-the-slow-motion-apocalypse/

https://revkane.com/2020/09/11/my-covid-times-diary-a-day-in-the-life/

https://revkane.com/2020/11/03/my-covid-times-diary-election-day/

https://revkane.com/2020/11/10/my-covid-times-diary-here-we-go-again/

https://revkane.com/2020/12/18/my-covid-times-diary-hope-and-death/

https://revkane.com/2020/12/23/my-covid-times-diary-our-values/

https://revkane.com/2021/01/05/my-covid-times-diary-lets-not-flip-the-switch-just-yet/

https://revkane.com/2021/01/12/my-covid-times-diary-the-triple-triple/

https://revkane.com/2021/01/27/my-covid-times-diary-peaks/

https://revkane.com/2021/02/02/my-covid-times-diary-for-the-last-time-this-is-not-just-a-flu/

https://revkane.com/2021/02/09/my-covid-times-diary-butterflies-or-bust/

https://revkane.com/2021/03/02/my-covid-times-diary-dystopian-vaccination-under-a-full-moon/

https://revkane.com/2021/03/09/my-covid-times-diary-its-serious-and-not-over/

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15 Lessons to being Happy

15 Lessons to being Happy

happiness

 

15 Lessons to being happier from The Inspiration Tree http://www.theinspirationtree.com/2011/01/pursuit-of-happiness-15-lessons-to-keep.html

1. The only person that can ever truly make you happy is yourself. Stop depending on everyone else.

2. People lie, stuff happens. Don’t take it too personally.

3. Want people to think you’re amazing? Start believing you are, and then they will too.

4. Smiling is the ultimate anti-depressant. Smile and laugh out loud, it doesn’t look stupid, I promise.

5. The world is never just black and white, right or wrong, one way or another. Try and see things from as many points of view as possible.

6. “Let everything happen to you
Beauty and terror
Just keep going
No feeling is final”
Rainer Maria Rilke

7. Have empathy.

8. Gossip, problems of the past, events you cannot control, negative thoughts and negative people; time spent on these is time poorly wasted.

9. When you’re jealous or find yourself filled with hate for someone/something, stop. The only person its hurting is you.

10. Although the newest, most expensive material things may make you feel as if you’re a better person, they won’t hold you at night or listen to you when you need it. Make sure your priorities make sense.

11. Step outside your comfort zone- it’s when you’ll really feel alive.

12. Don’t be afraid to be yourself, the people who really matter, don’t mind

13. Let your emotions out sometimes, humans have them for a reason.

14. Celebrate the things you have. Think only positively of the things you don’t (but would like to have) and they too will come.

15. Love unconditionally ♥.

 

 

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