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Thanks to Student’s Hunch, Seniors With Dementia Are ‘Coming Alive’ Again With the ‘Magic’ of Virtual Reality

Startup uses virtual reality to help seniors re-engage with the world
Rendever’s VR platform brings new experiences and fond memories to aging adults in nursing homes.
Written by Zach Winn
MIT News

As Reed Hayes stood inside an assisted living facility in front of an elderly man struggling with dementia, he wasn’t quite sure what to expect.

The man sat slouched in his wheelchair, unmoving, his eyes barely open. Hayes had enrolled in MIT’s Sloan School of Management with the idea of helping older adults overcome depression and isolation through the immersive world of virtual reality. Now he needed to test his idea.

Hayes turned on a virtual reality experience featuring a three-dimensional painting by Vincent Van Gogh and a classical piano playing in the background. Nervously, he placed the headset on the man. What happened next stunned everyone in the room.

“He just came alive,” Hayes remembers. “He started moving around, tapping his feet, laughing. He was all of a sudden much more engaged in the world, and this from someone who was slouched over, to now kind of bouncing around. [My classmate] Dennis and I looked at each other like, ‘Holy cow, we might be onto something.’ It was remarkable.”

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It would not be the last time Hayes and Dennis Lally saw the transformative impact of virtual reality (VR). Their startup, Rendever, has since brought its VR experiences to more than 100 senior living communities, and has launched in hospitals to extend the enthralling world of VR to patients of all ages.

“Starting Rendever was one of the most important things I’ve done in my life,” Hayes says. “It holds a special place in my heart, and it’s probably the most material impact I’ll have in my life.”

Rendever’s main product is its resident engagement platform, which offers users a variety of games and activities like virtual scuba diving and hiking, and includes content from diverse sources that let users travel almost anywhere in the world. One of the most important features of the platform, though, is its ability to sync to multiple headsets at once, prompting social group activities.

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“It’s amazing to see them point things out to each other and engage with one another, yelling ‘Look left!’ Or ‘There’s a puppy at our feet!’” says Grace Andruszkiewicz, Rendever’s director of marketing and partnerships. “Or, if they’re in Paris, someone might say, ‘I was in Paris in 1955 and there was this cute café,’ and people start adding details and telling their own stories. That’s where the magic happens.”

The company, which uses off-the-shelf headsets, also offers a family engagement portal so relatives can upload personal content like photos or videos that let users relive fond memories or be present in places they can’t physically be in. For example, family members can borrow a 360-degree camera, or purchase their own, to take to weddings or on family vacations.

The idea for the company was first sketched out by Hayes on a napkin at a university café as part of a pitch to Lally shortly after they’d come to MIT. With the help of two other MIT students, they officially launched the company in the fall of 2016.

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Since then, everyone at the company has racked up a series of unforgettable memories watching older adults use the platform. Lally remembers one early test when they gave an older woman the experience of seeing the Notre-Dame cathedral in France.

“She was so ecstatic to be able to see this church from the inside, something she had dreamt about, and we were able to kind of fulfill a lifelong dream of hers,” Lally says. Indeed, the company says it specializes in helping seniors cross items off their bucket list.

Rendever’s team adds original content to its platform twice a month, much of it based on feedback from residents at the communities that subscribe to the service. Subscriptions include headsets, a control tablet, a large content library, training, support, and warranties.

The company also helps nursing homes deliver personalized content to their residents, which makes for some of the most powerful experiences.

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“Once there was an older adult who just kept saying ‘I want to go home,’ but she was in an assisted living community because she was showing signs of dementia,” Hayes remembers. “With the technology that we’d built, we were able to type in the address of her home and take her there. And she started crying tears of joy. She kept saying, ‘This is the most beautiful place in the world.’”

Now the company is working to reproduce in clinical trials the results they’ve seen with individual clients.

A study performed in conjunction with the MIT AgeLab and presented at the 2018 International Conference on Human Aspects of IT for the Aged Population compared social VR experiences for older adults with watching the same scenes on a television. The researchers found that the people who had shared these experiences through VR were significantly less likely to report depression or social isolation and more likely to feel better about their overall well-being.

“To this day, the power of the shared experience remains at the heart of our philosophy, and we owe much of that to our roots at MIT and ongoing collaboration with the MIT AgeLab,” says Rendever CEO Kyle Rand.

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Rendever is also deploying its system outside of senior living communities. A study with UCHealth in Colorado used Rendever’s VR as a distraction for patients undergoing unpleasant treatments such as chemotherapy. After the program, 88 percent of participants said they’d use VR again.

The system has worked so well that many of Rendever’s employees have used it with their own aging relatives. Before Andruszkiewicz accepted a job at the company, she asked if she could take a demo set to her 89-year-old grandmother.

“She started telling me stories that I’d never heard before, and she and I have a really close relationship, so it was surprising that some of her memories had come back,” Andruszkiewicz says. “That sealed the deal for me.”

Factors such as quality of life and mental stimulation have long been suspected to influence impairments related to aging. Rendever’s team is hoping the transformations they’ve seen can be replicated through peer-reviewed research. One particular transformation sticks with everyone.

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For years, an elderly woman named Mickey was the most outgoing and friendly person in her Connecticut assisted living community. She knew everyone’s name, was a regular at community events, and always had a smile on her face.

Then she was diagnosed with dementia. One of her first symptoms was expressive aphasia, a disorder that robbed her of her ability to speak. Mickey’s silence left a void in the community and saddened residents and staff members.

Then Rendever’s team came in to do training. A staff member, with tears in his eyes, told the team about Mickey, so they cued up a scene of golden retriever puppies and put the headset on her.

“She completely lights up,” Andruszkiewicz recalls. “Mickey was trying to pet the puppies, and calling them over, and she was talking throughout the experience.”

From a clinical perspective, it’s too early to say that VR improves symptoms related to aging, but when Rendever followed up with the Connecticut community six months later, they learned something interesting: Mickey had continued using Rendever, and continued communicating with old friends who never thought they’d hear from her again.

