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Download Free Coloring Books From 100 Museums, Libraries, and Iconic Collections

New York Academy of Medicine Library

Adult coloring can relax the fear center in your brain known as the amygdala, reducing stress, and helping improve your sleep and focus. It’s also fun.

To get as many as people involved in arts—and the joys of coloring—as possible, the New York Academy of Medicine Library has been hosting an annual #ColorOurCollections project since 2016, with global museums, libraries, archives, and academic institutions participating in the creation of completely free, downloadable coloring pages inspired by their collections.

The coloring books from 2021 and the five years prior remain accessible year-round for free download. You can check out the different options here (note that the website is a little tricky to navigate: To get to the PDF you’d like to download, you’ll want to click on a title, for example ‘Eton College Library Coloring Book 2021’. On the new page that click takes you to, click on the hyperlink with the same title, and that’s your PDF).

You could draw over vintage motorcycle posters from the archives at Harley-Davidson. You could color in ancient book pages from Barcelona. Victorian flora and fauna illustrations, old medical sketches—it’s all available, so just take your pick.

And if none of these printable PDFs are really striking you?

RELATED: From Miniature Sushi to Tiny Cakes, Mom Makes Exquisite Dollhouse Food — LOOK

Over the past year, everyone from West Elm to illustrator Johanna Bashford—who popularized adult coloring with her books like Secret Garden and The Enchanted Forest—have been creating free books for anyone to download and color in. And they’re wonderful.

Johanna Bashford

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“When people don’t express themselves, they die one piece at a time.” – Laurie Halse Anderson

Quote of the Day: “When people don’t express themselves, they die one piece at a time.” – Laurie Halse Anderson, Speak

Photo: by Giancarlo Corti

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

8 in 10 Youth Think Gardening is Cool, and Half Would Rather Visit a Garden Center Than a Nightclub

Eight in 10 young people think gardening is cool—and it turns out that more than half would rather go to a garden center than a nightclub.

A poll of 2,000 people found horticulture has enjoyed a renaissance among 18 to 34 year-olds during lockdown.

The appeal appears to be rooted in young people having a desire to make their homes and gardens a nicer place to be, to improve mental health, and create a space they can escape to.

It also emerged gardening is so popular that young adults spend close to two hours during a typical week taking care of their beloved plants.

Kev Smith, head of marketing at Draper Tools, which commissioned the survey, said: “The popularity among young adults is fantastic to see, we knew it was popular, but even we were surprised by the outpouring of love for it.

“There’s a tendency to think of gardening as an activity for older people, but this poll proves that gardening really is for everyone, whatever your age.

“Gardening is a very calming activity, as well as a rewarding one—everyone can enjoy the benefits it brings.”

The survey found the most popular houseplants among those polled are cacti, orchids, and aloe vera, followed by basil, spider plants, and peace lilies.

Outdoors, the most common are daffodils, roses, and lavender, along with tulips, mint, and hydrangea.

While the act of gardening itself is one of the biggest appeals—it appears to be bigger more than that.

Two thirds (66 percent) also said they love shopping for gardening items, whether that’s plants, seeds, or tools.

To date, the Brits polled have spent £318.56 ($452) on such items—with 58 percent revealing they’ve spent more on gardening during the past 12 months or so than ever before.

MORE: 8 Cheap Gardening Hacks For Plants – Using Wine and Plastic Bottles, Orange Peels and Coffee Grounds

In fact, 56 percent said gardening is one of the things which has kept them going in the wake of the pandemic.

But this doesn’t mean their interest looks likely to shrivel up like an unloved plant—72 percent intend to keep on investing in plants, tools, equipment, and more to fulfil their vision for their garden.

Carried out through OnePoll, the study also found 60 percent wish they had access to more outside space than they do currently, so they could be even more green thumbed.

However, 78 percent believe you don’t need a big outdoor area to experience the benefits of gardening.

READ: Step Inside the Magical World of An Ancient Tradition: Growing Rhubarb by Candlelight

The most popular place to grow plants is on the kitchen windowsill, while living rooms, bathrooms, and balconies are also popular locations for all things green.

Kev Smith added: “Gardening is incredibly accessible which might in part explain its increasing popularity.

“Wherever you live, whatever your space, anyone can give growing plants a go—and we’re seeing more and more people embracing this.

CHECK OUT: Paul McCartney is Helping People Grow Their Own Fruits and Vegetables in the UK for Better Health and Wellbeing

“The transformative effect of plants on areas big or small is just one of many great things about having plants in your home—both inside and out.” Cheers to that.

MOST POPULAR HOUSEPLANTS AMONG YOUNG ADULTS

1. Cactus
2. Orchids
3. Aloe Vera
4. Basil
5. Spider Plant
6. Peace Lily
7. Tomatoes
8. Chilli
9. Money Plant
10. Parsley
11. Snake Plant
12. Ivy Houseplant
13. Cress
14. Monstera (cheese plant)
15. Chives
16. Air Plant
17. Lucky Bamboo
18. Fiddle Leaf Fig
19. Prayer Plants
20. Umbrella Plant

MOST POPULAR GARDEN PLANTS AMONG YOUNG ADULTS

1. Daffodils
2. Roses
3. Lavender
4. Tulips
5. Mint
6. Hydrangea
7. Clematis
8. Geranium
9. Magnolia
10. Hyacinth
11. Snowdrops
12. Honeysuckle
13. Jasmine
14. Chrysanthemum
15. Iris
16. Hibiscus
17. Lupins
18. Wisteria
19. Ornamental Grass
20. Waterlilies

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Teacher Swaps Shoes With Student To Save Him From Missing His Graduation Ceremony

John Butler

High school graduations are one of the most important rites of passage in a teenager’s life. Four years of hard work, friendships, and dreams for the future all culminate in a shining moment that will be remembered long after the caps and gowns are collecting dust.

