Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Chain of Kindness


It is colorful and intriguing and, like an indoor plant, it grows when nurturedIt is the Chain of Kindness (the Chain).

Fully realized, the Chain is a multi-colored streamer made of linked paper strips. A thumbtack secures it high on the classroom wall every three feet or so. Links dip from the weight and rise to meet the next thumbtack. The end of the Chain hangs low enough for students to access. When it reaches the floor an excited child informs a teacher to hang it high it once again.

Seeds of kindness come with being human. When one of us makes a thoughtful gesture, it generally makes the giver and recipient feel good.  When another bears witness to the act, positive feelings spread. 

Sowing the seeds for the Chain literally involves cutting flame-retardant paper into uniform strips and putting them an easily accessible location with pencils nearby.

Intention fosters the Chain’s growth. Fueled by a brainstorming session around ideas of kindness, modeling the recording of an observation, and periodic reminders (a morning message or a challenge to a kindness spy), the Chain flourishes.

Initially, the link’s author is the only one to know what he or she records. Countless acts of kindness occur throughout the day. By observing and recording each one, we celebrate them again. Linked together, these observations join to create a whole, decorative presence in a classroom or home environment — one that symbolizes compassion.

Each written acknowledgement of kindness both heightens the awareness of and perpetuates a feeling of good will in its author. When each individual contributes to the Chain’s development, a spirit of generosity reigns throughout the community.

The Chain can be cultivated annually by detaching and examining it. A collection of links handed back to community members elicits smiles when they realize the impact of their previous actions.

My mom made me breakfast.
Emily held the door open for me.
Max helped me tie my shoes.
Terrence made me feel better me when I felt sad.

Sorting links into piles with like colors, the paper can be regenerated into paper pulp for reuse as an art medium. Molding the pulp into the form of a container repurposes the kindness-infused paper into a container, a Peace Bowl, for a new chain. 

Seeds of kindness spread when shared. Not only does one act of kindness beget another; the gift of a Peace Bowl with paper cut to size propagates more Chains.

Imagine the power of the ultimate chain of kindness: a chain cultivated between people, connected between areas within an institution, communities, and even countries. A 7-year-old student did just that when he proclaimed his goal for the Chain to reach Jupiter. By sharing his wish with you, dear reader, my hope is to one day make his dream come true.