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Residents of Tiny Town of Tampa, Kansas, Are Flown to Tampa, Florida for ‘Trip of a Lifetime’

TPA Welcome
Courtesy of TPA

Every one of the 105 Kansas residents in a town called Tampa were invited on a free trip to visit the sunny city with the same name in Florida—so they can experience ‘the other Tampa’.

Most of the group of 95 Kansans had never been to Florida, and most of the children had never flown in a plane.

The surprise vacation came courtesy of Visit Tampa Bay and Southwest Airlines and almost the entire town’s population arrived at the Tampa International Airport last week for their quick holiday vacation.

The welcoming contingent of Floridians waved blue signs reading, ‘You’re not in Tampa, Kansas anymore,’ adopting a famous line from The Wizard of Oz.

The Midwestern contingent included about 30 children, who were treated to excursions to Busch Gardens, ZooTampa, and the Florida Aquarium.

RELATED: Woman Pairs a British Village Named ‘Dull’ with Oregon Town Called ‘Boring’–Making Both More Exciting

TPA Welcome

“We want to welcome our Kansas cousins for what is sure to be the trip of a lifetime,” said TPA Executive Vice President for Marketing and Communications Chris Minner.

“TPA is proud to be able to give this group its first impression of the entire Tampa Bay region.”

The group stayed for three nights in the Floridan Hotel, and had passes to the Tampa Museum of Art and the Glazer Children’s Museum, before heading back on a nonstop flight to Kansas City.

More From Florida: ‘Hometown Heroes Housing Program’ Helps Florida Teachers and First Responders Buy Their First Home

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Woman Who Hated Exercise Starts Lifting Weights to Help Combat Arthritis–And is Now a Regional Gold Medalist

- SWNS
– SWNS

A woman who hated exercise took up powerlifting to help combat her arthritis and is now slaying it as a commonwealth gold medalist in the sport.

She says she’s now fitter than when she was in her 20s, and has now won gold, silver, and bronze medals in weightlifting.

Arthritis prevented 58-year-old Kelly Clark from doing so much as close the trunk of her car. Her obesity worsened the condition, and facing both severe joint inflammation and a “cocktail of drugs” prescribed for it, she took up weightlifting instead.

Clark first visited doctors when she was 49 for a pain in her side and the inability to complete simple tasks around the house.

They diagnosed her with osteoarthritis, an agonizing condition which leaves sufferers with stiff and sore joints.

But 9 years later, Clark lost a third of her body weight. Her bench is at 165 lbs. (75 kg), and she was able to get off all her medications.

“I couldn’t close my car boot. I couldn’t have a shoulder bag on one shoulder, and I couldn’t reach into kitchen cupboards if they were above my head,” said Clark, from South Yorkshire. “It’s changed my life in so many different ways. I’ve gone from totally unfit on arthritis medication to coming off it and lifting.”

“I was traveling around for work a lot, so not having a routine of any sort of exercise,” said Clark. “That meant staying in hotels and eating the wrong stuff and living out of the glove box.

RELATED: Powerlifter Hailed as Hulk Hero After He Lifts Jeep Off of Injured Driver Trapped Underneath

“But when I was put on medication, that was really the trigger, like I don’t want to carry on being like that,” she added, saying that it interfered with her sleep.

The weightlifting cured it all, but her recovery also inspired her to take up the competition side of it.

In 2017 she was volunteering as a referee at a Special Olympics event when she decided she wanted to try it out.

MORE WEIGHTLIFTING NEWS: 80-Year Old Powerlifter Can Still Pump 800 Pounds And Inspire Seniors to Hit the Gym

By 2019, she had qualified to compete in the World Powerlifting Championships for Team Great Britain, before going on to the World Bench Press Championships in 2021. After that she was hooked.

She kept going and claimed gold and silver medals for England in the bi-annual Commonwealth Championships in New Zealand last month after lifting a record weight in ‘equipped bench press’ event in her weight category.

She came home with a gold medal in the ‘equipped bench press’ and a silver medal in the ‘classic bench press’—her best results at a world competition to date.

SIMILAR: 78-Year-old Iron Woman Is Powerlifting Champion Who Does 400 Squats and Holds 19 World Records

“Both competitions took place on the same day, which was quite difficult. You have to keep your body weight within a certain limit, so I had to do two weigh-ins,” said Clark. “I was running between the weighing room for the second competition and the podium. If you miss the time slot for weighing in, you’re in a bit of trouble.”

Kelly, who bagged her gold with a winning lift of 132 lbs. (60kg), said it was a “dream” to take part in world competition, which was funded by her employer, Keepmoat.

“If someone had told me I would be this mobile, let alone competing in international competitions ten years ago I would never have believed them.”

