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Helping When You Don’t Know How

balancing rocks 3 Pacific ocean-sm

balancing rocks 3 Pacific ocean-smI had no idea what to expect. A pastor had called me and asked if I could visit a man who was in the hospital. He completely broke down and was threatening to shoot his entire family. I didn’t know what I would say to him. I had no magical wand or secret powers.

When we met he first looked at me with mistrust and bewilderment. His eyes looked tired and he was shaking. Who was I and what did I want? I simply introduced myself and sat down. We talked and in time he opened up to me about his feelings of failure, the job he had been laid off from, and the bottle that was giving him relief. He said he was not serious about hurting his family, and that people overreacted. We talked about how this experience could be used as a powerful stepping stone forward. I knew a thing about bouncing back and how anything really is possible.

After he was released we kept in touch. I stressed the importance behind his children needing a father who was sober. He did well at first, but soon called drunk. I told him that he first had to help himself before seeing the hand out to help him up.

I worked with him on moving forward with his life. Amends could be made but he had to forgive himself first. He had to get back up, dust his pants off, and try again. As humans we live our lives constantly falling down and failing. Its what we do with our failures that count. I shared some very personal information about my own life and bouncing back. I had been a patient, in the same exact room he was in, over 10 years ago. I knew what he was feeling because I had shed the same tears.

What happened next I will never forget. Instead of taking on these challenges he took his own life. I felt like I had failed and may be at fault for not having done more. Helping in these lives come at a price. I was hurt and angry with his choice.

My wife helped me understand that to stop this program would be failure. Was I basing my actions on success or on need?

I shared this post to show that all this program is not one that always has a happy ending. Did I fail? I know the answers today but didn’t at that time. Who wants to walk into a county mental health hospital and connect with lives in the midst of hurt? I did not want to go, yet something inspired me to go forward. I thought of the lives of those who might choose the right paths ahead. Was it fair to them?

It took a bit for me to get back on the horse and move forward. I had to understand what happen and know that the dark side of life often needs the most light shown on it. I have used this situation as a reminder not to duck the phone or not return a call. I had ignored a call around the same time as his death, thinking he was just drunk and loaded.

(TheSequoiaProject.com)

Super Hero Assures Amputee Tot, He Will Walk Again

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sportacus.jpgBrave four-year-old amputee Harley Slack beamed with joy yesterday as kids’ TV superhero Sportacus visited the Manchester hospital where he’s lived for months after being struck down by meningitis.

Muscleman Magnus Scheving, who created and plays Sportacus, flew in from Iceland along with a representative from a leading manufacturer of prosthetic limbs who promised Harley a set of junior “sprinting feet”.

A hospital worker fought back tears and said: “I don’t think I’ve seen Harley smile before.”

The newspaper’s reporting on the tot’s plight had touched the nation’s heart and swelled the parents’ fundraising campaign to more than £400,000.

(Continue reading in UK’s Sun w/ photos)

British Conductor is Hero in Wedding Pianist Emergency

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bramwelltovey.jpgDisaster was imminent: The bride was due to arrive at any moment and the pianist called to say he wouldn’t arrive in time. Fearing his fiance would have to walk down the aisle in silence, the frantic groom ran into the concert hall adjacent to the wedding venue – with stupendous results.

His luck led him to the music director of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, British conductor Bramwell Tovey. Disheveled and dressed in shorts, he agreed to act as substitute, dashing up to the piano ready to play the required Cole Porter’s Night and Day… He even chose the closing piece.

“No one had told me what to play as the bride and groom walked out,” he said. “So I decided to be traditional and went with the Mendelssohn march, which I finished with a big flourish.”

(Read the wonderful account w/ photo in the Toronto Globe and Mail)

Thanks to Bill McMahon for submitting the link!

Tube Rider Finds Bag of Cash, Turns it in

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earthheart.jpgAn anonymous Tube rider in London’s Underground found and turned into authorities a purse containing more than $3,300 in cash. The bag, left in the Tube Monday by Sri Lanken tourists, also contained passports and credit cards.

A LU spokeswoman said: “We don’t know who handed the bag in – we would like him or her to come forward so we can add our thanks.”


(Read story w/ photo at London Evening Standard)

Image by Sun Star 

Beaten Pizza Driver Receives Check from Kid Rock

Kid Rock playing for troops with USO

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Musician Kid Rock sent a check for $1,500 to a stranger he read about in the paper.