So imagine Daverius Peters’ dismay when on May 19, as he headed into the ceremony to receive his diploma, he was stopped at the door by the fashion police. Although his black-topped, white-soled sneakers were anything but outrageous, Peters learned they were in violation of the school’s dress code and he was denied entry.

It looked as if Peters was about to miss his chance to walk across the stage with his classmates—until someone stepped in with both feet—and shoes—to turn things around.

When the distraught senior caught sight of a friendly face he went looking for help. John Butler, a para-educator at Boutte, Louisiana’s Hahnville High School was on hand for the graduation as a parent, not a staff member, but once he learned the details of Peters’ predicament, he accompanied the young man he’d come to know and respect back to the entry to see if he could change the gatekeeper’s mind.

“[I was] hoping that maybe if she saw me with him, she would let it go, but she insisted on not letting this young man in, and I didn’t have time to go back and forth with her,” Butler told The Washington Post. “It was a no-brainer… This was the most important moment in his life up to that point, and I wasn’t going to let him miss it for anything.”

MORE: Couple Hides $1000 Cash Inside Baby Supplies at Target to Help Other Families – After Recalling Their Own Struggle

Without missing a beat, Butler simply swapped his size-11 loafers for Peters’ size-9 athletic shoes. With seconds to spare, Peters made it inside the venue just as the doors closed and was able to keep his place in the graduation line.

Although his family was initially confused by the last-minute wardrobe substitution, they were thrilled that Butler’s quick thinking kept a joyful celebration from turning into an ugly situation.

RELATED: Good Deed Takes Flight at Airport as Man Buys Ticket For Someone Desperate to Get Home

“I wasn’t surprised because Mr. Butler is that type of person,” a grateful Peters told The Washington Post. “At school, if you’re having a bad day, he’ll be the one to take you out of class, walk around the school with you and talk to you.”

It’s said that a truly generous man will give the shirt off his back to someone in need. Now it seems, the adage also applies to the shoes off his feet.

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Man Grows 18ft-Tall Plant – The Biggest in Britain – After Saving It From a Dumpster

SWNS
SWNS

A man has grown Britain’s biggest echium plant after saving it from a dumpster.

Tree surgeon Darren Wilson took the plant home three years ago after he saw it had been chucked away on a job he was working on.

He saved it and planted it in front of his house, and it has now grown to be the tallest in Britain—at 18th feet, it’s even taller than his house.

Echium plants are generally biannual, which means they usually flower in their second year.

However, Darren’s echium plant has flowered in its third year, meaning it had a whole extra year of growing before it flowered.

The 39-year-old from Saltash, Cornwall, believes a combination of good sunlight and a winter fleece during the cold months have helped it grow.

MORE: Gardener Grows Britain’s Biggest Tomato… Using Pantyhose

He said that after he and his wife measured the enormous plant, they decided to do some research online and try to find out how tall the biggest one was.

SWNS

Their research revealed that the tallest known echium in the UK was 16-feet tall—two whole feet shorter than Darren’s.

“We measured it Sunday and it had already grown three inches from Friday. It should stop growing once it’s finished flowering. Al the flowers will turn to seeds and the whole thing will die… But I reckon it’s still got another month’s growth.”

CHECK OUT: This Green-Fingered Gardener Has Grown Something Amazing – A Sunflower With 27 Heads

Darren stumbled upon the echium, which was much smaller at the time, in a clearance job he was doing. Since then, he’s been protecting the magnificent plant and wrapping it up in winter.

As for what the neighbors think of the tree-like plant?

Darren says: “One guy actually said he’s pretty sure it runs around the street at night when we’re all in bed.

“When you come up the road it’s just right there in your eyeline, so it stands out—it looks good, very impressive.” We could never deny that.

PASS On The Fun And Share With Your Gardening Friends on Social Media…

These Homegrown Mushroom Hives Could Save Ireland’s Bees

YouTube/James Dyson Foundation
YouTube/James Dyson Foundation

An Irish designer is hoping to save her island’s native bee species by creating special hives grown from mushrooms.

Placing on the world Top 20 for the James Dyson Design Award for Sustainability, the prototype hive, called Econooc, is being designed specifically by Niamh Damery for the Irish black bee, as well as to get more people involved in conservation.

Plummeting bee populations in Ireland are not only the result of habitat loss or pesticide use as is common elsewhere, but also because for years the country imported bee populations from warmer climates that have a hard time surviving the Irish weather.

Those introduced species bred with native bees to create hybrids that invaded black bee hives, but that still couldn’t cope with the weather. Econooc hives are grown from mycelium spores spread onto an agricultural byproduct, like wood shavings or straw, called a substrate.

Mycelium is the fibrous underground structure the supports the fruiting body—the mushrooms we see on walks—and is emerging as a potential super design tool. GNN has reported on its use to make things as varied as bricks, canoes, and even coffins. The mixture of mycelium and substrate is stuffed into a mold to mimic the natural structure of a beehive, before going in the oven to preserve the shape.

