A 7-pound black kitty named "Cupcake" proved to be tough and streetwise prowling the devastated New Orleans neighborhood for six months in search of food following the evacuation of her family. She never strayed far from her home until animal rescuers found her owner and reunited Cupcake with the teenager now living in Atlanta… AP reports and files a wonderful photo of the happy girls.
Six months after Katrina, Kitty Reunited with Owner
How to Get a Small Business Loan
When I finished writing my Loan Financing Guide for Small Business Owners, I realized that the book is only a small step toward the achievement of my goal to develop training tools and resources that are easy to grasp and actually work.
My book tour has taken me to the streets of large cities like Boston and Miami and small towns like Cambridge and Somerville in Massachusetts. I’ve documented many questions from small business owners about loan financing for small businesses in Finland as well. In response, I’ve written articles and developed a seminar entitled, Preparing a Powerful Small Business Loan Request.
Here are three answers to frequently asked questions.
Volvo Pledges Lifetime of New Cars for Heroes
Hope Bevilhymer from West Jordan, Utah, is “America’s Greatest Hometown Hero” in the third annual Volvo for Life Awards. Her inspired work in developing countries around the world helping those in need to receive prosthetic limbs, won her a complimentary new Volvo car every three years for the rest of her life. The Limbs of Hope Foundation was born out of the difficulties in her own life raising money to buy a prosthetic limb when it was not covered by insurance.
Australian Vintners Donate Grapes to Winery Torched in Brush Fires
Wineries in Australia rallied to support a fellow vintner whose crop had been destroyed by regional bushfires. Ten thousand dollars in grapes were donated to allow Grampians Estate to bottle a Shiraz that year.
They called it the ‘Friends Collection‘ and put images of the fires and the people who helped them return to their craft on the front and back labels of the 2006 vintage.
Don’t you just love Australian wines even more now?
(READ the full story from ABC.net)
Summer Vacations, Cheering Orphans, and Host Couples
The adults who sign up for the program, through KidSave International, fall in love with children and often are inspired to adopt. More than 1,300 children have participated in the Summer Miracles program. Nearly all have found permanent homes.
American College Students Choosing to Teach Inner City Kids
Grad Students Teach America What Gen X is All About
In the spring of 2005, 12 percent of graduating seniors at Yale signed up to “Teach for America” in inner city schools. David Gergen of US News and World Report shared a compelling tale of young idealism.
“This spring on many college campuses, something absolutely remarkable happened: Talented young people lined up by the scores to teach lower-income kids in urban and rural public schools. In years past, investment banks like Goldman Sachs were the recruiting powerhouses at top campuses; this year, they were joined by Teach for America, a program that expresses the fresh idealism and social values of this new generation.”
Small World Stories
This is an inspiring letter I received from Michael in Canada. He calls it his small-world story. It should remind you that striking up conversation with people whom you don’t know is usually quite worthwhile, even though it takes some courage.
A recent study shows how being extroverted can make you happy. Talking to strangers requires us to be extroverted, but it pays handsomely, as the following tale reveals. Notice how Michael is aware that passing time talking with others enriches his happiness:
20,000 Muslims Gather for Peace
Dec. 5, 2005 — We need to be reminded again and again that mainstream Muslims are not like their fanatical brothers in terror. In Britain, families traveled to London to be counted as the peaceful majority of Islam, able to stand against terrorism yet speak out in the face of unfairness. Let’s collect here on the Religions page of the GN Network as many stories as we can about Muslims as equals. Equality and Oneness shine as values in all the world’s religions.
Optimism is Healthy
A 2006 Dutch study of elderly men found a lower risk for cardiovascular death for those identified as optimistic.
The research found optimism to be associated with a 50 percent lower risk of death from heart attack in men studied over 15 years. Higher optimism scores were associated with younger age, higher education, less often living alone, better health, and increased physical activity.
