Sharing Heartprints
We’ve all heard of the Domino Effect. Push one domino and the rest of the dominoes in the line come tumbling down. The Heartprint Effect, like The Butterfly Effect, is different in that it creates exponential changes…in many directions, at once.
Our intention is to make this page a sharing space, where you can post your comments about your own footprints and the impact they’re making, and read about others’ experiences as well. If you send us your email address, we’ll drop you a line and let you know when our blog is running. In the meantime, we encourage you to keep reading…and keep making positive heartprints.
The Heartprint Effect in Your Life
Did you know that our individual feelings and thoughts affect the world on a global scale? Well it’s true. We’re wired to pick up emotional weather in our environment. When you’ve walked into a room and immediately known that someone is angry, you're receiving an emotional weather report.
Every feeling and every thought we have affect not only our inner selves, but also contribute to the emotional weather around us as well as the global emotional climate. When that climate is polluted with anger, fear, hatred and envy, destructive thoughts and violent actions are not far behind. When we’re feeling loving and thinking clearly…effective solutions to problems and kindness to ourselves and others flow as naturally as warmth on a sunny day. Yes, we are personally responsible for the world we have created.
This is great news because it means we have the power to create a different world. We have the capacity to make our own lives happier and the world a more sustainable and harmonious place at the same time. We can serve our self-interests and the interests of the global human family simultaneously.
Learn more about The Heartprint Effect
The basics of the Butterfly Effect and the man who first discovered it, Edward N. Lorenz, from San Francisco’s Exploratorium Museum. Includes a link to draw your own butterfly effect.
The New York Academy of Sciences: From Mirror Neurons to the Mona Lisa: Visual Art and The Brain
Wikipedia’s take on Chaos Theory