MORE: Eating Mushrooms a Few Times a Week Could Dramatically Reduce Dementia Risk, Says 6-Year Study

Econooc simulates the hollow of a native tree where black bees tend to build their hives in order to shelter themselves, their food, and their young from the rain. A landing pad where owners can watch bee activity in and out of the hive is made from recycled plastic, while the straps that secure it to the tree are old car seatbelts, making it almost entirely recycled or otherwise sustainable.

Damery also worked to create a calendar, which will be included in the purchase of every hive, that each month educates the owner on the different native plants growing in that period that require Irish black bees for pollination, as well as what exactly is happening inside the hive during that season.

CHECK OUT: Bees Actually Bite Plants to Make Them Flower Early – Surprising Scientists

In addition, once the month is finished, the owner can rip the calendar’s bottom part off, which is filled with wildflower seeds, and place it under an inch of soil in their garden to further aid in the efforts to save black bees and other Irish pollinators.

As soon as the Econooc is ready for market, we’ll be sure to let you know.

(WATCH the James Dyson Foundation video about this story below.)

BUZZ This Innovative Design Over to Pals on Social Media…

Astounding Fossil Discovery in California After Man Looks Closely at Petrified Tree And Finds Bones of Great Beasts

EDMUD

One of the biggest California fossil discoveries ever made has been found to include the remains of ancient mastodon, fish, and other mammals.

Encased amid the fossilized remains of a petrified forest, they were discovered by a local government ranger in the Mokelumne River watershed south east of Sacramento—and are now making headlines around the world of paleontology.

Thought to be from the Miocene Era of around 10 million years ago, ranger Greg Francek at the East Bay Municipal Utility District was in the area for work when he found the first fossilized tree, half buried in the soil.

Petrified wood, EBMUD

“I looked around the area further and I found a second tree,” Francek said in an EBMUD statement released this week. “And then a third and so on. After finding dozens of trees I realized that what I was looking at was the remains of a petrified forest.”

After millions of years, forests and trees buried in the ground become “petrified” or turned to minerals; coming from the Greek word “petra” which means stone. There are 19 petrified forests in the U.S., ranging in size from merely stands of trees to national park-sized forests.

It took three weeks of surveying the area for Francek to find his first vertebrate fossil; a piece about twice as big as his folding knife, broken in three places.

“What I didn’t comprehend at the time [of the initial find]” he said, “was the amazing fact that I was looking at the bones of great beasts that had roamed this landscape millions of years ago.”

Francek then reached out to every geology and paleontology expert in the area as fast as he could. Soon a team arrived from California State University, Chico, to begin excavating the fossils.

CHECK OUT: Woman Collecting Shellfish Discovers Dinosaur Footprint of ‘Jurassic Giant’

The bones of two elephant cousins, camel, rhino, horses, tortoises, and even a toothed-salmon weighing 400 pounds were all subsequently discovered there in what is one of the largest single discoveries in the state’s history.

Great Beasts

Most charismatic of Francek’s ‘Great Beasts’ was undoubtedly the complete skull of an American mastodon with all its teeth and magnificent tusks intact—the first discovery in the area since 1947. Needing over four days of work and eight people to load it into a truck, the two-tusked mastodon roamed Earth more than 10 million years ago before becoming extinct during the Pleistocene, just 12,000 years ago.

Mastodon tooth, EBMUD

A gomphothere was also discovered—a shorter cousin to the mastodon that sported four tusks, but that died out around 6 million years ago. It’s massive jaw required the assistance of a backhoe to heave it from the ground.

MORE: Newly Discovered Species of Saber-Toothed Cat Was So Big It Hunted Rhinos in America

Beyond this pair of tusked-titans, remains of merychippus, the three-toed progenitor of the modern horse, tapirs, single-hump camels, and even rhinoceros were all discovered there as well. One of the most challenging excavations was a Miocene salmon species, that judging by the skeleton, which was equipped with a mouth full of teeth, and could reach 400 pounds.

RELATED: Irish Farmer Stumbles Onto ‘Untouched’ Ancient Underground Tomb of Stone Near Dingle

Both state and federal government protections for the area have kicked in since its discovery, and the next step in the story is to try and parse out the classic scientific questions: why are the finds there, and how did they die.

You can learn more at EDMUD and Chico University, who both have excellent reports with stunning images of the finds.

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“Why didn’t I learn to treat everything like it was the last time. My greatest regret was how much I believed in the future.” – Jonathan Safran Foer

Nelson Santos Jr

Quote of the Day: “Why didn’t I learn to treat everything like it was the last time. My greatest regret was how much I believed in the future.” – Jonathan Safran Foer, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Photo: by Nelson Santos Jr

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Nelson Santos Jr

 

Inspiring College Principal Converts 8 Acres of Treeless Land into Mini Forest and Orchard on India Campus

Tagore Government Arts and Science College

This blog was submitted to GNN by one of our readers for publishing. If you have an interesting story of kindness or positivity, be sure and send it to us for review.

Situated along the coast of the Bay of Bengal is one of the most beautiful territories of India. Named Pondicherry / Puducherry, it charms visitors with its soothing breezes and jaw-dropping sunsets.

Among the numerous government and private colleges here is a gem known as the Tagore Government Arts and Science College, which stands out from the rest—not so much for its education, but the amazing ecosystem grown on campus by the college principal, Sasikanta Dash.