SHARE Kelly’s Inspiring Fitness Turnaround…

Off-Duty EMT Rescuer Spends Day Keeping Skier Alive After Avalanche

An EMT continued his heroic work into his day off, when during a ski trip he located a man buried by an avalanche, dug him out, and spent 8 hours by his side on the mountain waiting for search and rescue.

Wild amounts of Utah snowing last week left the slopes in Neffs Canyon ripe for an avalanche. Experienced backcountry skier Travis Haussener took it “one tiny step too far” by passing through a loose snow pack and triggering one.

Hearing the “Wumpf,” he realized he was probably a goner. After it overtook him he was buried entirely but for a single arm, breaking his femur and hurting his arm in the process.

After about 45 minutes of pain, digging, and shouting for help, an EMT with the Unified Fire Authority, passing by on his own skiing trip, heard his cries for help.

The as-yet unidentified EMT called search and rescue, but weather conditions prevented a helicopter from getting there. Equipment issues caused further delays, and it wasn’t until 7pm—8 hours later, that they got Haussner off the mountain.

RELATED: Dramatic Rescue Shows Community Teaming up to Save 4 Horses That Fell Through Ice into Freezing Pond

Speaking of the EMT, Michael Finger, a squad leader with Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue called him a hero.

“I mean the guy’s a hero, it’s incredible, went skiing, it’s his day off, and he spent his whole day up there with this poor guy,” said Finger.

SIMILAR: After Senior Broke His Hip Mowing His Lawn, Responding EMTs Returned to His House to Finish the Job

“He was off-duty, just out enjoying some recreation time when he spotted someone in trouble and responded and has been up there all day and the reality is he could have come down at any point,” added Sgt. Melody Cutler with Unified Police Department.

WATCH local news coverage below…

BRIGHTEN Up A Snow Day And Share This Story With Your Friends…

Fishing Skipper Saves 31 Lives After a Boat Capsizes in the English Channel

Arcturus - Ben Squires.
Arcturus – Ben Squires.

The skipper of a scallop trawler became an unlikely hero after a dinghy filled with refugees attempting to cross the English channel in wintertime broke apart.

His vigilance and mariner skill saved 31 lives of men and children that night from the freezing water.

It was dark and cold in early December after a cold snap fell over the Channel, dropping the water temp to just above freezing. Around 4AM Ben Squires, the owner of Oceanian Drifter Fishing, got a call from the captain of one of his boats, the Arcturus.

The captain said that migrants in a flimsy inflatable dinghy had managed to make a distress call to a charity, and that he was close enough to affect some kind of rescue in what was a fairly-small fishing vessel.

“The bottom of their boat had gone so they were all in the water in the freezing cold, panicking and extremely scared,” Squire told the Plymouth Herald.

SIMILAR: Hero Honeymooners Rescue Sleeping Babies from Burning Nursery in Spain: ‘Instinct Took Over’

Thousands of migrants try to cross the channel every year in unseaworthy vessels.

Most of the 43 onboard the dinghy were men, but 4 children were also rescued. The French and British coastal guards, as well as the navies and police assisted in the efforts after the Arcturus had done all it could.

RELATED: Boston Officers Rescue Father and Son Floating on Cooler

“He’s a really professional skipper… he kept calm… and his training obviously kicked in,” Squire said in another interview. “Amazingly he got right in next to the sinking boat and managed to come alongside and safely get 31 people on board the boat as it unfolded.”

SHARE The Story Of This ‘Really Professional Skipper’ On Social Media…

“I’m not going to continue knocking that old door that doesn’t open for me. I’m going to create my own door and walk through that.” – Ava DuVernay

Quote of the Day: “I’m not going to continue knocking that old door that doesn’t open for me. I’m going to create my own door and walk through that.” – Ava DuVernay

Photo by: Edgar

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?

‘Astonishing’ 1,300-Year-old Gold and Gemstone Necklace is the Richest Ever Uncovered in Britain

MOLA / Hugh Gatt
MOLA / Hugh Gatt

Archaeologists have uncovered an “astonishing” 1,300-year-old necklace in Northamptonshire, England, discovered during excavations for a housing development.

Researchers from the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) say the necklace is the richest of its type ever uncovered in Britain—with a staggering 30 pendants and beads made of Roman coins, gold, garnets, glass and semi-precious stones.

It was found in a high-status female burial containing other intriguing items that are still being investigated. The collection has been dubbed the ‘Harpole Treasure’, based on the name of the local parish. Experts believe this is the most significant female burial from the era ever discovered in Britain.

“When the first glints of gold started to emerge from the soil we knew this was something significant,” said MOLA Site Supervisor, Levente-Bence Balázs. “However, we didn’t quite realize how special this was going to be.”