While in Cincinnati for a July 22 concert, Kid Rock read an Enquirer story about a brutal attack on a pizza delivery man and was moved to help.

When questioned about the gesture, Nick Stern, the musician’s representative said the rocker often quietly helps those in need.

(Read more in the Enquirer)

Kid Rock performs for military men and women as part of a USO show onboard Camp Phoenix – free license photo

 

Kenya to Plant 7.6 Billion Trees to Counter Deforestation

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african-tree-vcu-blog.jpgKenya said on Wednesday it would plant 7.6 billion trees over the next 20 years to redress decades of chopping down forest cover, the effect of which is now being felt in acute water and power shortages.

The government set a target of covering 10 percent of their heavily-agricultural nation with trees and estimated the cost to be $20 billion over 20 years.

(Continue reading in Reuters)

South Africa tree: photo from VCU.edu blog 

Chevy Volt Gets 230 Miles Per Gallon in the City

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volt-230mpg-sign.jpg GM announced yesterday that the Chevy Volt electric sedan, due out in late 2010, tallied 230 miles per gallon on the EPA’s city fuel economy test.

10,000 of the electric cars will be produced next year with a sticker price of $40,000, although consumers would get a $7,500 rebate from the government. The vehicle is powered by battery alone for the first 40 miles on every charge, then uses gasoline to the battery. The combined fuel economy of city and highway driving is expected to be rated over 100 miles per gallon.

Chevrolet promises 50,000 more cars in each of the two years following its debut in 2010.

One of the downsides is its long charging time when using standard home outlets — 23 hours. A fast charging box is planned to provide 3-hour charges.

Watch the video news report below, from WWLP… 

Plankton Power To Build Algae Biofuel Facility on Cape Cod

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green-crude_2.jpgTo help meet the federal mandate of quadrupling biofuel use by 2020, a public-private consortium announced plans to construct a new facility on Cape Cod to produce renewable biofuels from algae.

Plankton Power and the Regional Technology Development Corp. (RTDC) of Cape Cod said their Cape Cod Algae Biorefinery will focus on pilot- and commercial-scale manufacturing of the 100% renewable fuel, which is cost-competitive with other biofuels made with petroleum, animal or vegetable-based materials.

The planned biorefinery is proposed for construction on five acres of land on the Massachusetts Military Reservation (MMR) in Bourne, Massachusetts, supported by the Massachusetts National Guard pending legal and regulatory reviews.

Free Radios for the Poorest of India

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wonder.jpgAuthorities in eastern India are distributing free radio sets to lower-caste villagers so that they can listen to music and news after a hard day’s work and improve their awareness, officials said Wednesday.

Officials are distributing transistors costing 400 rupees ($8) each among hundreds of “Dalits” or the formerly “Untouchables” at the bottom of India’s ancient Hindu caste system.

(Continue reading in Reuters)

Soros Gives $35 Million to New York Children for School Supplies

kids playing, photo by Sun Star

monkey-bars-smiles.jpg850,000 New York children in low-income families will receive $200 each for back to school supplies from wealthy financier George Soros. Soros and his Open Society Institute today announced a $35 million gift for kids across the state for purchasing supplies and clothing for the new school year.

The grants enable the state to draw upon another $140 million in federal stimulus matching funds. Governor Paterson, who announced with Soros the program at a Harlem elementary school, said helping families who are on public assistance and food stamps was most definitely an economic stimulus.

“Even in the toughest of economic times, starting the school year right is key to a child’s success,” said Mr. Soros. “When I was a student after World War II, I had no money. I received financial help, and I remember how important that was to my education. Since then I have been very fortunate and am happy to have the opportunity today to help others. I hope these funds will relieve some of the financial burden on New York’s families,” added Mr. Soros.

One of the Most Polluted Sites in US to Become Green Tech Community

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hunterspoint-shipyard-vision.jpgA 140-year-old shipyard in San Francisco Bay, left for dead in the early 1970’s as a radioactive wasteland contaminated by heavy metals, is to be reborn as an urban green business and residential district featuring parks and shops as well as a green technology complex to house a United Nations think tank for climate change and sustainable technologies.  

Once the US military’s largest facility for applied nuclear research, the Hunters Point Shipyard has been undergoing a $500-million clean-up of its 417 acres since the early 1990s, spearheaded by the Environmental Protection Agency. 