After 4 years of consistent effort, since Dash took the position in 2017, the green spaces have become mesmerizing.

“I was appalled by the vast treeless lands staring at me,” he told GNN. “It was a defining moment for me as I could gauge the under-utilized potential of this blank space.”

Then and there he decided to convert this place to the most lustrous green cover ever possessed by a college.

Today the college boasts of its 8 acres of green cover—home to plants and wildlife and oxygen-rich air coming from trees that include 100 palms, neem, banyan, burflower (Kadamba), and Bodhi. They have beautiful blooming flowers like jasmine, crape jasmine, champa (a variety of magnolia), hibiscus, sadabahar (periwinkle), morning glory, and many more.

RELATED: India Fishermen Divert Their Catch of Ocean Plastic So it Can Be Used to Rebuild Roads

Best of all are the orchards of nutritious fruits that include 50 Jackfruit trees, 25 mango trees, 45 coconut and papaya trees, and 10 pomegranate trees, along with guavas, lemons, bananas, and blackberries hanging from limbs and shrubs inside the campus.

Tagore Government Arts and Science College

Some land is also devoted to producing seasonal vegetables. Students can watch a variety of birds that now call the campus home—including woodpeckers, parrots, kingfishers, cuckoos, sparrows, and owls.

“We have constructed rainwater harvesting setups that recharged 1.2 million liters of water last year,” says Dash proudly. “Recently we have been able to successfully draw honey from honey-combs installed as part of a new apiculture initiative at the college.”

POPULAR: Villagers Went Without Streetlights for 45 Days to Help a Bird and Its Hatchlings In India

And every single celebration here is honored by planting a tree, which are also planted in fond memories of departed souls.

The team at the college fully supports Dash’s efforts to create a nourishing environment, and helps maintain the flourishing ecosystem. Together, they strive to gift the students an environmentally sustainable campus that will inspire them to create legacies for India in all fields.

“We have come a long way from 100 trees 4 years ago to a mini forest (3000 trees) today,” says Dash. “It feels extremely good to say that a tour of the campus with its nature trails and seating benches will rejuvenate your spirits…equivalent to a nature tour in an eco-resort.”

LOOK: Photo of Paralyzed Man Cleaning Plastic From India River Goes Viral – And He’s Showered With Gifts to Better His Life

He welcomes everyone to visit the college for a glimpse of ‘the harmonious sustenance of humankind and nature’.

“It would be great if you could share your suggestions on how to make it an even better place.”

SHARE His Inspiration—and Invitation—With Colleges Around the World on Social Media…

Police Capture Elusive Tiger Poacher After 20 Years of Pursuing the Bengal Cat Killer

Rick L

News of the arrest of a poacher nicknamed ‘Tiger Habib’ has brought “sighs of relief” to local police and conservation officers in Bangladesh.

Rick L

The Guardian reported this week that police chief Saidur Rahman said Habib Talukder was finally in custody, and charged with numerous violations of wildlife conservation law.

He lived near the vast Sundarbans mangrove forest and would “flee whenever officers raided the area”.

The 50-year-old has been on the run for 20 years, Rahman said, and is suspected of hunting and killing dozens of Bengal tigers that live and swim in the local mangrove forest—containing one of the world’s largest populations of the majestic species.

RELATED: Great News For Tiger Populations Surging in India – and Discovered in Thailand

After an earlier crackdown on poaching and banditry, a 2019 study by Bangladesh’s forest department found a total of 114 Bengal tigers living in the Sundarbans area, a UNESCO heritage site. That number is up 7 percent from the record low in 2015.

One forest conservation officer described Habib as “a big headache for us.”

But with his capture, Bengal tigers—and the rest of the world—can rest more easily.

MORE: Nepal Set to Become First Country That Doubles Its Wild Tiger Population

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New Initiative Will Plant 18 Million Trees Around Glasgow in ‘Urban Forests’

By Phil Reid

A new partnership has vowed to plant 10 trees for every man, woman, and child in the Glasgow region as part of a new urban ‘forest’ network.

By Phil Reid

The ambitious planting pledge is being called the Clyde Climate Forest initiative, and it will ‘breathe new life’ across the eight local authorities around Scotland’s largest city.

The 18 million trees to be planted over the next decade will increase woodland cover in the region from 17% to 20%.

The Glasgow & Clyde Valley Green Network, founded in 2007, is leading the way to help the city demonstrate its commitment to reaching Net Zero, as Glasgow hosts the next annual UN climate change conference, COP26, in November.

In Inverclyde, the first saplings were planted by Council leader Stephen McCabe, who, along with volunteers from the Friends of Coves Community Nature Reserve group, agreed that ‘must do all we can to protect our planet.’

RELATED: Forests Regrown Since 2000 Covers the Size of France, Potentially Absorbing a Full Year of U.S. Emissions

“The pandemic has brought into focus like never before the value of local spaces as places to exercise, de-stress and engage with nature,” said Susan Aitken, Leader of Glasgow City Council.

There are around 112 square-miles (29k ha) of broadleaved woodland in the region, but they are fragmented due to urban development. The new planting aims to connect these woodlands and help restore nature and boost biodiversity.

The right tree in the right place, while reducing blight

The project team aims to focus on areas of deprivation—former coal mining sites, vacant and derelict land, and urban streets—but will operate on the planting principle ‘the right tree in the right place’.

