Our world is interconnected.
We are all interconnected.
Our behavior and actions have an integral impact on the whole.
Though many believe that life is purely about living for self, to exclusion of others. This is a very narrow way of looking at the world and its complexities.

Often, we have to look at the whole, at all of nature, cycles of life, and devise meaning for the individual from that of the whole.
“By understanding that our ecosystems, our social systems, and our economic systems are interconnected, we can hope to avoid actions which may end up being detrimental to our long-term well-being.”- Fractal Foundation

We do not live in isolation and thus impact can be felt far and wide.

You are important.
What you do is integral.

The ripple of your actions throughout time and space is what has been termed the Butterfly Effect.
The butterfly effect is the, “Sensitive dependence on initial conditions.” -Larry Bradley
“A more rigorous way to express this is that small changes in the initial conditions lead to drastic changes in the results.” -Fractal Foundation
You are the change.
With every action, knowingly or unknowingly, you change the world and you shape the future.
Whether you like it or not the responsibility for changing the world is never the responsibility of others, it is your responsibility.

- Always be present, in the present.
- Be fully vested in the things you do.
- Recognize the depth of your value is beyond all you can ever imagine.
Stop, and think for a moment. Ponder on your very existence. Do you know, you were born from the choice and action of another.
Your miraculous being results from a precious choice, made in a moment.
The very fact that you yet live means that you have a purpose, and you can yet do miraculous things.
It takes a miracle to recognize a miracle, and to create and bring about much more after the same kind.

We begin to understand our value and our purpose.

Bradley, L. (2010). “The Butterfly Effect; Chaos and Fractals.” Retrieved 19 May 2015 from http://www.stsci.edu/~lbradley/seminar/butterfly.html
Fractal foundation (2013). What is Chaos Theory? Retrieved 19 May 2015 from http://fractalfoundation.org/resources/what-is-chaos-theory/