Texas Man Brings Hope to Forgotten Disabled Iraqi Kids

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Brad Blauser lives in war-torn Baghdad, where he doesn’t earn a paycheck and is thousands of miles from his family. But he has no intention of leaving anytime soon.

For the past four years, the Dallas, Texas, native has been providing hope to hundreds of disabled Iraqi children and their families through the distribution of pediatric wheelchairs.

Since 2005, Brad Blauser’s Wheelchairs for Iraqi Kids program has distributed nearly 650 free wheelchairs.

(WATCH the video below – or READ the story from CNN Heroes)

New Vaccine Could Save Bees from Colony Collapse Disorder

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bee-colony.jpg An Israeli company has developed a revolutionary new drug that could solve the problem of Colony Collapse Disorder, the disturbing syndrome that has been wiping out bee communities and threatening agricultural production all over the world.

The drug, Remembee, which was developed by Beeologics, has completed successful clinical trials on millions of bees in North America. Not only has it proved effective in maintaining bee health, but it also improved the longevity of bees and increased the honey in the hives.

Based on Nobel prize-winning RNAI technology, Remembee helps the bees overcome IAVP virus, also discovered in Israel, which has been associated with colony collapse in scientific literature.

“It’s really a tug of war between the virus and the host. We are helping the bee tug the rope more strongly and beat the virus. We take advantage of an immune system that the bees elicit for viral disease. But we are really using naturally occurring phenomenon. It’s not a pesticide and it’s not toxic,” says Nitzan Paldi, CTO of Beeologics.

The US Department of Agriculture has been accompanying Beeologics with its FDA certification process due to the urgency of the need for the drug.

Thanks to Israel 21c for the story. Watch their video report below…

For 13th Year, Bar Owner Brings City Kids to Frolic on the Beach

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black-boy-jumping.jpgEvery summer, a white Washington, D.C. bar owner brings a mix of 40 city kids to his home on the Delaware shore, to frolic in the ocean, go motor-boating and trap blue crabs — a generous impulse that has become a tradition.

The beach makes street-tough kids drop their defenses and act like children again, playing in the waves, reaching for a grown-up’s hand.

(Continue reading and see lovely photos in the Washington Post)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

 

 

Homebuyer Credit Makes August Hot For Home Sales

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8000-tax-credit.jpgJust like the “Cash for Clunkers” program that helped the auto industry, the homebuyer tax credit is helping turn around the housing market. The National Association of Realtors said last week that the number of contracts to buy previously owned homes rose in June for a fifth straight month.

They point to an $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers, which Congress decided to create in February, as “having a big impact.”

(Continue reading or listen to the story at NPR)

GM Plans to Launch Plug-in Hybrid SUV in 2011

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chevy-equinox.jpgGeneral Motors Co.’s product development chief says the company will introduce a plug-in rechargeable midsize sport utility vehicle sometime in 2011.

The new vehicle, to be added to its Buick line, will be about the size of a Chevy Equinox SUV, right, but get double the city gas mileage with the help of an electric motor alongside the traditional one.

(Read more from AP in Seattle Times)

Chicago Murder Rate Drops 11 Percent This Year

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cop-hat.jpgChicago Police Supt. Jody Weis on Friday hailed an 11 percent drop in homicides and a 9 percent dip in all crimes during the first seven months of 2009 as a “very encouraging” sign that his department’s strategies are working.

(Continue reading in Chicago Sun-Times)

Integrating Spirituality Into Therapy: A Mental Health Minute

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elderly-with-dove-sun.jpgAlthough the term “spirituality” can refer to religious activity (attending formal worship services or believing in God), it can also describe a commitment to anything greater than oneself, including helping others or being attuned to nature. People can express spirituality through prayer, meditation, community service, or being mindful while hiking in the forest.
 
A therapist can reap benefits by encouraging a patient’s spirituality. One example is in the case of bereavement. If a person has a religious or spiritual belief in a higher power, the therapist can help them approach issues of grief from this vantage point. The therapist may help the client to process his or her belief that the deceased person still lives on. Even if the client does not believe in a higher power, the therapist can help them to think of ways in which the deceased person lives on through especially fond memories.

Hotels Offer Free Bikes as a Green Way to see the Sights

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bixi-bike-montreal.jpgAn increasing number of trendy hotels across North America, Europe and Asia are offering guests free use of bikes during their stay, as a fun and green way to explore the city.

“The bikes are hugely popular and are usually out all day in the spring and summer months,” said one hotel manager.

(Continue reading in the Toronto Star)