Reprinted with permission from MIT News

(WATCH the video below)

Mickey's Story from Rendever on Vimeo.

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21-Year-old Hotel Employee Hailed as Hero After Taking Care of 90 Guests During 36 Hours of Flooding in Texas

 

When dozens of people were trapped inside of a Texas hotel amidst torrential flooding earlier this week, a 21-year-old employee was hailed as their hero.

Satchel Smith typically only manages the front desk at the Homewood Suites in Beaumont. After his father dropped him off for work on Wednesday, he expected to work his regular 8-hour shift before heading home later that evening.

That was until Tropical Storm Imelda rolled through the area and flooded many of the local roads and highways.

Smith was now the only employee who was managing the hotel with 90 guests trapped inside—and he rose to the challenge with awe-inspiring grace and gusto.

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Angela Chandler, who was one of the guests staying at the hotel under Smith’s care, took a photo of the college student and published it to Facebook so she could praise him for his work.

“Satchel has been here all night,” she wrote. “His coworkers couldn’t make it to work so he stayed. He has manned the phones, answered each of our questions, ensured that we have had a hot cup of coffee or tea, and helped serve us a hot breakfast. He has handled this situation with grace, kindness, and a beautiful smile on his face.”

For 36 hours straight, Smith was the hotel’s manager, front desk attendant, maintenance man, and kitchen crew. Thankfully, he was not entirely alone in his work; many of the guests banded together to help him serve the meals and wash the dishes—which he was particularly grateful for since the college student admits that he isn’t a very good cook.

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Other guests even volunteered to help Smith brave the downpour and bring clean water and food to the truckers stranded nearby.

“The guests were very helpful,” he told CNN. “It was basically like a big family.”

After his co-worker arrived on Friday, Smith was able to take a quick nap before he went back to work and waited for his family to pick him up.

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“No one you have been… ever leaves you. The new parts of you simply jump in the car and go along for the rest of the ride. The success of your journey all depend on who’s driving.” – Bruce Springsteen (turns 70 today)

Quote of the Day: “No one you have been… ever leaves you. The new parts of you simply jump in the car and go along for the rest of the ride. The success of your journey all depend on who’s driving.” – Bruce Springsteen (turns 70 today)

Photo: by Alexandre Baron, CC license on Flickr, cropped

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

 

Disney Brings Back ‘Bedtime Hotline’ to Help Parents Get Children to Sleep

Photo by Tim Malabuyo, CC license

A recent survey showed that 77 percent of parents are exhausted by the process of getting their children to bed, but they might be happy to learn about the return of the “Disney Bedtime Hotline.”

Parents in America can once again incorporate a little Disney magic into their bedtime routine, with short voicemail messages featuring their kids’ favorite characters on-demand.

Giving the kids something to look forward to at bedtime should exponentially ease the process of coaxing them into their room when they want to keep playing.

Just like last year, parents call a toll-free number and choose between six special goodnight messages from top Disney characters sweetly urging the little ones off to bed.

“Nothing lulls a child into slumber quite like the soothing speech of Yoda the Jedi master,” says the DisneyShop’s post on Facebook.

The characters detail their day, then talk about how ready they are for bedtime. Wise Yoda then adds a reminder that even Jedi knights must catch some shut-eye. “Feel the force around you—like a blanket it is, hmmm!”

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Here’s how it works:

Dial 1-877-7-MICKEY (877-764-2539), then press the number 2 on your phone to bypass the advertising message that asks if you want to opt-in to receive texts from the Disney Store.

Then you—or your child—can press whichever number character you want to hear from:
Press 1 for Mickey Mouse
Press 2 for Woody
Press 3 for Princess Jasmine
Press 4 for Anna and Elsa
Press 5 for Yoda
Press 6 Spiderman

“My 2 year old daughter went to bed with the biggest smile after hearing from Mickey.” wrote one Disney fan, Heidy Colón-Lugo, on Facebook, thanking the company. “The fastest she has ever gone to sleep too!”

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Not every real-life story has a happy ending though: because the hotline will run only through September 30, it might require some actual magic to put kids to bed in October.

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MIT Scientists Accidentally Discover ‘Blackest Black’ Material Ever, Inspired by Artist Who Uses it to Amaze Audiences

Photo by Diemut Strebe / MIT News
Photo used by permission from Diemut Strebe

MIT engineers were delighted to report that they had accidentally cooked up a material that is 10 times blacker than anything previously recorded—and it was due to an artist’s vision for a provocative art piece that combined Greek philosophy, elemental physics, and the arbitrary value humans place on luxury items.

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The researchers published their findings last week in the journal ACS-Applied Materials and Interfaces. But much more fascinating was the unveiling of the cloak-like material in a new art/science exhibit at the New York Stock Exchange, a place where arbitrary value is personified by the swarming hive of traders relegating value on items ranging from orange juice to gold.

Entitled “The Redemption of Vanity,” the artwork, conceived by Diemut Strebe—a German-born artist-in-residence at the MIT Center for Art, Science, and Technology—features a 16.78-carat natural yellow diamond estimated to be worth $2 million. Ms. Strebe worked for two years to try to acquire such a gem for the art piece until she found a willing partner in LJ West Diamonds.

Her idea, born in 2014, was a fusion of the Greek philosophy of Heraclitus, who revered the paradoxical nature of life, and her fascination with carbon nanotubes (CNTs), which are entirely black due to their composition of vertically-aligned microscopic filaments of carbon that act as a thick forest to block all light and shadow. Bright, sparkly diamonds, it turns out, are made of the exact same elements of carbon—just rearranged differently in their atomic lattice structure. “A gigantic opposite,” she told GNN, that inspired her to begin working on an art piece to exhibit the hidden paradox.