A rectangular pendant with a cross motif forms the centerpiece of the necklace and is the largest and most intricate element. Made of red garnets set in gold, MOLA specialists believe it was originally half of a hinged clasp before it was re-used.

X-rays taken on soil revealed a further tantalizing find—a striking and elaborately decorated cross, featuring highly unusual depictions of human faces cast in silver.

Specialist Lyn Blackmore – MOLA / Andy Chopping

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The soil blocks are currently being micro-excavated by MOLA Conservators, but this large and ornate piece suggests the woman may have been an early Christian leader.

The skeleton itself has fully decomposed (with the exception of tiny fragments of tooth enamel). However, the Harpole Treasure suggests that this was a very devout high status woman such as an abbess, royalty, or perhaps both.

“We are lucky to be able to use modern methods of analysis on the finds and surrounding burial to gain a much deeper insight into the life of this person and their final rites.”

“This find is truly a once-in-a-lifetime discovery—the sort of thing you read about in textbooks, and not something you expect to see coming out of the ground in front of you,” said an RPS Archaeology consultant, Simon Mortimer, who was involved with the excavation for the planned development and accorded a unique opportunity to investigate the site.

LOOK: Exquisite Mosaic Unearthed by Farmer Planting Olive Tree, ‘Perfectly Preserved’ From Byzantine Era

“Had they not funded this work this remarkable burial may never have been found.”

Painstaking work is being undertaken by MOLA Conservators to examine and conserve the finds. This includes identifying and recording traces of organic remains within the burial and on the surface of the artifacts. It is possible the deceased was placed on a bed within the grave and traces of soft furnishings may be found. Analysis could also detect residues that show how artifacts were used in life or in the burial ritual.

Surprisingly, the area surrounding the elite burial was completely unremarkable. One other burial was present nearby but did not contain any high-status grave goods nor has been firmly dated.

A handful of similar necklaces from this time have previously been discovered in other regions of England, but none are as ornate as Harpole.

LOOK: Exquisite Mosaic Unearthed by Farmer Planting Olive Tree, ‘Perfectly Preserved’ From Byzantine Era

The Harpole Treasure will be featured in BBC Two’s Digging for Britain, where Professor Alice Roberts will be getting an exclusive look at this extraordinary find and delving deeper into the ongoing conservation and analysis. The new series of Digging for Britain starts on BBC Two in early January 2023.

The discovery also serves as a reminder of the importance of archaeology in the planning and development process.

BRING Some Royalty to Social Media By Sharing This…

The Top 10 Most Beloved Holiday Movies Ranked in Order, and Ready to Watch This Season

OnePoll
OnePoll

Nothing says ‘Happy Holidays’ like a healthy dose of nostalgia—and what better way to feel the spirit of the season than watching a holiday classic.

A new poll of 2,000 Americans who celebrate the festive season found it was the top tradition—with 72% choosing the tradition of watching Christmas movies, beating out decorating the tree (66%) and baking cookies (55%).

Among the top-watched shows during the season are A Charlie Brown Christmas (42%), Home Alone (42%), How the Grinch Stole Christmas (35%), The Polar Express (32%), A Christmas Story (31%), and White Christmas (30%).

But, the most beloved holiday movie to watch during the holiday? It’s a Wonderful Life.

Their favorite holiday character was Kevin McCallister in Home Alone (30%) and Tim Allen who plays the jolly toymaker in The Santa Clause (29%).

Commissioned by global streaming media platform Plex and conducted by OnePoll, the random double-opt-in survey found that 52% believe that watching holiday movies helps them bond with their family.

The top TV favorites of the festive season are Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (60%), Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town (37%), Friends “The One With the Holiday Armadillo” (19%), and South Park “Christmas Snow” (14%).

LOOK: Boy Recreates Iconic Scene From Toy Story to Mark His First Day of School

Four in 10 binge-watch movies during the holiday season more than any other time of year. Over half of women surveyed said they go out of their way to make sure they can watch their favorite holiday movies and shows each and every holiday season.

A third of respondents said they would even download and/or subscribe to a new streaming service that has their favorite holiday movie just to scratch their festive watching itch.

Although 63 percent say the holidays are stressful, the nostalgia of holiday movies provides comfort and joy. Over half (52%) believe the holidays would feel “incomplete” if they weren’t able to watch their favorite movies.

“There’s a certain sense of charm in holiday movies—especially the older classics,” said Jason Williams, Product Director at Plex. “Seeing these top choices all grouped together is a reminder of how timeless some of these movies are and how long-lasting their impact is on how we celebrate the holiday season.”

RELATED: More Than Half of Adults Would Welcome a Pre-Owned Gift This Christmas

Respondents also shared their favorite movies they consider holiday films, without explicitly being so, including Die Hard (25%), Frozen (23%), The Sound of Music (21%), Harry Potter and The Sorcerer’s Stone (12%).

