| |

Imagine is dedicated to inspiring people to be the difference that makes the difference in the world. That equation has two parts: inspiration and action. On this site, in our
e-newsletter and in our upcoming online publications, you’ll find articles, advice, and resources that will help you create a better world—and a better you—by imagining and acting on life’s best possibilities.
For us, those best possibilities include a cleaner environment. That’s why we’ve moved from a printed publication to a web-based one. We can now deliver the same message of inspired action in an environmentally friendly format that’s faster, fresher and landfill-free.
We hope you enjoy Imagine online and will visit us often
Blog |
| |
|
LifesOwnSelf
explores the grit and grace of everyday living and how mindfulness--simply paying attention to life as it's happening--can make the living sweeter. |
|
| |
Articles |
| |
Change Your Mind, Change Your World
“There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.” Shakespeare’s Hamlet said that, and he was really onto something. Our habitual thought patterns frame the world as we see it—the world “out there,” as well as our private, internal world . . . Read More |
| |
To DEET or not to DEET?
That’s the buggy question. DEET is commonly known as the king of mosquito repellents, though not everyone is keen to slather it on their skin. A study conducted in the late 1980s on Everglades National Park employees to determine the effects of DEET . . . Read More
|
| |
|
| |
When Your Body Fires You From Your Job
Most professionals who live with a chronic illness are challenged to balance three equally competing demands: career, personal life and disease symptoms. But what happens when a person’s body decides that work is no longer an option but the mind and soul
. . . Read More |
| |
King Corn
Behind America’s 99 cent hamburgers and 72-ounce sodas is a key ingredient that silently fuels our fast-food nation — Corn. KING CORN is a feature documentary about two friends, one acre of corn, and the subsidized crop that drives . . . Read More
|
|
|