She wanted to completely coat a high-value stone with an ultra-black CNT material. And, inside the board room of the most famous stock exchange in the world, the effect has been regarded as sensational. Using the new breakthrough material that randomly presented itself to her scientific partners at MIT who were working on ways to grow carbon nanotubes using aluminum and salt, the new CNT material is 10 times blacker than anything that’s ever been reported—and the optics presented to invited guests in New York is arresting: The jewel, normally brilliantly faceted, appears as a flat, black void—a gem that absorbs all light.

Adding to the enchantment, Artnet reported that two large magnifying scopes were set up alongside the glass dome allowing viewers to get an even better look at the black hole where the diamond is perched.

A press release noted that the diamond cloaking is viewable by invitation only, until November 25.

Brian Wardle, the professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT who made the discovery, says the CNT material, aside from making an artistic statement, may also be of practical use in reducing unwanted glare in space telescopes.

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The Accidental Discovery

Wardle and his co-author on the paper—former MIT postdoc Kehang Cui—didn’t even intend to engineer an ultra-black material. Instead, they were experimenting with ways to grow carbon nanotubes on electrically conducting materials such as aluminum, to boost their electrical and thermal properties, according to MIT news.

At the time, Wardle’s group was using salt and other pantry products, such as baking soda and detergent, to grow the nanotubes. In their tests with salt, Cui noticed that chloride ions were eating away at aluminum’s surface and dissolving its oxide layer.

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The team had been working with Ms. Strebe on her art project, so he immediately noticed the change in the material’s color.

“I remember noticing how black it was before growing carbon nanotubes on it, and then after growth, it looked even darker,” Cui recalls. So he measured the optical reflectance of the sample.

“Our group does not usually focus on optical properties of materials, but this work was going on at the same time as our art-science collaborations with Diemut, so art influenced science in this case,” says Wardle.

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Cui measured the amount of light reflected by the material, not just from directly overhead, but also from every other possible angle. The results showed that the material absorbed at least 99.995 percent of incoming light, making it the blackest material on record. In other words, it reflected 10 times less light than all other superblack materials, including Vantablack, which had been previously considered for use in the art project.

“If the material contained bumps or ridges, or features of any kind, no matter what angle it was viewed from, these features would be invisible, obscured in a void of black,” wrote MIT News.

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“The researchers aren’t entirely sure of the mechanism contributing to the material’s opacity, but scientists believe that forests of carbon nanotubes can trap and convert most incoming light to heat, reflecting very little of it back out as light.”

Wardle and Cui have applied for a patent on the technology, but are making the new CNT process freely available to any artist to use for a noncommercial art project—and have already been approached by several artists.

The material is already gaining interest in the aerospace community. Astrophysicist and Nobel laureate John Mather, who was not involved in the research, but who Strebe had contacted five years earlier regarding her art project, is exploring the possibility of using Wardle’s material as the basis for a massive black shade that would shield a space telescope from stray light or glare as it searches for orbiting planets.

“This black has to be tough to withstand a rocket launch,” said Mather. “Old versions were fragile forests of fur, but these are more like pot scrubbers—built to take abuse.”

The Paradoxes of the Diamond are Multi-faceted

As for the starring role of the diamond, it has at least one museum in its future, and perhaps a trip to Sotheby’s auction house, says Strebe who hoped it would provoke thought about the unification of extreme opposites—the brightest jewel and the blackest veil sharing the same elemental make-up.

The “disappearing” diamond unveiled other paradoxes, too, that Strebe alluded to in a phone call with GNN. While a literal devaluation of a $2-million diamond takes place when its apparent beauty is cloaked, the art world with its own arbitrary value judgements might even increase the gem’s value after all its glitter has been enveloped by darkness.

And, equally ironic, as the exhibit opened, some news outlets were using the photo of the ‘devalued’ gem only to highlight a scientific discovery, relegating a five-year project to the level of a sleight-of-hand stunt.

“The swallowing of the diamond caused the swallowing of the artwork,” she mused.

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How to Let Go of a Grudge That is Stealing Your Joy

It’s no secret that a grudge can steal your joy. The enigma is how to let go of that grievance. For many people, living with resentment has become such an engrained, daily habit that any notion that they could break free of it seems like an unreachable goal—as difficult as breaking some Da Vinci Code.

That is thankfully incorrect. I have seen many people, including myself, break free from deep-seated, even life-long, resentments, by applying the principles in 12-step recovery programs. Learning to let go of resentments is actually a major theme in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). One of their most commonly repeated aphorisms regarding resentment is that it’s like drinking poison and waiting for the other person to die. They admonish members who want to be successfully sober to stop drinking the poison of resentment.

The same principles that have helped many people in recovery overcome their resentments can help anyone struggling with a grudge.

On that note, here are four steps you can take to rid yourself of the bad blood you may be harboring against someone in your life, which has turned to poison in your own:

1. Write down who you’re harboring a grudge against, the cause, how that grudge is affecting your life, and your part in harboring that grudge. This is a critical, first step to finding release from a grudge. It will only work if you’re willing to be fearlessly honest.

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When I work with people in early recovery who are just learning how to stay sober, we use a helpful outline for writing down our resentments. A key goal of this exercise is to be able to see clearly (written down on paper) who we’re resentful towards and how the poison we’re drinking is harming us. Only when we’re able to see clearly how a grudge is robbing us of our joy can we position ourselves to own our part in harboring the grudge. Only then can we take responsibility and effect inner change

When writing these things down, it can be very helpful to make four columns on a sheet of paper and organize your notes accordingly. (In the Sober Skills program that I help lead, this is how we approach the writing exercise.) In the first column, titled “Resentments,” name the individual or institution you are angry at. In the second column, titled “Cause,” write down the harm or injustice that legitimately caused your resentment.