In addition to the abundance of holiday-themed content, 29% said they go further to create a cozy ambiance during the holiday season by streaming virtual Yule Logs.

“Pouring yourself a mug of hot chocolate and streaming your favorite content can truly bring out the magic of the holidays.”

TOP 10 HOLIDAY MOVIES
-It’s a Wonderful Life – 43%
-A Charlie Brown Christmas – 42%
-Home Alone – 42%
-How the Grinch Stole Christmas – 35%
-The Polar Express – 32%
-A Christmas Story – 31%
-White Christmas – 30%
-National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation – 29%
-The Santa Clause – 27%
-Elf – 27%

Merry Christmas to All and to All a Good Night!

Artist Makes Spectacular Sand Art Portraits That Sell for Thousands After Quitting His Engineering Job–LOOK

James Sun's sand art – SWNS
James Sun’s sand art – SWNS

A man who quit his mechanical engineering job and is now earning thousands of dollars by creating stunning sand art portraits.

James Sun was going through a difficult breakup in Toronto, Canada, when he began looking to make a new start that could reduce the stress.

“I was heartbroken. I needed something to heal my heart, so I looked online, and when I saw sand art it really made me calm.”

He searched online for people who made the type of art he envisioned, and spent $30,000 to travel to China and Japan to learn from the masters.

The 36-year-old said he “just kept practicing”, and because he is a really big sports fan and passionate about pop culture, he started making celebrity portraits of sportsmen like Ronaldo and Messi, and TV characters like Wednesday Addams.

“When I made the change everyone thought I was crazy,” he told SWNS news. “But, looking back, it was the best decision that I ever made.”

James now has five employees and is also making sponsored sand art logos and character portraits for companies like BMW, F.C Barcelona, and Nickelodeon.

James Sun’s sand art portrait of Wednesday Addams – SWNS

After five years, his custom pieces now sell for $1,500, while his work for brand promotion costs upwards of $4,500.

RELATED: 3D Printed Violins Could Deliver Music into Many More Classrooms With Cheap Price Point

“I get the chance to work with all these great brands, and I make way more money than I used to.”

It was 2018 when he started posting on TikTok. “That was when it really changed.”

He amassed more than 3.4 million followers and now creates between 10 and 15 pieces a month, spending around 10 hours per day on his craft.

He uses a small spoon to sprinkle colored sand into the container and a custom needle to pack it into the shape he needs. (See the process in the video below…)

The pieces can take anywhere between a few hours, for the simpler logos, to three days for the more complex portraits.

Argentina football star Lionel Messi sand art portrait by James Sun – SWNS

“I just do it one grain at a time,” Mr. Sun said. “I take breaks when I’m doing it, because I really need to focus, but I really enjoy it—it really relieves my stress so much.”

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“Mentally, it has healed me. It mended my broken heart.

The doubters in his life have now turned into supporters—and James has become the master, fielding requests from others who want to learn how to do it.

Inspire People to Overcome Heartbreak By Sharing the Story on Social Media….

World’s First Hovering Robot That Collects Rare Minerals From Sea Floor Allows Industry to Ditch Dredging

Impossible Metals Eureka 1 - YouTube
Impossible Metals Eureka 1 – YouTube

With the need for critical battery minerals growing, a company has proved that sustainable ocean mining is possible with a discriminating robot miner.

Below the waves, seafloors are covered in “polymetallic nodules” a fancy word for stones with many different metals in them.

Impossible Metals recently proved that it’s possible to harvest these nodules with precision and smart learning rather than dredging with large destructive plows. Their method is the Eureka 1, the world’s first undersea selective mining robot.

Full of lithium, nickel, and cobalt, the nodules could provide battery manufacturing with a more sustainable supply that doesn’t involve carbon-intensive mining, and avoids the geopolitical difficulties associated with pursuing these minerals in conflict zones or unstable states.

“Our harvesting machines don’t touch the seafloor,” said Renee Grogan, Chief Sustainability Officer and Co-founder. “What we’re designing is a fleet of underwater robotic vehicles. And they are not tethered to the vessel. They don’t make contact with the seabed. They hover above it.”

Once hovering above an area of seabed, an AI-powered computer will pick out nodules from other matter, and command a host of horseshoe crab-like grabber arms on the underside of the robot to pick them up and feed them through a hose into a collection chamber.

In November, the Eureka 1 dove to depths of 25 feet, successfully differentiated nodules from rocks, and utilized a special buoyancy compensation engine to bring them back to the surface.

SIMILAR: Sharp-Shooting Farm Robot Can Treat 500,000 Plants Per Hour With 95% Decrease in Chemical Sprays

“This shallow water milestone demonstrates progression of our principles of avoiding serious harm to the seabed by replacing dredging technology with an alternative that prevents biodiversity loss and large sediment plumes” said Oliver Gunasekara, CEO & Co-Founder.