Studies suggest that a person’s optimism can predict their well-being and physical health, according to background information in the article. Being optimistic has been associated with better health outcomes in patients with ischemic heart disease (caused by narrowing of the coronary arteries), and with a lower risk for all-cause death and cardiovascular disease and death. The study authors focused on dispositional optimism, defined as having generally positive life engagement and expectancies for one’s future.
Erik J. Giltay, Ph.D., M.D., of GGZ Delfland, Institute of Mental Health, Deft, the Netherlands, and colleagues studied elderly men living in the Netherlands to determine optimism’s effect on cardiovascular death. The study included 545 men aged 64 to 84 years who did not have pre-existing cardiovascular disease or cancer. Optimism was assessed in 1985, 1990, 1995 and 2000 in a questionnaire given to study participants, who were asked to rate their agreement with the following items: “I still expect much from life,” “I do not look forward to what lies ahead for me in the years to come,” “My days seem to be passing by slowly” and “I am still full of plans.” The men were given scores and divided into groups based on their levels of optimism.
(Article in the February 27 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals)
Blue Butterfly Back From the Brink
The Smithsonian published a feature article in 2005 called Back From the Brink that asserted: “Not every endangered species is doomed. Thanks to tough laws, dedicated researchers, and plenty of money and effort, success stories abound.”
The Hawaiian green sea turtle is one such success featured in the magazine, along with the bald eagle, palila songbird, and southern sea otter, the whooping crane, red-cockaded woodpecker, and California chinook salmon, the Chiricahua leopard frog, grizzly bear and the karner blue butterfly.
For instance, the article points to Wisconsin:
Amy Grant, of Germantown, Wisconsin, wrote to the Good News Network describing how she cooperated in this coalition for conservation:
Decrease of American Women Smoking
U.S. Forests Expanding
Since 2000, U.S. forests have expanded by an area larger than Delaware. — Jan. 2006, Smithsonian magazine
Sudan and Chad Agree to Peace Plan
Sudan and Chad have agreed to end a crisis that began last year when fighting broke out on their border, reports BBC News.
“After months of dispute, the Tripoli accord, chaired by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, commits the two countries to restore diplomatic relations and cease any attempts of cross-border conflict,” said the February 9 report.
“I was blind for 25 years. Had a heart attack, woke up and could see.”
From the Telegraph newspaper in the UK, comes this story of a woman who had been blind for 25 years and awoke in the hospital after suffering a heart attack with her sight fully restored! The first thing she said to her husband — after, “I can see, I can see” — was, “You’ve gotten older haven’t you?”
Lower Lead Levels in U.S. Kids
Water for Life
He remembers how the people reacted when he came to drill a well for them. “People just mobbed me and cried.”
Willis Miller believes in fate. Near death with a heart attack at age 50, he vowed to spend the rest of his life doing good in the world if he survived.
Now 81, Miller can take satisfaction in the decades of good created through his nonprofit organization, Water for Life. Miller spent all the money he saved as a successful water well driller to provide and maintain hundreds of water wells for the poor in Haiti, many of whom walked over 5 miles for a bucket of dirty water. “If you don’t have clean water,” Miller said, “you don’t have anything.”
Water for Life provides clean water for over 200,000 people a day in Haiti. Clean water not only improves health, but crop production and living conditions as well.
While recovering from his heart attack, Miller met a man one day who asked him what he did for a living. “I told him I was a water well driller, “ Miller said. “This man started telling me about how bad it was in Haiti, how a Haitian mission had a water well that no one could fix.”
For the next seven years Miller gave his time and expertise to large organizations such as World Vision and Compassion International. He remembers how the people reacted when he came to drill a well for them, “People just mobbed me and cried.”
The large organizations didn’t service the wells once they were drilled. “It just didn’t work out,” Miller said. “I drilled over 40 wells for them, but today none of them are working.”