The third column is called “Affected Areas of My Life.” In this column, you’ll list seven categories. They include the following: Pride; Personal Relations; Self-Esteem; Security; Ambition; Pocketbook; and Sexual Relations. Under each category, honestly answer the following questions:

  • Regarding Pride … How does this resentment affect how others see me?
  • Regarding Personal Relations … How does this resentment affect how I
    treat others?
  • Regarding Self-Esteem … How does this resentment affect how I see
    myself?
  • Regarding Security … How does this resentment affect my physical
    wellbeing? My emotional wellbeing?
  • Regarding Ambition … How does this resentment affect what I want?
  • Regarding Pocketbook … How does this resentment affect my financial
    wellbeing?
  • Regarding Sexual Relations … How does this resentment affect my sense of
    sexual identity?

2. Focus only on what you can do to move forward, not on what you can’t do. You cannot make the other person apologize or ask for your forgiveness. You can, however, accept what has happened—and even learn to forgive the person who has wronged you.

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My colleague Michael Peerbolte, who facilitates 12-step groups, gave the following example: “Say you’re holding a grudge against someone who fired you. When you take an inventory, you discover that your grudge affects your pride, your pocketbook, your personal relationships (because others may now think you’re not employable or are incompetent), and so on. Then you look at your part in this resentment and what you contributed to this situation. Maybe you weren’t consistently showing up to work on time or not giving your all. You look at the ways that you may have contributed to the animosity and conflict. Soon you begin to understand that you do have a part in this, and that’s the part you can accept and own.”

When you’ve found acceptance, you’re one more step closer to letting go of that resentment.

3. Wishing the best for the person who has wronged you. For the religious, this can be translated into ‘praying’ for the other person. This step can be hard: the idea of wishing the best for someone whom you despise or even hate may seem weird or impossible. But the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous is very clear that, “If you have a resentment you want to be free of, if you will pray for the person or the thing that you resent, you will be free.”

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What does it mean to “pray” for your enemy? It means that you ask God or your “Higher Power”, which is your inner best self, to give this person everything that you want for yourself or those whom you love. AA recommends that you “Ask for their health, their prosperity, their happiness,” and to make this request every day for two weeks.

While it may sound hokey, this spiritual formula for releasing a grudge really does work. I can say this from personal experience, both in my own life and in the lives of others in recovery.

4. Make amends to the person you have held a grudge against (when appropriate). The embodiment of letting go of a grudge is forgiveness, and making amends is how you enact this forgiveness. By making amends, you apologize for your part in the conflict (when the apology will not cause the other person or yourself further pain and harm).

As illustration, consider again the example of the hypothetical former boss whom you’re harboring a grudge against. To make amends, you might meet with them and tell them the ways in which you were in the wrong in your relationship.

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Maybe there were things you did on the job that merited being fired. Mention those things and ask for forgiveness. In this way, you can begin a conversation of healing.

On the other hand, if your former boss refuses to meet with you, that is okay, too. You still have done your part to try to make amends. That in itself is a form of making amends.

Resentment is toxic. Carrying around resentments and letting them fester can take a toll on our mental and physical health. The good news is that these four principles, when applied, can help us let go of the grudges that are ruining our health and happiness.

Art Jacob is Director of Sober Skills at FHE Health. FHE Health is a nationally recognized behavioral healthcare provider offering addiction treatment and mental health rehab programs to adults over the age of 18.

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“The great gift of human beings is that we have the power of empathy.” – Meryl Streep

Quote of the Day: “The great gift of human beings is that we have the power of empathy.” – Meryl Streep

Photo: by Heath Cajandig, CC license on Flickr, cropped

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

 

Man Connects With Humanity By Sharing Thousands of Hour-Long Conversations With Strangers

As we become more involved with technology and social media, it can often seem like the gap between human connections is widening—but Rob Lawless has dedicated countless hours to proving the opposite.

Every day for the last four years, Lawless has made a point of sitting down to have a hour-long face-to-face conversation with at least one stranger. Since he generally tends to meet with as many as four strangers every day, the 28 year-old extrovert from Philadelphia has talked with over 2,800 strangers since 2015.

When asked why, he simply says that he believes that “connecting with other individuals is the most valuable way that I can spend my time.”

When Lawless first got out of college, he landed a corporate job where his sense of connection to humanity quickly dwindled. “When I graduated with my Finance degree in 2013 and became a Business Analyst at Deloitte Consulting, I missed the feeling of familiarity I used to have with [the people] around me,” he told Good News Network.

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He was hungry to meet people organically, not in the rigid, corporate environment where there was always an agenda. So, in November of 2015, he decided to launch his 10KFriends project with the lofty goal of using it to meet 10,000 new people—and in July of 2016, after being laid off from his job, he began running the project full-time.

A typical day for Lawless begins with an early morning at the gym, followed by meetings with 4 strangers lasting one hour each. He says that he has “found that number to be the right balance of feeling accomplished while also moving at a sustainable pace.” These meetings happen anywhere—from coffee shops to the beach, or, as was the case with Tyson McDowell, inside a hand-built airplane flying over the coast of San Diego.

Lawless says he feels that, even in just one hour with someone, they can reach a deep, satisfying place in their exchange. Sometimes, the conversations are more superficial, such as simply talking about the Philadelphia Eagles—but they can also be a place to become more vulnerable.

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“I’m interested in simply connecting and opening the door to the relationship. I feel no desire to dive into the depths of people’s lives, but if they want to take me there, I’m all ears,” he told GNN. “My conversations are more like two old friends catching up who just haven’t met yet.”

When asked what patterns he sees in meeting thousands of people, he said, very insightfully, “The biggest thing I’ve learned through my project, from meeting people of all ages and levels of success, is that none of us really know what we’re doing with our lives. We’re all just doing the best we can with the resources that we have. I believe that most people walk around thinking that everyone but them has their life together when the reality is that no one, including you, has their life together. Therefore, I think we should all take a little bit of the pressure we put on ourselves off of our shoulders.”