RELATED: World Achieves its Target to Protect More Land, Adding 42%—the Size of Russia—in Last Decade

They are also calling on community groups and land managers to help identify places to plant new trees, or replace ones that have been lost in the past.

Work is also beginning to encourage smaller land owners and local authorities by providing free woodland assessments to identify potential new areas to be greened up with trees.

“Trees are nature’s own green lungs, improving the air that we breathe and soaking up harmful CO2 emissions from our environment,” said Councillor Andrew Polson who is Chair of the Land Use and Sustainability Portfolio for Glasgow City Region.

RELATED: Scotland Blows World Away With Wind Power Equal to 118% of Nation’s Electricity Needs in 2017s

“We all have a fantastic opportunity to work collectively to improve our living environment whilst tackling climate change at the same time.”

This is a first for Scotland, with eight local authorities working together with government and other partners on a major woodland creation initiative, but the nation of Scotland has been no slouch when it comes to reforesting.

It carried the UK on its green shoulders in 2018 when England fell short of its tree planting targets, but Scotland surged past its own by planting 22 million new trees.

The majority of woodland planting will be funded through Scottish Forestry’s various grant schemes but also through funding mechanisms that the Clyde Climate Forest can leverage on its own.

LOOK: 361 Golden Retrievers Met Up in Scotland to Celebrate Their Breed’s Birthday

For instance, the project secured a £400,000 grant from the Woodland Trust’s Emergency Tree Fund. Individuals and community groups can also donate to the Clyde Climate Forest project, here.

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“Take responsibility of your own happiness, never put it in other people’s hands.” – Roy T. Bennett

Quote of the Day: “Take responsibility of your own happiness, never put it in other people’s hands.” – Roy T. Bennett, The Light in the Heart

Photo: by Caju Gomes

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

Dad Hilariously Struggles to Keep Triplets From Climbing Furniture (Watch)

We don’t have the details, but a video has gone viral for its amusing peek into a parent’s life with triplets.

With all 3 kiddos walking around the room at the same time, our immediate reaction was, ‘That’s a full time job right there.’

Just like the mama bear that needed to get all four cubs across the road, we couldn’t help but smile—and relate to—this dad who is doing his best to keep two of the triplet babies from climbing onto the kitchen table from multiple chairs.

If the family could bottle-up such youthful determination, they’d have plenty of buyers.

ALSO WATCH: Clever Australian Shepherd Appears to Outsmart Owner, So He Can Get Two Treats

SEND a Laugh to Your Friends on Social Media…

This Week’s Inspiring Horoscopes From Rob Brezsny’s ‘Free Will Astrology’

Our partner Rob Brezsny provides his weekly wisdom to enlighten our thinking and motivate our mood. Rob’s Free Will Astrology, is a syndicated weekly column appearing in over a hundred publications. He is also the author of Pronoia Is the Antidote for Paranoia: How All of Creation Is Conspiring To Shower You with Blessings. (A free preview of the book is available here.)

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week beginning June 3, 2021
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
“All I want to be is normally insane,” said actor Marlon Brando. Yikes! I have a different perspective. I would never want to be normally insane because that state often tends to be sullen and desperate and miserable. My preferred goal is to be quite abnormally insane: exuberantly, robustly, creatively free of the toxic adjustments that our society tells us are necessary. I want to be cheerfully insane in the sense of not being tyrannized by conventional wisdom. I want to be proactively insane in the sense of obeying my souls’ impulses rather than conforming to people’s expectations. I bring this to your attention, Gemini, because I believe the coming weeks will be a fruitful time for you to be my kind of insane.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
“It’s one thing to make a mistake, it’s another to become wedded to it,” advised author Irena Karafilly. Let’s make that one of your key truths in the coming weeks. Now is a good time to offer yourself forgiveness and to move on from any wrong turns you’ve made. Here’s a second key truth, courtesy of composer Igor Stravinsky: “I have learned throughout my life as a composer chiefly through my mistakes and pursuits of false assumptions, not by my exposure to founts of wisdom and knowledge.” Third key truth, from Sufi teacher Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan: “Don’t be concerned about being disloyal to your pain by being joyous.”

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the number of perfect moments you will experience during the next two weeks could break all your previous records. And what do I mean by “perfect moments”? 1. Times when life brings you interesting events or feelings or thoughts that are novel and unique. 2. Pivotal points when you sense yourself undergoing a fundamental shift in attitude or a new way of understanding the world. 3. Leaping out of your own mind and into the mind of an animal or other person so as to have a pure vision of what their experience is like. 4. An absolute appreciation for yourself just the way you are right now.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
“There is strong shadow where there is much light,” wrote Virgo author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832). That’s a good metaphor for you these days. Since I suspect you are currently shining as brightly as you possibly can, I will urge you to become acutely aware of the shadows you cast. In other words, try to catch glimpses of the unripe and unformed parts of your nature, which may be more easily seen than usual. Now, while you’re relatively strong and vibrant, investigate what aspects of your inner world might need improvement, care, and healing.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
According to physicists, it’s impossible for a human being to suck water up through a straw that’s more than 34 feet long. So please don’t even try to do that, either now or ever. If, however, you have a good reason to attempt to suck water up a 33-foot straw, now would be an excellent time to do so. Your physical strength should be at a peak, as is your capacity for succeeding at amazing, herculean tasks. How else might you direct your splendid abilities? What other ambitious feats could you pull off?