Miller became so frustrated he was ready to return to his home in rural Iowa. But a friend decided he would rent out his farmland and give Miller the money so that he could continue his good works in Haiti. “We started with nothing,” Miller said, “but today Water for Life has a budget of over $600,000 and has more than 300 working wells in Haiti.” Water for Life trains Haitians to service the wells. A single well provides clean water for about 750 people and 250 livestock.
Water for Life also built two irrigation systems, a church and a primary school in Haiti. Before the irrigations systems were put in, Miller said, crops baked in the sun and yielded little edible food. “They used to get a bushel of corn. Now they get a roomful of corn,” Miller said.
Although he retired about 5 years ago, Miller remains involved in the operation of Water for Life from his home in Kalona, Iowa. His son, Leon, now president of Water for Life, spends much of his time in Haiti conducting most of the work, Miller said. “I feel I’ve accomplished what I set out to do,” he said. Seeing the living conditions in Haiti change dramatically has been one of Miller’s greatest rewards.
Miller said, “Mothers would tell me their babies once had worms up to three feet long, but not any more.” Then he smiled, “That just thrilled my soul.”
Mayors Combat Greenhouse Gases in US
States Set Renewable Energy Goals
Eighteen states, including power hogs California and Texas, have set requirements or goals for renewable energy. New York, for one, aims to generate 25 percent of the state’s energy from renewables by 2013, up from 19 percent today. (Jan. 2006)
The Legend Of Bagger Vance
An Inspired! Book Review
Bagger Vance is a wonderfully inspiring story that uses the quest of mastering ones golf swing as a metaphor for mastering ones self and ones existence.
The author, Steven Pressfield, weaves his tale using the unfolding lives of three men from three generations. Each man struggles to let go of emotional scars that haunt and torment his life. It is after each one reaches his lowest point that the presence of a mystical being, Bagger Vance, appears in the guise of a golf caddy to reveal a path that leads to greatness and self mastery.
The book is loosely based on the Bhagavad-Gita, the ancient Hindu epic and spiritual text of India. Bagger Vance represents the divine being that appears as a guide offering insight on how to live an authentic life.
The internal fight that each man faces is played out through his golf game. But the teaching here is not only about the golf swing. . .
Golf is just the perfect vehicle for Pressfield to convey a deeper message, that each of us is meant to stand up, explode into our existence, surrender to it completely, and be (without guilt or pride) all of what we can be. This is what is meant by mastering one’s self.
Bagger Vance will not only appeal to every athlete or performer, it is truly for everyone. Everyone has a game, an arena, or field in which they play. We all were meant to excel. It is up to each of us to find the field, know the field, and be the field. Reading this book will inspire you to do all three.
See the book or movie
Honoring Youth Heroes
June 3, 2005 — Kids everywhere are helping out around communities. These children have done things such as volunteering, raising money for patients with cancer, even helping out at the local YMCA. Whatever the reason may be, whether it’s to help the ill or just to put a smile on someone else’s face, it’s nice to know that children can make a difference in the world.
“This year North Star was overwhelmed by nominations for the award,” Lindsey Murtagh, manager of the North Star Program, said. “I think it is a tribute to our youth (aged 6–17) that we received so many stories detailing their heroic efforts. Our community is built on the efforts of unsung heroes.”
A Massachusetts community honored its young heroes in the annual North Star Hero Awards. Amber LaFountain, a youth leader in the Brayton Hill neighborhood, was chosen one of the area’s finest volunteers. For the past five years, the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition has been able to count on this important volunteer to help organize and lead activities in the neighborhood and wider community, including last summer’s Voter Awareness project, National Night Out, and dozens of other special projects, all of which benefited from her leadership abilities.
tells the story of five more young heroes, including six-year-old Justin Beany, who participated in a program called Pennies for Patients.
“On his own initiative he asked his parents if he could do chores to earn pennies. He vacuumed, washed dishes, emptied the trash, swept the kitchen, cleaned his room and made his bed” to earn money to help sick children.