Fortunately, Marsha Sinetar’s quote, “Do what you love; The money will follow,” eventually worked in Lawless’s favor after he lost his job. He hoped he could satisfy not only his interest in people, but his desire to live an entrepreneurial life—and as he has gained momentum with his project, he was right.

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“Though I’ve come close to having $0 to my name a couple of times over the last 3 years, I’m now at a place where things seem to be clicking and doors seem to be opening at a faster rate,” mused Lawless. “This summer, I signed on to a 3-month partnership with the co-working space, WeWork, and just signed on to an additional 6 months with them going forward.” He also has plans to speak at various companies and universities.

Since this is more of an extrovert’s activity, I asked Lawless what advice he had for introverts who may want to follow in his footsteps and meet more people.

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“I would recommend introverts set a goal for a number of people to meet in a specific time period and then share that goal with their friends so they have assistance in completing it. (I wrote an article on this concept: How to Meet 12 New People in 2019). From there, I think they should build in the expectation that they’ll be nervous or uncomfortable for the first handful of meetings. If they allow themselves space to grow, they won’t be as focused on being perfect conversationalists immediately and can meet new people with less pressure!”

In the offing, Lawless sees a road trip where he meets 10 strangers in all 50 states. It’s taken a little more planning than expected, but 2020 will likely see Lawless behind the wheel. Maybe he’ll even pick up a stranger or two hitchhiking on the highway.

If you want to learn more about Lawless’s project or participate in the project as one of his strangers, you can visit his website or Instagram page.

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When Man Gets Ominous Email From His Boss, He Hires Clown to be His Invited ‘Support Person’ at the Meeting

Photo by Josh Thompson
Photo by Josh Thompson

Getting fired from your job can be a stressful ordeal, but this New Zealand man made international headlines for employing an amusing tactic to cope with his impending termination meeting.

Josh Thompson had been working as a copywriter for an Auckland-based ad agency when he received a foreboding email from his bosses calling for a meeting “to discuss some matters in regards to his role” with the company. Furthermore, the human resources department encouraged him to bring a “support person” to the meeting.

Because New Zealand law mandates that employees be given the option of bringing a support person or support animal to such a meeting, Thompson knew he was about to be canned, particularly as there had been recent job cuts at the company. But, rather than bring a family member or therapy dog to the meeting, he decided to have a little fun by spending $200 on a clown.

At the appointed time, Thompson was indeed joined by “Joe” the clown who took the job very seriously despite the bizarre nature of the 20-minute gig. In addition to making a few balloon animals for the meeting, Joe even mimed the act of crying when Thompson’s former employers handed over the termination paperwork.

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“He nodded his head along when I received the bad news as if he was also receiving the bad news,” Thompson told BBC Australia. “Professionalism at its finest, really.”

Despite reacting very little to the clown’s appearance at the meeting, company officials later told him they grateful to him for “spicing up the meeting” and “seeing the humorous side” of the ordeal.

Photo by Josh Thompson

Thompson couldn’t be more pleased; in fact, he wholeheartedly recommends hiring a support clown.

“If you’ve got family, friends, step mums, step dads, step kids, bring them by all means,” he told BBC. “But if there’s a clown available, especially Joe, I’d definitely recommend it.”

It might not be easy for any prankster to find a clown who is willing to take on such a surreal—and potentially offensive—role. 26-year-old Joseph Brosnahan said it was definitely one of the top 10 weirdest gigs that he has ever accepted as an actor or part-time clown.

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“[My boss] said ‘Feel free to say no to this because it’s pretty out-there, but there’s this guy who’s apparently got word that he’s going to be fired and he’s allowed to bring a support person with him, and as a joke he’d like to bring in a clown. Would you be up for doing that?’” Brosnahan recalled to the New Zealand Herald. “And I just thought that sounded so hilarious I couldn’t resist.”

As in any comedy, there is happy ending here: Thompson has already started a new job at another advertising agency in Auckland. Though there are few details as to whether the media attention from the clown appearance helped him land the position, he hopefully won’t have to call up Joe any time soon.

Photo by Josh Thompson

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Hundreds of Volunteers Have Prevented Violence By Helping 350,000 People in Sudan and Congo Make Personal Peace

In celebration of September 21 being the International Day of Peace, this organization is highlighting an astonishing 12-year legacy of helping hundreds of thousands of people around the world to heal their grievances.

Last year alone, World Relief’s peace-building program set up 79 village peace committees in the DR Congo, Sudan, and Pakistan, and trained 744 volunteers to mediate between 343,247 people who were entrenched in conflicts, and helped them reach peaceful outcomes.

The volunteers willing to participate were trained in conflict mediation. They received instruction on what to do when someone comes to them with a grievance, how to investigate, how to bring parties together, and guide them in reaching a resolution. These Village Peace Committees address domestic disputes, petty theft, land use disagreements, conflicts over water usage, or other community issues. While more serious or violent crimes such as killings are referred to authorities, these individuals and committees tangibly break cycles of revenge by de-escalating violence and repairing relationships.

“We cannot overemphasize the importance of individuals living out their calling to be a light in the world and taking seriously their calling to bring peace,” says World Relief CEO Tim Breene. “In many areas around the world, we know that peace is the foundation for flourishing, and conflict erodes the very ability for people to access basic healthcare or harvest their crops for food. Each conflict that a volunteer de-escalates is one more relationship repaired, another harvest brought to fruition and more families who don’t need to flee out of fear for their lives.”

LOOK: California Professors Place Seesaws Across US-Mexico Border So Children Can Play Together

The Democratic Republic of Congo is an area prone to violence where local conflicts have led to high rates of forced displacement, gender-based violence, and poverty. The peace committees have embraced the power of healing as a way to repair communities and prevent further violence.

Over the last 12 years, World Relief has worked with pastors from various ethnic groups—but the reconciliation is conducted in both faith-based, interfaith, and secular contexts. World Relief partners with local authorities to identify leaders in these communities who are willing to become committed to bringing about peace.