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Scorpio poet Ezra Pound had character flaws that bother me. But he also had a quality I admire: generosity in helping his friends and colleagues. Among the writers whose work he championed and promoted with gusto were 20th-century literary icons James Joyce, T. S. Eliot, Marianne Moore, Hilda Doolittle, William Butler Yeats, Ernest Hemingway, William Carlos Williams, and Robert Frost. Pound edited their work, arranged to get them published in periodicals and anthologies, connected them with patrons and editors, and even gave them money and clothes. In accordance with astrological omens, I encourage you to be like Ezra Pound in the coming weeks. Make an extra effort to support and boost your allies. Assist them in doing what they do well. To do so will be in your own best interest!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Poet Tess Gallagher praises those times “when desire has strengthened our bodies.” I want you to have an abundance of those moments during the coming weeks. And I expect that cultivating them will be an excellent healing strategy. So here’s my advice: Do whatever’s necessary to summon and celebrate the strong longings that will strengthen your body. Tease them into bountiful presence. Treasure them and pay reverence to them and wield them with gleeful passion.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
“To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else,” observed poet Emily Dickinson. That’s the truth! Given how demanding it is to adjust to the nonstop challenges, distractions, and opportunities of the daily rhythm, I’m impressed that any of us ever get any work done. According to my astrological analysis, you Capricorns are now experiencing a big outbreak of this phenomenon. It’s probably even harder than usual to get work done, simply because life keeps bringing you interesting surprises that require your ingenuity and resourcefulness. The good news is that these surges of ingenuity and resourcefulness will serve you very well when the hubbub settles down a bit and you get back to doing more work.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Aquarius-born August Strindberg (1849–1912) was a masterful and influential playwright. He also liked to dabble in painting and photography. His approach in those two fields was different from the polish he cultivated in his writing. “I am an amateur and I intend to stay that way,” he testified about his approach in the visual arts. “I reject all forms of professional cleverness or virtuosity.” Just for now, Aquarius, I recommend you experiment with the latter attitude in your own field. Your skill and earnestness will benefit from doses of playful innocence, even calculated naiveté.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Which of the astrological signs feels the deepest feelings? I say it’s you Pisceans. You’re connoisseurs of deep feelings, as well as specialists in mysterious, multi-splendored, brushes-with-infinity feelings. And right now, you’re in the Deepest Feelings Phase of your personal cycle. I won’t be surprised if you feel a bit overwhelmed with the richness of it all. But that’s mostly a good thing that you should be grateful for—a privilege and a superpower! Now here’s advice from deep-feeling author Pearl Buck: “You cannot make yourself feel something you do not feel, but you can make yourself do right in spite of your feelings.”

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
“There is ecstasy in paying attention,” writes Aries author Anne Lamott. That’s always true for everyone, but it’s extra true for you Aries people. And it will be extra ultra-especially true for you during the next 20 days. I hope you will dedicate yourself to celebrating and upgrading your perceptual abilities. I hope you will resolve to see and register everything just as it is in the present moment, fresh and unprecedented—and not as it was in the past or will be in the future. For best results, banish all preconceptions that might interfere with your ability to notice what’s raw and real. If you practice these high arts with exhilarating diligence, you will be rewarded with influxes of ecstasy.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Your guiding wisdom comes from Taurus author Annie Dillard. She writes, “I think it would be well, and proper, and obedient, and pure, to grasp your one necessity and not let it go, to dangle from it limp wherever it takes you.” I suspect that Dillard’s approach will enable you to maintain a righteous rhythm and make all the right moves during the coming weeks. If you agree with me, your crucial first step will be to identify the nature of your “one necessity.” Not two necessities. Just the single most important.

WANT MORE? Listen to Rob’s EXPANDED AUDIO HOROSCOPES, 4-5 minute meditations on the current state of your destiny — or subscribe to his unique daily text message service at: RealAstrology.com

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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Concerned Farmer Uses Drone to Check on Sick Calf

JuJube the calf is facing some serious challenges, but farmer Dave is doing everything he can to ensure it grows up to enjoy life on this “ethical farm”.

A few weeks ago in Ontario, Canada, JuJube was born with difficulty walking and getting up, and a calf who cannot stand is unable to nurse or follow the herd around the vast expanse of rolling pasture.

With many acres of lush, green pasture and meadows to wander and graze upon, the calf’s mother Bernise has lived here for ten years, but in this situation, even a loving parent can’t help a sick creature like JuJube.

On this farm, which is family-owned and operated, they treat the animals more like pets—and Dave puts more emphasis on their health than profit.

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A veterinarian was hired to come out to the farm every few days to examine JuJube and check on his progress. They initially suspected he might suffer from white muscle disease, which is a deficiency in selenium. They gave JuJube vitamins and supplements by injection, along with anti-inflammatories and antibiotics because the animal could also be suffering from an infection in his joints.

JuJube has responded well to treatments, but just to make sure he’s looking healthy, farmer Dave has employed a drone to check up on the latest member of the herd…

WATCH the peaceful health check-up…

RELATED: Cuddling in Freezing Temperatures, Newborn Calf and Collie Become Adorable Best Friends

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“Break clear away, once in awhile, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean.” – John Muir (Today is World Environment Day)

Quote of the Day: “Break clear away, once in awhile, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean.” – John Muir (Today is World Environment Day)

Photo: by barnyz, CC license

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quote of the Day page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

Long-Lost Sisters Reunite And Discover Their Tattoos, Jobs, and Hobbies Match Exactly

SWNS
SWNS

A woman who took a DNA test found a secret sister who looks exactly like her, shares the same hobbies and job, and even has a matching tattoo.

