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UK Superstars Saved the Day for Fan

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takethat-concert.jpgBritish superstar pop band ‘Take That’ came to the rescue after hearing that one of their fans missed the previous night’s concert after their car had wrecked on the way to the show. Ben Watcham and his mum were okay, but devastated over missing the concert he’d been anticipating for six months.

The policeman on the scene of the accident also worked the crowds at the concert. He saw band member Jason Orange, and told him about Ben and his mum. “I’m not having that,” he said.

Jason and pals laid on three VIP seats for Saturday’s gig, including an extra one for Ben’s dad.

(Read the rest in the UK Mirror)

Thanks to Andrew Norris for sending the link! 

Positive Psychology, Depression and the Economic Slow-down: A Mental Health Minute By Cristina Frick

By bandita, CC license

beach-couple-wander.jpgNo doubt it is a difficult time for many, as employers continue to cut jobs — 345,000 in the U.S. last month. Given the economic conditions, it is no surprise that many are experiencing depression, a clinical condition which can include symptoms such as sadness, loss of interest, changes in sleeping and eating patterns, and suicidal thoughts.

The good news is that the field of positive psychology has much to offer those suffering from depression, whether the condition is related to the recession or to other factors.

In an empirical study by Nancy Sin (2009), positive psychology was shown to be effective at alleviating depression.*  Its various therapies can help those affected by the recession to see that there are some factors in their lives that are still within their control, according to an article in Positive Psychology News. This is referred to in psychology as shifting one’s focus of control from external to internal. Allowing people to regain their sense of control in the midst of the recession is crucial in helping them to build resilience during this difficult time.

This shift in mindset can be achieved in several ways. People may need to adjust their goals to smaller ones that are reachable in the current economic circumstances, such as getting a part-time job rather than a full-time job. People may also need to focus on other domains of their lives until they find a job, such as family, friends, and hobbies. The good news is that making simple changes in mindset like these can help to alleviate some of the depression and stress felt by those affected by unemployment and financial difficulties.

Another way positive psychology can help those who are suffering from depression, recession-related or not, is expressed in a Psychology Today article. Martin Seligman (the father of positive psychology) described the importance of ‘learned optimism’ in preventing depression. This means ‘training your brain’ to focus on the good and joyful aspects of your life. Here are some of Seligman’s suggestions.

Training Your Brain Toward the Rosy Side of Life (MSN):

  • Identify your top five strengths and use these strengths in new ways each day (Use language that emphasizes strengths rather than troubles.)
  • Write three good things that happen every day before bedtime (The benefits of writing down three good things each day can last at least six months, according to one study by Christopher Peterson.)
  • Make a gratitude visit (discussed in more detail in the previous article in this series)

Positive psychology can be used with other forms of therapy to maximize treatment benefits for a given client. It can be used with cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and similar therapies, which help clients to change negative thoughts to positive ones. In well-being therapy (developed by Dr. Giovanni Fava, M.D.), similar to CBT, the client journals about positive events and the negative thoughts and emotions that might interrupt those events and contribute to depression. Through CBT-like principles, the client is taught to think more positive thoughts. These include developing hope by using coping skills such as breaking problems into manageable parts, or taking the time to slowly and purposefully enjoy a routine activity during the day, such as eating or doing the dishes, which was particularly effective for a client being treated for depression featured in Psychology Today.

Of course it is important to take each individual and his or her personality, diagnosis, and the severity of that diagnosis into account when deciding whether to use positive psychology on its own or whether to combine it with other approaches.

Far from ignoring clients’ pain and telling them to simply “think positive,” positive psychology can be used on its own or in combination with other approaches to change a client’s entire way of thinking.

This type of therapy combats the helplessness often present in depression by helping clients to regain a sense of control in their lives. Positive psychology teaches clients that they can break problems down into manageable steps, thus giving them a sense of mastery and empowerment. It encourages them to look at and reflect upon the positive moments in their day and on their feelings of gratitude. It teaches clients to be purposeful about even mundane tasks during their day, which increases pleasure and guards against the ‘robotic’ feeling of daily chores.

Especially during an economic downturn, I believe that positive psychology can help people to focus on other domains of their lives, allowing them to get back in touch with deeply held values such as family. Also, positive psychology opens people to the possibility of finding another job that they like even better or discovering a new passion. (Photos by bandita, CC license; Sun Star)

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If you are feeling depressed, the APA website offers a listing of therapists in every state. If you are feeling suicidal, please call the Suicide Hotline immediately at 1-800-SUICIDE. Please know that there are people out there who care and call now if you are feeling suicidal- there is help and hope available. You can get better. Please call now.
_____________________

* Sin, N.L. (2009). Enhancing well-being and alleviating depressive symptoms with positive psychology interventions: A practice-friendly meta-analysis. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 65, 467-487.