Impossible Metals believes the Eureka 1 could be in large-scale production by 2026.

WATCH the robot in action below.


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“May I feel all I need to feel in order to heal. May I heal all I need to heal in order to feel.” – Marguerite Rigoglioso

Quote of the Day: “May I feel all I need to feel in order to heal. May I heal all I need to heal in order to feel.” – Marguerite Rigoglioso

Photo by: Daiga Ellaby

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?

Heartwarming Moment Ex-Foster Kid Asks to Be Adopted by Family He Sold a Car To

- SWNS
– SWNS

There’s no substituting the need for family, and one young man raised in the foster care system hoped to find one in a pair of perspective car buyers he met last year.

Video shows the Wilkinsons family, who walked off the lot with a car and a new friend in April 2021, reacting tearfully to salesman Davon Woods’ recorded message asking them to become his ‘forever family’ and whether he could take their last name.

Growing up in the foster care system, the 27-year-old Woods said he never had a relationship with any parent ever, and after Sarah Wilkonson heard her story, she kept her and her parents in touch with Woods, attempting to reach out when they could

The Wilkinsons invited Davon for dinner on his birthday in August 2021 and to join them again for Thanksgiving later that year at their Savannah Georgia home. More than a year after their first encounter, Woods asked to become part of the family.

Although no legal adoption process has taken place, the Wilkinsons now treat Davon like family—which is all that really matters—and gave him the green light to become Davon Wilkinson.

“It was weird to be in a loving environment. I’ve never had a relationship with any parents ever, adoptive or biological,” said Woods. “It was something I’d always wanted. I’ve always wanted to say ‘this is my family.'”

RELATED: Adopted Man Discovers Family After 20 Years When Brother Used His Unusual Name to Track Him Down

Davon has since quit his job and founded Foster Kids Matter, an organization dedicated to serving foster children in Georgia.

“I was inspired to become a foster kids advocate. If I hadn’t had that experience I would never have done it,” he added. “When you go without love for a long time and are presented with it, it’s weird. It feels like you’re starting a new job.”

LISTEN To Woods’ prepared speech. 

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Aggressive Leukemia Disappears in 13-Year-old Girl Who was First to Receive New CRISPR Treatment

Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children

In the latest CRISPR success story, a 13-year-old girl whose leukemia had not responded to other treatments now has no detectable cancer cells.

She received a dose of immune cells that were genetically edited to attack the leukemia, a method that’s been used with other cancers.

A form of cancer in the bone marrow tissue, leukemia is caused by mutated immune cells and is normally treated by killing all bone marrow cells in the patient’s body before receiving a transplant from a donor. If this falls, the Nobel Prize-winning CAR-T cell therapy can be used instead.

This was the case of Alyssa, a 13-year-old girl from the UK, who received a dose of common immune system weapons called T cells that had been modified to attack cancerous cells in her body. To avoid the extreme costs associated with this, the Great Ormond Street Hospital team at University College London further modified the donor T cells.

“This is quite remarkable, although it is still a preliminary result, which needs to be monitored and confirmed over the next few months,” said Robert Chiesa, one of the doctors treating Alyssa, in a statement released by Great Ormond Street Hospital.

CHECK OUT: 3 Years After CRISPR Treatment 73 of 75 Patients Cured of Blood Disease – FDA Approval is Near

While she has no detectable cancer now, it will take several years to determine whether she’s truly cancer-free.

This procedure was used before to save the life of a 1-year-old girl, Layla, also in the UK last year, and is now approved by the NHS as a treatment for people with leukemia arising from mutated B cells, another group of immune cells that can lead to the cancer.

RELATED: Revolutionary CRISPR-based Genome Editing System Destroys Cancer Cells ‘Permanently’ in Lab

New Scientist explains that lead researcher Waseem Qasim at University College London had applied four edits to the cells’ DNA, which puts them at risk for dangerous mutations. To circumvent this, he used a different method of the CRISPR gene editing protein that ” changes one DNA letter to another,” a technique called base-editing.

Alyssa is the first person ever to be treated with base-editing.