27-year-old Victoria Voorhees knew she was adopted, and took a 23&Me home DNA test kit to find out a bit more about her Hispanic heritage and genetic make up.

She was astonished when the results revealed she had a sister—and was sent a photo of a woman who looked just like her.

Victoria—who was adopted when she was two months old—always dreamed of having an older sibling.

But she couldn’t believe her eyes on seeing the photo of her sister for the first time: “At first I was like there’s no way, I didn’t think it was possible, and maybe they found someone that has some similarities to me, but I know now that’s not how it works!”

MORE: Woman Reunites With Birth Mom After 50 Years and Learns She Starred In Her Favorite TV Show

She sent her sister a message through the 23&Me app, as well as to a predicted cousin she had been matched with, and rushed home to tell her parents.

28-year-old Alyss Ravae and Victoria chatted, then they joined a call with their biological mother for the first time. “I showed her some photos of me growing up with my adoptive parents,” says Victoria, “and she was happy but still crying!

Alyss says of her sister, “We live very parallel lives even though we were given very different situations.”

It’s not just their mutual love of Halloween—of Stephen King, of It and The Shining—that she was fascinated by; they both have bat tattoos—on opposite feet but the same part of the ankle.

Alyss said: “When she sent me that [tattoo] picture I literally just dropped my phone.”

RELATED: Young Woman is Trying to Adopt Her New Friend to Keep the 27-Year-old Out of a Lifetime of Institutions

They also both have cats and make and sell pet portraits online.

Victoria said: “We both like hiking trails as well, I’m going to show her all the cool ones around here [in Chicago]!”

(SEE all those common traits in this TikTok video below.)

@terribletaurus666

##duet with @victoriavvorhees completely different lives, shared dna, but basically the same person 🤣 ##adoption ##fyp ##storytime ##lostsiblings

♬ Stranger Things (Main Theme) - I Love TV Themes

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Brave 7-Year-old Boy Swims an Hour to Rescue His Dad and Little Sister

Chase Proust
Chase Proust/YouTube

In life and death situations, the instinct to save those we love can grant us near superhuman powers. On the eve of this past Memorial Day weekend, thanks to a small but mighty hero who rose to meet such a challenge, a father and little girl are alive to tell the tale.

Chase Poust is only 7. He, his dad Steven, and his 4-year-old sister, Abigail were out for a family boating excursion on Florida’s St. Johns River near Mandarin Point. Chase and Abigail were swimming at the stern of the anchored boat while Steven was on deck fishing.

It was an idyllic outing—until a strong current loosened Abigail’s grip and she let go of the boat. Instantly realizing his sister would be swept away, Chase let go of the boat as well to try and reach her.

Steven leaped into the water but after realizing he couldn’t keep up with both kids, he was faced with an agonizing decision. “I told them I loved them because I wasn’t sure what’s going to happen,” Steven told News-4 JAX. “I tried to stick with both of them. I wore myself out. She drifted away from me.”

Directing Chase to swim to shore for help, Steven stayed behind, keeping as close as he could to Abigail as the life-vest that was keeping her above the waves floated further and further from his reach.

It was a tough go for the 7-year-old, but rather than attempting to swim all out, Chase wisely paced himself. Stopping to float or dog paddle when he tired, he’d rest and then set off again.

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“The current was going the opposite way of going to the boat and the shore so it was very hard to swim that way,” Chase told JAX.

It took Chase an hour to reach the shore. Once on solid ground, he ran to the nearest house and called for help.

Members of the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department, Sheriff’s Office, and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission were dispatched to search for Steven and Abigail.

Miraculously, the two were found and rescued about an hour later—more than a mile away from the family’s abandoned boat.

RELATED: Video Captures Hero Cop Running to Lift Overturned Car Single-handedly to Save Woman

Steven Poust couldn’t be prouder of his son, or more grateful. Thanks to the determination of a pint-sized superhero, this is likely to be one Memorial Day the Poust family will never forget.

(WATCH the WJXT 4 video about this story below.)

Featured image: WJXT 4/YouTube

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U.S. Suspends Oil and Gas Leases in One of Nation’s Largest Wilderness Areas

USFWS
USFWS

The U.S. Department of the Interior announced this week that it has suspended all oil and gas drilling activities established under the previous administration in the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

One of nation’s largest undeveloped wilderness areas, the refuge is known for its fragile tundra, its coastal area underneath which 11 billion barrels of oil sits, and for being an important habitat for caribou, polar bears, and birds in Alaska.

After the Bureau of Land Management held a lease sale on January 6, it subsequently issued 10-year leases on nine tracts covering more than 430,000 acres.

According to a statement, a comprehensive environmental review of the leases will now take place under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Secretarial Order 3401 will also address legal deficiencies in the current leasing program’s environmental review.

The Department is notifying lessees that it is suspending oil and gas leases in the Arctic Refuge while this review goes on—in order to determine whether the leases should be reaffirmed, voided, or subject to additional mitigation measures.

MORE: Arctic Oil Drilling Plans Suffer ‘Stunning Setback’ as Almost ‘No One Shows Up’ For the Sale

According to the New York Times, various environmental groups have vocally given their support to the suspension—and are calling out for a permanent ban on drilling in the Arctic.