“We work to empower local volunteers and churches to boldly step in and de-escalate hostility in conflict zones,” added World Relief President Scott Arbeiter. “We are humbled by the women and men we have the privilege of coming alongside to equip and support.”

(Photo credit: World Relief)

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“To be wronged is nothing, unless you continue to remember it.” – Confucius (Int’l Day of Peace)

By Arnaska - CC license

Quote of the Day: “To be wronged is nothing, unless you continue to remember it.” – Confucius (Today is the International Day of Peace)

Photo: by arnaska, CC license on Flickr, cropped

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Google is Making the Largest Corporate Purchase of Renewable Energy, Investing $2 Billion

In what is being hailed as the largest corporate purchase of renewable energy infrastructure, Google has just announced that they will be spending $2 billion on more solar and wind projects around the world.

According to a new blog post from the tech company, the initiative is projected to expand their renewable energy portfolio by 40%—or 5,500 megawatts (equivalent to the capacity of a million solar rooftops).

The new investment is not about buying power from existing wind and solar farms but instead will make long-term purchase commitments that result in the development of new projects.

The investments will collectively fund 18 new energy projects ranging from building solar farms in Texas to wind turbines in Sweden. In total, this brings the company’s fleet of renewable energy to 52 global projects, which is “driving more than $7 billion in new construction and thousands of related jobs.”

“We’ve been a carbon-neutral company since 2007,” wrote Google CEO Sundar Pichai. “In 2017, we became the first company of our size to match our entire annual electricity consumption with renewable energy (and then we did it again in 2018). As a result, we became the largest corporate buyer of renewable energy in the world.

“Once all these projects come online, our carbon-free energy portfolio will produce more electricity than places like Washington D.C. or entire countries like Lithuania or Uruguay use each year.”

RELATED: Australia is Creating Renewable Energy Faster Than Other Countries—and They’re Planting 1 Billion Trees to Boot

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Billionaire Who Promised to Pay Off College Debt for Grads is Now Paying Off Their Parents’ School Debt Too

Multi-billionaire Robert F. Smith made headlines back in May for his pledge to pay off the student loan debt of an entire graduating college class—and now, he says that he is paying off the debt of the students’ parents as well.

Smith, who is the founder and CEO of Vista Equity Partners, is collectively donating $34 million to the new Morehouse College Student Success Program to pay off the loans that students and parents of the class of 2019 accumulated to fund a Morehouse education.

The Morehouse Student Success Program is a scholarship, loan debt, research and educational initiative established by the Board of Trustees as a national investment strategy to curb student loan debt and help graduates to prosper faster. Under the new initiative, Morehouse will solicit and accept donations made specifically to reduce or eliminate the student loan debt of Morehouse Men and their parents or guardians, thus creating an opportunity for greater financial freedom for new alumni and their families.

The history-making grant from Mr. Smith, who announced his intention to make this grant when he received an honorary doctorate from Morehouse in May, will ease the financial strain on the class of 2019, the billionaire’s “classmates.” The $34 million contribution to the Morehouse Student Success Program will benefit the new alumni by allowing them to pursue advanced degrees, start careers, and build wealth without being tethered to undergraduate loan debt related to Morehouse.

RELATED: This Seventh Grader Donated All $15,000 of His County Fair Earnings to a Children’s Hospital

“This liberation gift from Robert Smith—the first of its kind to be announced at a graduation in higher education—will be life-changing for our new Morehouse Men and their families,” said David A. Thomas, the President of Morehouse College. “It is our hope that our graduates will use their newfound financial freedom to pursue their career goals, to lead and serve the community, and to remember the spirit of the gift given to them by paying it forward to support the education of future classes of Morehouse Men.”

More than 400 students, parents, and guardians of the Class of 2019 will receive Morehouse’s inaugural gift under the Student Success Program.

America’s student loan debt—now more than $1.5 trillion, according to the U.S. Department of Education (more than the nation’s $1.3 trillion in auto loan debt)—can exacerbate the wealth gap that exists between black families facing generational poverty and other groups. Black households nationally have the lowest median net worth, lagging behind Asian, white, and Latin Americans respectively, according to the U.S. Census. Economic status can impact loan repayments.

MORE: Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler Donates $500K to Open Up Another Home for Abused and Traumatized Girls

Following Morehouse’s inaugural gift under the Student Success Program, Morehouse will study the freedom of choice that alumni experience in their lives and careers when their student loan balances are paid in full or reduced to manageable levels. The first subjects of the research study will be some of the inaugural gift recipients, who will be encouraged to participate in the study. With additional investments, the Student Success Program will also provide current and future Morehouse students with scholarships and access to financial literacy programs that detail the impact of debt on family budgets. Parents and guardians will also be included in the educational outreach.

At Morehouse, the student loan debt threshold at graduation is between $35,000 and $40,000, which is higher than the average for HBCUs. According to UNCF research, HBCU graduates borrow nearly twice as much—$26,266 on average—than non-HBCU students. And one in four HBCU students borrows $40,000 or more to attend college.

“Morehouse’s program to provide debt relief to new graduates is a fund-raising opportunity that should be studied and duplicated nationally,” said Michael L. Lomax, president and CEO of the United Negro College Fund. “The impact of such a gift, particularly for minority or economically disadvantaged families, could accelerate the growth of a more diverse and robust middle class.”

CHECK OUT: This Movie Star Lives Such a Simple and Happy Life, He’s Giving His $714 Million Net Worth to Charity

Alumni who graduated in May or who finished their degree requirements during summer school 2019 are eligible to receive gifts in the inaugural offering from the Morehouse College Student Success Program. Their parents and guardians are also gift-eligible. All must show supporting documents to prove that loans were taken to finance a Morehouse College education and processed by Morehouse. The inaugural gift will cover the full payment of principal and interest for education loan balances as of August 28th, 2019, as reported by the Department of Education.