SHARE This Story And The Relief Her Parents Must Have Felt… 

Your Inspired Weekly Horoscope From Rob Brezsny: A ‘Free Will Astrology’

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

Here is your weekly horoscope…

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY – Week of December 17, 2022
Copyright by Rob Brezsny, FreeWillAstrology.com

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
I applaud your expansive curiosity. I admire your yearning to learn more and more about our mysterious world as you add to your understanding of how the game of life works. Your greed for interesting experiences is good greed! It is one of your most beautiful qualities. But now and then, there come times when you need to scale down your quest for fresh, raw truths and work on integrating what you have already absorbed. The coming weeks will be one of those times.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
Better than most, you have a rich potential to attune yourself to the cyclical patterns of life. It’s your birthright to become skilled at discerning natural rhythms at work in the human comedy. Even more fortunately, Capricorn, you can be deeply comforted by this awareness. Educated by it. Motivated by it. I hope that in 2023, you will develop your capacity to the next level. The cosmic flow will be on your side as you strive to feel the cosmic flow—and place yourself in closer and closer alignment with it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Anne, a character in a book by L. M. Montgomery, says she prefers the word “dusk” over “twilight” because it sounds so “velvety and shadowy.” She continues, “In daylight, I belong to the world . . . in the night to sleep and eternity. But in the dusk, I’m free from both and belong only to myself.” According to my astrological assessment, you Aquarians will go through a dusk-like phase in the coming weeks: a time when you will belong solely to yourself and any other creature you choose to join you in your velvety, shadowy emancipation.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
My Piscean friend Venus told me, “We Pisceans feel everything very intensely, but alas, we do not possess the survival skills of a Scorpio or the enough-is-enough, self-protective mechanism of the Cancerians. We are the water sign most susceptible to being engulfed and flooded and overwhelmed.” I think Venus is somewhat correct in her assessment. But I also believe you Fishes have a potent asset that you may not fully appreciate or call on enough. Your ability to tune into the very deepest levels of emotion potentially provides you with access to a divine power source beyond your personality. If you allow it to give you all of its gifts, it will keep you shielded and safe and supported.

ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Aries painter Vincent van Gogh was renowned for translating his sublime and unruly passions into colors and shapes on canvas. It was a demanding task. He careened between torment and ecstasy. “I put my heart and soul into my work,” he said, “and I have lost my mind in the process.” That’s sad! But I have good news for you, Aries. In the coming months, you will have the potential to reach unprecedented new depths of zest as you put your heart and soul into your work and play. And hallelujah, you won’t lose your mind in the process! In fact, I suspect you will become more mentally healthy than you’ve been in a long time.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
“The soul is silent,” writes Taurus poet Louise Glück. “If it speaks at all, it speaks in dreams.” I don’t agree with her in general, and I especially don’t agree with her in regard to your life in the coming weeks. I believe your soul will be singing, telling jokes, whispering in the dark, and flinging out unexpected observations. Your soul will be extra alive and alert and awake, tempting you to dance in the grocery store and fling out random praise and fantasize about having your own podcast. Don’t underestimate how vivacious your soul might be, Taurus. Give it permission to be as fun and funny as it yearns to be.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
The coming weeks will be an excellent time to expand your understanding about the nature of stress. Here are three study aids: 1. High stress levels are not healthy for your mind and body, but low to moderate stress can be good for you. 2. Low to moderate stress is even better for you if it involves dilemmas that you can ultimately solve. 3. There is a thing called “eustress,” which means beneficial stress. It arises from a challenge that evokes your vigor, resilience, and willpower. As you deal with it, you feel hopeful and hardy. It’s meaningful and interesting. I bring these ideas to your attention, dear Gemini, because you are primed to enjoy a rousing upgrade in your relationship with stress.

CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Long before he launched his illustrious career, Cancerian inventor Buckminster Fuller was accepted to enroll at Harvard University. Studying at such a prestigious educational institution was a high honor and set him up for a bright future. Alas, he was expelled for partying too hard. Soon he was working at odd jobs. His fortunes dwindled, and he grew depressed. But at age 32, he had a pivotal mystical experience. He seemed to be immersed in a globe of white light hovering above the ground. A disembodied voice spoke, telling him he “belonged to the universe” and that he would fulfill his life purpose if he applied himself to serving “the highest advantage of others.” How would you like a Buckminster Fuller-style intervention, Cancerian? It’s available if you want it and ask for it.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Leo-born Judith Love Cohen was an electrical engineer who worked on NASA’s Apollo Space Program. She was also the mother of the famous actor Jack Black. When she was nine months pregnant with Jack, on the day she went into labor, she performed a heroic service. On their way to the moon, the three astronauts aboard the Apollo 13 spacecraft had encountered a major systems failure. In the midst of her birth process, Judith Love Cohen carried out advanced troubleshooting that helped save their lives and bring their vehicle safely back to Earth. I don’t expect you to achieve such a monumental feat in the coming days, Leo. But I suspect you will be extra intrepid and even epic in your efforts. And your ability to magically multitask will be at a peak.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
When you’re at the height of your powers, you provide the people in your life with high-quality help and support. And I believe you could perform this role even stronger in 2023. Here are some of the best benefits you can offer: 1. Assist your allies in extracting bright ideas from confusing mishmashes. 2. Help them cull fertile seeds from decaying dross. 3. As they wander through messy abysses, aid them in finding where the redemption is. 4. Cheer on their successes with wit and charm.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
A blogger named Daydreamydyke explains the art of bestowing soulful gifts. Don’t give people you care for generic consumer goods, she tells us. Instead, say to them, “I picked up this cool rock I found on the ground that reminded me of you,” or “I bought you this necklace for 50 cents at a yard sale because I thought you’d like it,” or “I’ve had this odd little treasure since childhood, but I feel like it could be of use to you or give you comfort, so I want you to have it.” That’s the spirit I hope you will adopt during the holiday season, Libra—as well as for all of 2023, which will be the year you could become a virtuoso gift-giver.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
In 1957, engineers Alfred Fielding and Marc Chavannes invented three-dimensional plastic wallpaper. No one bought the stuff, though. A few years later, they rebranded it as Bubble Wrap and marketed it as material to protect packages during shipment. Success! Its new use has been popular ever since. I suspect you are in a phase comparable to the time between when their plastic wallpaper flopped and before they dreamed up Bubble Wrap. Have faith in the possibility of there being a Second Act, Scorpio. Be alert for new applications of possibilities that didn’t quite make a splash the first time around.