Woman Crazy for Turtles Ends Slaughter of Giant Leatherbacks

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What was once a turtle graveyard is now one of the largest leatherback nesting colonies in the world, thanks to  a woman who grew sick of sea turtle carcasses littering the beach and launched a crusade to help end the slaughter of the gentle giants.

She began patrolling the beaches nightly stopping people with machetes who were waiting for the turtles to nest. Now the community has created a sustainable tourism industry using the very turtles she saved along the gorgeous stretch of white sand that is Trinidad’s Matura Beach.

Watch the video below, or read the story at CNN Heroes.

New Technology Uses Wastewater to Irrigate Crops

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irrigation-crop.jpgA British company has created an irrigation system that can grow crops using almost any water, whether pure, brackish, salted or polluted. The system can even take most industrial waste-water and use it without the need for a purification process.

The pipes are made from a plastic that retains virtually all contaminants while letting clean water through to the plants’ roots.

(Continue Reading in Wired)

Congratulations to Mark Tonkin of Design Technology and Irrigation, based in Brighton! 

Amazing Sand Sculptures (Video)

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sand-sculpture-ele.jpg “Sandsation 2009” an annual sand sculpture festival in Berlin, gathering together an international cast of artists opened on Sunday with the theme: “Berlin in the year 2222.” Twelve sculptors have a week to finish their works.

Watch video below, or at Clip Sydicate

EU Approves Aid to Volvo for Green Car Development

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volvo-logo.jpgThe Swedish government won approval from the European Commission on Friday to guarantee loans from the European Investment Bank for Ford Motor Co unit Volvo to help co-finance the development of green cars.

(Read more in Reuters)

Power To Change, Encouraging Users to Shut Down Idle PCs

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power-to-change-widget.jpgA new campaign by global electronics brand HP is encouraging people to turn off their computers when they go to bed or leave work. They’ve created a cool desktop widget that tracks your impact on the environment, along with the cumulative effect of all the users around the world.

For instance, right now 5,359 people have downloaded the green desktop reminder, and shut down their computers enough to simulate 59 cars taken off the road. Not only are these emissions kept out of the atmosphere, but you save money on your own electric bill.

“In the U.S. alone, we have learned that only 36% of business desktop users turn off at the end of the work day,” says the Power to Change website. “This unnecessary use of energy increases costs and carbon emissions.”

By making one small change, many people together can make a big difference.

Download the widget on the Power to Change website, here

Teenager’s Life Saved By Trip To Dentist

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toothbrushes.JPGAnna Campbell, 15, was unaware she had dangerously high blood pressure until she had a tooth out under general anaesthetic. Doctors discovered the schoolgirl suffered from a rare condition called coarctation of the main aortic artery. 

(Read more at The Telegraph)

Wal-Mart Says it Will Create 22,000 Jobs in 2009

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walmart.jpgWal-Mart Stores expect to hire about 22,000 people for new positions, including plenty of cashiers and stock clerks, but also store managers, pharmacists and personnel workers.

The world’s largest retailer is still the target of criticism from union-backed groups for its pay and benefits, has improved its health insurance coverage and opened it to full- and part-time employees. The company says 94 percent of its employees have health coverage, either through Wal-Mart or another family member.

(Read the rest from AP in Google News)

Indulge in Gourmet and Help Feed a Child, Charity says

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garden-hotel-guangzhou.jpgDining at top-notch restaurants just got more meaningful with a charity drive that hopes to turn gourmet meals across Asia into food for children in one of the world’s poorest nations, East Timor.

More than 50 restaurants across Asia will donate 15 percent of their proceeds from special menus or promotions during August to the United Nations World Food Program (WFP) in East Timor.

(Visit Reuters for the story)

Swim Time for Disabled Patients Becomes an Uplifting Experience

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olympian-smile.jpgWhen you lose a leg, or two, it is hard to exercise. You gain a belly and sometimes a lot more. Especially at Walter Reed where, thanks to an outpouring of goodwill, we are surrounded by boxes and boxes of homemade chocolate chip cookies…

But an idea to bring the guys to the local pool turned into an ideal way to uplift and exercise. They also were blessed by free admission.

(Read more at the Washington Post)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star 

Eno Artwork Lights Up Sails of Sydney Opera House

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sydney-opera-eno-lights.jpgLike a freeform painting, the Sydney Opera House will glow with rich, continuously changing configurations of color as part of its new exhibition of music, light and performance curated by rock musician Brian Eno.