“Until the leases are canceled, they will remain a threat to one of the wildest places left in America,” Kristen Miller, acting director of the Alaska Wilderness League, told The Times. “Now we look to the administration and Congress to prioritize legislatively repealing the oil leasing mandate and restore protections to the Arctic Refuge Coastal Plain.”

In one statement, more than a dozen Indigenous and conservation organizations thanked the current administration for taking steps to protect the land.

“These lands are sacred to the Gwich’in and Iñupiat peoples and nursery to the Porcupine caribou, polar bears, and millions of migratory birds,” they wrote.

“More work remains, however, and we look forward to working with the administration on stronger action to correct this unlawful leasing program and preserve one of our nation’s most majestic public lands.”

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Moving Your Sleep Time An Hour Earlier Could Cut Depression Risk by 23%, Study Says

Kinga Cichewicz

Waking up just one hour earlier could reduce a person’s risk of major depression by 23%, suggests a sweeping new genetic study.

The study of 840,000 people, by researchers at University of Colorado Boulder and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, represents some of the strongest evidence yet that chronotype—a person’s propensity to sleep at a certain time—influences depression risk.

It’s also among the first studies to quantify just how much, or little, change is required to influence mental health.

As people emerge, post-pandemic, from working and attending school remotely—a trend that has led many to shift to a later sleep schedule—the findings could have important implications.

“We have known for some time that there is a relationship between sleep timing and mood, but a question we often hear from clinicians is: How much earlier do we need to shift people to see a benefit?” said senior author Celine Vetter, assistant professor of integrative physiology at CU Boulder. “We found that even one-hour earlier sleep timing is associated with significantly lower risk of depression.”

Previous observational studies have shown that night owls are as much as twice as likely to suffer from depression as early risers, regardless of how long they sleep. But because mood disorders themselves can disrupt sleep patterns, researchers have had a hard time deciphering what causes what.

Other studies have had small sample sizes, relied on questionnaires from a single time point, or didn’t account for environmental factors which can influence both sleep timing and mood, potentially confounding results.

In 2018, Vetter published a large, long term study of 32,000 nurses showing that “early risers” were up to 27% less likely to develop depression over the course of four years, but that begged the question: What does it mean to be an early riser?

To get a clearer sense of whether shifting sleep time earlier is truly protective, and how much shift is required, lead author Iyas Daghlas, M.D., turned to data from the DNA testing company 23 and Me and the biomedical database UK Biobank. Daghlas then used a method called “Mendelian randomization” that leverages genetic associations to help decipher cause and effect.

“Our genetics are set at birth so some of the biases that affect other kinds of epidemiological research tend not to affect genetic studies,” said Daghlas, who graduated in May from Harvard Medical School.

More than 340 common genetic variants, including variants in the so-called “clock gene” PER2, are known to influence a person’s chronotype, and genetics collectively explains 12-42% of our sleep timing preference.

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The researchers assessed deidentified genetic data on these variants from up to 850,000 individuals, including data from 85,000 who had worn wearable sleep trackers for 7 days and 250,000 who had filled out sleep-preference questionnaires. This gave them a more granular picture, down to the hour, of how variants in genes influence when we sleep and wake up—the results of which have just been published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.

In the largest of these samples, about a third of surveyed subjects self-identified as morning larks, 9% were night owls and the rest were in the middle. Overall, the average sleep mid-point was 3 a.m., meaning they went to bed at 11 p.m. and got up at 6 a.m.

With this information in hand, the researchers turned to a different sample which included genetic information along with anonymized medical and prescription records and surveys about diagnoses of major depressive disorder.

MORE: You Should Not Be Eating Late at Night: Here’s Why and How You Can Avoid it

Using novel statistical techniques, they asked: Do those with genetic variants which predispose them to be early risers also have lower risk of depression?

The answer is a firm yes.

Each one-hour earlier sleep midpoint (halfway between bedtime and wake time) corresponded with a 23% lower risk of major depressive disorder.

This suggests that if someone who normally goes to bed at 1 a.m. goes to bed at midnight instead and sleeps the same duration, they could cut their risk by 23%; if they go to bed at 11 p.m., they could cut it by about 40%.

It’s unclear from the study whether those who are already early risers could benefit from getting up even earlier. But for those in the intermediate range or evening range, shifting to an earlier bedtime would likely be helpful.

What could explain this effect?

Some research suggests that getting greater light exposure during the day, which early-risers tend to get, results in a cascade of hormonal impacts that can influence mood.

Others note that having a biological clock, or circadian rhythm, that trends differently than most peoples’ can in itself be depressing.

RELATED: New Study Shows Healthy Sleep Habits Help Lower Risk of Heart Failure by 42%

“We live in a society that is designed for morning people, and evening people often feel as if they are in a constant state of misalignment with that societal clock,” said Daghlas.

He stresses that a large randomized clinical trial is necessary to determine definitively whether going to bed early can reduce depression. “But this study definitely shifts the weight of evidence toward supporting a causal effect of sleep timing on depression.”

For those wanting to shift themselves to an earlier sleep schedule, Vetter offers this advice:

“Keep your days bright and your nights dark,” she says. “Have your morning coffee on the porch. Walk or ride your bike to work if you can, and dim those electronics in the evening.”

Source: University of Colorado at Boulder

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