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

(Zodiac images by Numerologysign.com, CC license)

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Swedish Firm to Unlock the Electricity of the Sea With Largest Wave Power Station in the World

Eco Wave Power - SWNS
Eco Wave Power – SWNS

Turkey will soon host the world’s largest tidal power station—a 77 megawatt system of large pier-like machines that generate clean energy from the sea’s endless rhythm.

Swedish firm Eco Wave Power (EWP) entered into the agreement for the potential construction in Ordu, Turkey, starting with a small pilot project.

EWP said that if it proves viable, the estimated $150 million power station would be Turkey’s first grid-connected tidal energy station, and upon completion, would be the biggest in the world.

Anchored to structures such as jetties or seawalls, the rising and falling motion of the waves powers hydraulic pistons inside the metal hulls—called “floaters”—which in turn powers a turbine on land which then sends energy to the grid via an inverter.

According to the terms of the agreement, government-owned Ordu Enerji will assign nine potentially suitable breakwaters to EWP for a period of 25 years from activation of the relevant pilot or power station.

“Subject to certain conditions, including, among others, receiving favorable results from feasibility studies and receipt of applicable licenses and permits, the 77 MW power station is planned to be constructed in several stages, starting with an up to 4 MW pilot station, and continuing with the construction, operation, and maintenance of the remaining capacity of the plant of up to 73MW,” said the company.

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Eco Wave Power will be responsible for constructing, and commissioning the power plants and selling the electricity to be generated by the power plant in accordance with an approved production quota to be determined for the site.

EWP has a grid-connected power station at Israel’s Port of Jaffa and ran a demonstration plant in Gibraltar for six years.

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“With the goal to build a self-sufficient grid, Ordu sees Eco Wave Power as an important asset to fully realising our potential for 100% clean energy,” said Mustafa Kemal Macit, President and CEO of Ordu Enerji.

“The entire municipality of Ordu is excited to fully realize the sea’s potential and use its unlimited source of energy to power our electrical grid. This project demonstrates that Ordu Enerji is committed to investing in innovative clean energy technologies.”

WATCH a short news spot highlighting the technology.

WAVE At Your Friends With This Green Energy Story…

“Tomorrow isn’t promised. Am I okay with how I’m living today?” – Hayley Williams 

prottoy hassan

Quote of the Day: “Tomorrow isn’t promised. Am I OK with how I’m living today? It’s the only thing I can help.” – Hayley Williams

Photo by: Prottoy Hassan, public domain

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?

prottoy hassan

Photographer Snaps a Snow-capped Stirling Castle Shrouded in Mist at Sunset

A photographer snapped snow-capped Stirling Castle shrouded in mist as he compared it to something out of Harry Potter. Dad-of-two Brian Smith, 55, was leaving work on Tuesday at 4.30pm when he saw the historic castle covered in snow.See SWNS story SWNAcastle. Fog and clouds parted above the building which is on a steep hill, so Bill took a picture with long exposure. Brian, a college lecturer, said: "It looks very festive."It looks like something out of Harry Potter.
A snow-capped Stirling Castle shrouded in mist –Brian Smith / SWNS

A photographer captured a magical moment when he looked up and snapped the snow-capped Stirling Castle shrouded in mist at sunset.

Brian Smith was leaving work on Tuesday at 4.30pm when he saw the historic Scottish castle frosted with snow.

Fog and clouds parted above the building which is on a steep hill, so the 55 year-old took a picture, using a long exposure.

“It looks like something out of Harry Potter,” said the college lecturer, who said it had been quite foggy all day.