The two-week LUMINOUS festival, launched last week with the lighting of the iconic building’s sails, also features a plethora of music acts, alongside public talks and art installations.

Part of Vivid Sydney, a city wide mid-year festival, its musical highlights include Battles, Ladytron, Lee Scratch Perry, Jon Hassell, Reggie Watts and Karl Hyde.

Eno’s spectacular visual light show will be projected on the sails from 6pm – 1am during the three weeks of LUMINOUS May 26-June 14.

Watch video report below… NOTE: UK residents need to watch it at ITN

Brain Scan Makes Torture Obsolete

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brain-scanning-prisoner.jpgDr. Lawrence Farwell has invented a technology that he believes will make torture obsolete. The system, which detects recognition of information stored in a subject’s brain, has already been used to convict a suspected murderer and more importantly, to exonerate a man convicted of a crime he did not commit.

The Brain Fingerprinting system has proven 100 percent reliable in more than 120 tests involving the FBI, the US Navy, and tests involving real-life situations, such as actual crimes, reported the Fairfield Ledger.

In early tests Dr. Farwell scanned the brains of 21 people  — 17 FBI new agent trainees along with 4 control subjects who lacked knowledge of the FBI.  He correctly identified 100% of the 17 new agent trainees as FBI agents using an FBI-related stimulus presented on a computer screen.

Amputees Gather for Festival of Scuba, Climbing and Sailing (Video)

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amputees-sailing-ap.jpgThis year’s “No Barriers Festival” in Florida includes eighteen disabled veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan who are gathering along with hundreds of other amputees for four days of classes in sailing, scuba diving and rock climbing.

Video below may take a moment to load…

See also www.NoBarriersUSA.org

Once an Untouchable, Elected First Woman Speaker in India

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indian-female-speaker.jpgA woman from the lowest “untouchable” caste in India has been unanimously elected as speaker of the parliament. Meira Kumar, a 64-year old diplomat and legislator welcomed the historic outcome and vowed to be neutral in her duties as the first female speaker.

(Read more in Aljazeera)

Free Entry to National Parks on Three Weekends This Summer

Yosemite.JPGYou’ll get free entry to Yosemite, Grand Canyon, Yellow Stone and 144 other national parks on three weekends this summer, including Father’s Day weekend, thanks to the government’s desire to help you through “these tough economic times.”

The hand-up can save you $20 per car, or $10 if you ride a bicycle or motorcycle. The offer extends through the weekends of June 20, July 18 and Aug.15.  Freebies include no-cost tours, boat rides, shopping bags and other extras. Don’t forget the many historical landmark national parks, Wright Brothers Park, Manassas Battlefield Park, and Saratoga Park.

(The LA Times has more info)

Click here to find a fee-free national park near you

Gay Penguin Couple Become Foster Parents

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gay-penguins.jpg A baby penguin is lucky to be alive. Its parents repeatedly rejected the egg until zookeepers decided to try giving it to a pair of gay penguins. And, it worked. The two kept the egg warm for nearly 30 days before it hatched and the two dads continue to care for the chick…

Watch the Video below…

Armed Shopkeeper Takes Pity on Robber

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shop-owner-mercy-surveilance.jpgA store owner who was being robbed turned the tables on the man pulling a shotgun from behind the counter. When the man started to beg and said he was only trying to feed his family, the shopkeeper provided the man with forty dollars and a loaf of bread and made him promise never to rob again. They even prayed together after the thief said he was inspired.

Watch the interview with the inspiring shop owner (in the first of two videos)…


 

Those Who Aim to Please May Miss the Mark

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bowing_manners.jpgHave you ever altered your behavior in an attempt to make someone else feel better? If you have, you may be pleased to know that you are entirely normal. We’ve been trained since the moment of birth to put others’ needs ahead of our own. Perhaps our parents or care-givers wanted us to be quiet when we wanted to be loud, or they wanted us to wear something we didn’t want to wear, or eat something we didn’t want to eat. They were relentless until we complied.

Our teachers often wanted us to learn the way they wanted to teach, society expected us to value what they thought we should value, friends subtly pressured us until we acquiesced to the vision of the pack, lovers withheld love until we gave them what they wanted and bosses withheld favor until we gave them what they required. Many religions even encourage us to deny our desires with the promise of future reward if we comply.

Exercise After Age 30 May Curb Breast Cancer Risk

Photo by Sun Star

bicycle-for-two.jpgAfter age 30, exercising for more than an hour a week may help cut a woman’s chances of developing breast cancer, according to a study presented at the American College of Sports Medicine’s annual meeting in Seattle.

(Continue reading in Reuters)

Photo courtesy of Sun Star