Reprinted from Morehouse College

(WATCH the video announcement below)

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Man Succeeds Where Government Fails: He Planted a Forest in the Middle of a Cold Desert

An intrepid old farmer has succeeded where many others have failed in growing a lush green oasis in the middle of a cold desert.

Anand Dhawaj Negi retired from his career in government work so he could pursue his passion for trying to plant trees in the mountainous northern regions of India.

There are more than 1 million acres of desert landscape that have been declared “uncultivable” by the agricultural department. Negi, on the other hand, was determined to find a way to make something grow.

When he first began his labor of love in Himachal Pradesh, he spent all of his savings on testing different combinations of local farming practices with more scientific methods of cultivation. Initially, his saplings had a mortality rate of 85%; but after he finally managed to hone his technique, the mortality rate dropped to 1%.

WATCH: Island on the Brink of Disaster Plants Thousands of Trees and is Now a Poster Kid for Adapting to Climate Change

Negi now cares for more than 160 acres of forest in Kinnaur and grows kidney beans, potatoes, green peas, apples, and apricots. He has shared his farming techniques with other locals so they can cultivate their own food and greenery.

According to a 2017 interview with Down to Earth, Negi said he is now working on planting coniferous trees, which he says are essential for combatting climate change in the region.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by Down to Earth

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Man Moves into Shelter Kennel So He Can Help Unwanted Pup Get Adopted

Despite how their living quarters might be a little cramped, this shelter pup has just gotten the most devoted roommate.

Since animal lover Scott Poore is a regular visitor at the Great Plains SPCA in Kansas City, he is familiar with all of the animals at the shelter—but there is one dog in particular that has stolen his heart.

Queen is a 3-year-old terrier mix who has been at the shelter for more than 400 days. Poore, who manages the Mission Driven clothing brand for adoption awareness, says that he recently began to notice that Queen seemed to be “losing hope” in ever finding a forever home.

RELATED: After Spending 7 Years in Hawaii Shelter, Dog Finally Adopted By Couple Visiting From Michigan

“I have been visiting Queen every single day for over a year now and I can visibly see her giving up,” Poore wrote on the Mission Driven Facebook page last week. “She used to get so excited when I would arrive and now she just lays in her bed and looks up at me. I sit in her room and all she does is look out of her window, in hopes to make eye contact with her hero.”

So as a means of raising awareness for Queen’s plight, Poore packed a suitcase and moved in to the pup’s kennel.

LOOK: Comfy Armchairs Pouring in For Animal Shelter So Every Pet Can Have a Spot

Poore says it has been tough managing his work while also living at the shelter, but he is determined to stay in the kennel until someone adopts Queen.

Since he settled into the kennel earlier this week, he and his new canine roommate have been featured on dozens of national news outlets, although no potential adopters have stepped forward.

That being said, Poore is taking advantage of Queen’s newfound fanbase in order to “pay rent” and raise money for the Great Plains SPCA throughout the month of September.

9/25/19 Update: Poore finally managed to go home yesterday after Queen was adopted by “an amazing man who fell in love with her story.”

(WATCH the news coverage below) – Photo by Mission Driven

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Reversing Hair Loss Could Soon Be as Easy as Wearing a Hat After Scientists Develop Simple New Tech

Photo by UW-Madison / Sam Million-Weaver
Photo by Alex Holloway / UW-Madison

Few things on earth strike fear into the hearts of men more profoundly than hair loss. But reversing baldness could someday be as easy as wearing a hat, thanks to a noninvasive, low-cost hair-growth-stimulating technology developed by engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

“I think this will be a very practical solution to hair regeneration,” says Xudong Wang, a professor of materials science and engineering at UW-Madison.

Wang and colleagues published a description of the technology in the journal ACS Nano.

Based on devices that gather energy from a body’s day-to-day motion, the hair-growth technology stimulates the skin with gentle, low-frequency electric pulses, which coax dormant follicles to reactivate hair production.

RELATED: Scientists Activate Stem Cells to Make Hair Grow

The devices don’t cause hair follicles to sprout anew in smooth skin. Instead they reactivate hair-producing structures that have gone dormant. That means they could be used as an intervention for people in the early stages of pattern baldness, but they wouldn’t bestow cascading tresses to someone who has been as bald as a billiard ball for several years.

Because the devices are powered by the movement of the wearer, they don’t require a bulky battery pack or complicated electronics. In fact, they’re so low-profile that they could be discreetly worn underneath the crown of an everyday baseball cap.

Photo by UW-Madison / Sam Million-Weaver

Wang is a world expert in the design and creation of energy-harvesting devices. He has pioneered electric bandages that stimulate wound-healing and a weight-loss implant that uses gentle electricity to trick the stomach into feeling full.

The hair-growth technology is based on a similar premise: Small devices called nanogenerators passively gather energy from day-to-day movements and then transmit low-frequency pulses of electricity to the skin. That gentle electric stimulation causes dormant follicles to “wake up.”

“Electric stimulations can help many different body functions,” says Wang. “But before our work there was no really good solution for low-profile devices that provide gentle but effective stimulations.”

LOOK: After Wildly Successful Crowdfunding, You Can Now Order Bike Helmets That Look Like Regular Hats

Because the electric pulses are incredibly gentle and don’t penetrate any deeper than the very outermost layers of the scalp, the devices don’t seem to cause any unpleasant side effects. That’s a marked advantage over other baldness treatments, like the medicine Propecia, which carries risks of sexual dysfunction, depression, and anxiety.

What’s more, in side-by-side tests on hairless mice, the devices stimulated hair growth just as effectively as two different compounds found in baldness medicines.

“It’s a self-activated system, very simple and easy to use,” says Wang. “The energy is very low so it will cause minimal side effects.”

Reprinted from University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Dozens of Bikers Visit the Lemonade Stand of the Girl Whose Mother Helped Them One Year Ago

This little girl’s lemonade stand was flooded with business thanks to dozens of motorcyclists who are still grateful for the kindness her family showed them one year ago.

Back in September 2018, several members of the Milwaukee Irons motorcycle club were involved in an automotive accident in Chili, Indiana. Daryn Sturch, who happens to be a nurse, had been driving down the road with her daughter when they came upon the scene of the collision.

Sturch immediately jumped into action and helped to assist the bikers in any way that she could—and they are still appreciative of her help.

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Since the bikers stayed in touch with Sturch on Facebook, they saw that her 8-year-old daughter Bryanne had set up a lemonade stand. Not only that, she had advertised it to be “the best lemonade in the state.”

More than 30 leather-clad motorcyclists then showed up at the lemonade stand to surprise Bryanne—and the results are adorable.

One of the bikers who arrived was one of the men who Sturch helped on the day of the accident last year.

WATCH: ‘Coolest Bus Driver Ever’ Halts Pedestrian Accident in London

“I feared for his life. This was the first time I’ve seen him since that day,” Sturch told RTV6. “Not only did they make my daughter’s lemonade stand unforgettable, but reuniting with these people and seeing how well they are doing was such a fantastic surprise!”

Photo by Daryn Sturch

Bryanne’s grandfather published a video of the surprise visit that has now been viewed more than half a million times—and Sturch hopes that it will help people to look past people’s appearances.

“My big takeaway is that I really want people to step back and understand that we can look differently, talk differently, dress differently, have different interests… but just because we are ‘different’ doesn’t mean that we don’t share the same core values,” Sturch said in a statement shared with Fox News. “It’s about respect, love, kindness, and the desire to serve others.”

(WATCH the video below)

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“Compassion is the basis of morality.” – Arthur Schopenhauer

Quote of the Day: “Compassion is the basis of morality.” – Arthur Schopenhauer

Photo: by cloud.shepherd, CC license on Flickr

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This New Bioreactor Uses Algae to Capture as Much Carbon Dioxide as an Acre of Trees

A team of innovators has come up with an ingenious new bioreactor that uses algae to capture and process carbon from the atmosphere.

The Eos Bioreactor, which was developed by Austin-based tech company Hypergiant Industries, uses AI to optimize algae growth, carbon capture, and algae output.

Since algae is 400 times better at sequestering carbon than trees, the reactor can process about two tons of oxygen in a year, which is about the same as an acre of trees.

According to the Hypergiant website, algae is a single-celled organism that is “considered one of nature’s most efficient machines” because of its ability to multiply rapidly through the absorption of sunlight and carbon dioxide. Not only that, it can be grown nearly anywhere and requires very few nutrients to survive.

With machine intelligence, the designers improved the efficiency of their design to use autonomous health monitoring for a machine that is aware of—and can react to—its surroundings. By constantly monitoring and managing the amount and type of light, available CO2, temperature, PH, biodensity, harvest cycles, and more, the reactor can create the perfect environment to maximize carbon sequestration.

RELATED: Scientists Are Replacing Plastic With Algae, a Revolutionary Idea That Can Suck Carbon Out of the Air

As the algae consumes CO2, it also produces biomass, which can then be harvested and processed to create fuel, oils, nutrient-rich high-protein food sources, fertilizers, plastics, cosmetics, and more.

Measuring in at just 3 by 3 feet wide, the compact device is designed to only take up a small amount of urban space compared to similar bioreactor prototypes. Hypergiant plans to release the blueprints for the bioreactor to the online maker community later this year with the goal of empowering individuals to create similar, smaller and modular devices for use in residential units.

Furthermore, the company will focus on the use of recycled ocean plastics to create the devices and encourages the community to do so as well. Additional details on productization will be announced in 2020.

MORE: This Icelandic Facility is Capturing CO2 Emissions So They Can Turn It All into Stone

“Our goal at Hypergiant Industries is to use the world’s best technologies to solve the world’s biggest problems,” said Hypergiant CEO and founder, Ben Lamm.

“Excess carbon in our atmosphere is driving a number of massive catastrophes for our planet and pushing us to get off planet and colonize space. I want humanity to colonize space because I want to explore the cosmos to better understand our place within it—I don’t want us to colonize space because we are running away from our home planet. This device is one of our first efforts focused on fixing the planet we are on.”

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Deaf Teen Thanks Flight Attendant for Handwritten Note That ‘Meant the World’ to Her During Her First Flight Alone

While some people can be pretty anxious about their first solo airplane flight, 16-year-old Ashley was particularly nervous.

Since the teen was born deaf, she was worried that her lack of hearing would prevent her from receiving any details about her recent flight from Baltimore, Maryland to Rochester, New York.

To make matters worse, she had a connecting flight from JFK International Airport, which can be an overwhelmingly busy airport for even the most experienced fliers.

RELATED: Smart Caption Glasses Allow Deaf Audience Members to Watch Live Theater Performers Directly

“I [felt] nervous because … what if I miss my flight or I don’t know where to go if I transfer,” Ashley told WJLA through an American Sign Language (ASL) interpreter. “I mean JFK is such a big airport, so I didn’t know where to go.”

Thankfully, Ashley had a safe and successful flight—and thanks to a compassionate flight attendant, it was also a particularly memorable one.

Shortly after Ashley’s plane took off from Baltimore, her Delta airline flight attendant handed her a handwritten note which explained everything about the flight and safety information.

Ashley told reporters that she had never experienced such kindness before, and the note—which she now plans on keeping—meant the world to her.

Delta later responded to the story by praising their flight attendant for her communication and announcing their intentions to make airline travel for inclusive for deaf passengers.

LOOK: 15-Year-old Melts the Hearts of Airline Passengers When She Befriends Blind and Deaf Passenger

Over the course of the next few months, airline staffers who can speak sign language will be encouraged to wear a badge that will identify them to other passengers.

“With this improvement, customers and qualified employees will immediately be able to visually recognize when they hold sign language as a common connection,” a Delta spokesperson told WJLA.

(WATCH the news coverage below)

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