Stirling Castle is one of the largest and most important castles in Scotland. The ancient complex located in Stirling sits atop Castle Hill, a massive volcanic rock surrounded on three sides by steep cliffs. With such a strong defensive position it became strategic for guarding what was, until the 1890s, the farthest downstream crossing of the River Forth, and marks the meeting point between the Lowlands and Highlands.

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It became a royal residence and a powerful stronghold during the Wars of Independence—which were civil wars among the Scots—as well as a struggle between Scotland and England, during which the castle changed hands eight times in 50 years.

The new photograph is so mythical-looking that many people have told the father-of-two that his photo looks computer-generated. But Smith is still humble.

“It looks very festive.”

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Ancient Grammatical Puzzle That Has Baffled Scientists for 2,500 Years Solved by Cambridge University Student

Page from an 18th-century copy of the Dhātupāṭha of Pāṇini – SWNS
Page from an 18th-century copy of the Dhātupāṭha of Pāṇini – SWNS

A 27-year-old PhD scholar finally cracked the riddle which has defeated Sanskrit experts since the 5th Century BC—by decoding a rule taught by “the father of linguistics” Pāṇini.

The discovery makes it possible to ‘derive’ any Sanskrit word—to construct millions of grammatically correct words including ‘mantra’ and ‘guru’—using Pāṇini’s revered ‘language machine’ which is widely considered to be one of the great intellectual achievements in history.

Leading Sanskrit scholars have described the discovery as ‘revolutionary’—and it now means that Pāṇini’s grammar can be taught to computers for the first time.

Six months before Indian-born Rishi Rajpopat finally decoded the 2,500 year old algorithm, his supervisor at Cambridge, Sanskrit Professor Vincenzo Vergiani, gave him some prescient advice: “If the solution is complicated, you are probably wrong.”

“I had a eureka moment in Cambridge,” said Dr. Rajpopat. “After nine months trying to crack this problem, I was almost ready to quit, I was getting nowhere.

“So I closed the books for a month and just enjoyed the summer, swimming, cycling, cooking, praying and meditating.

“Then, begrudgingly I went back to work, and, within minutes, as I turned the pages, these patterns starting emerging, and it all started to make sense.”

Pāṇini’s system—4,000 rules detailed in his greatest work, the Aṣṭādhyāyī which is thought to have been written around 500 BC—is meant to work like a machine. Feed in the base and suffix of a word and it should turn them into grammatically correct words and sentences through a step-by-step process.

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However, until now, there had been a huge problem. Scientists say that, often, two or more of Pāṇini’s rules are simultaneously applicable at the same step, leaving scholars to agonize over which one to choose.

Solving so-called ‘rule conflicts’, which affect millions of Sanskrit words including certain forms of ‘mantra’ and ‘guru’, requires an algorithm.

Thought to have lived in a region in what is now north-west Pakistan and south-east Afghanistan, Pāṇini taught a ‘metarule’ to help decide which rule should be applied in the event of a conflict.

But for the last 2,500 years, scholars have misinterpreted the metarule meaning that they often ended up with a grammatically incorrect result. Furthermore, in an attempt to fix the issue, many researchers laboriously developed hundreds of other metarules.

But Dr. Rajpopat showed in a paper published this week that those are not just incapable of solving the problem at hand, they all produced too many exceptions—and are completely unnecessary. He explained that Pāṇini’s ‘language machine’ is ‘self-sufficient’.

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“Pāṇini had an extraordinary mind and he built a machine unrivaled in human history,” said Rajpopat, who started his PhD work at St John’s College, Cambridge, in 2017. “The more we fiddle with Pāṇini’s grammar, the more it eludes us.”

Dr. Rishi Rajpopat – Cambridge / SWNS

Traditionally, scientists have interpreted Pāṇini’s metarule as meaning: in the event of a conflict between two rules of equal strength, the rule that comes later in the grammar’s serial order wins.

Rajpopat rejects this, arguing instead that Pāṇini meant that between rules applicable to the left and right sides of a word respectively. Pāṇini wanted us to choose the rule applicable to the right side. Employing this interpretation, Rajpopat found Pāṇini’s language machine produced grammatically correct words with almost no exceptions.

“Over the next few weeks I was so excited, I couldn’t sleep and would spend hours in the library including in the middle of the night to check what I’d found and solve related problems. That work took another two-and-a-half years.”

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Prof. Vergiani heralded the news, saying, “My student Rishi has cracked it. He has found an extraordinarily elegant solution to a problem which has perplexed scholars for centuries.”

“This discovery will revolutionize the study of Sanskrit at a time when interest in the language is on the rise.”

Sanskrit is an ancient and classical Indo-European language from South Asia. It is the sacred language of Hinduism, but also the medium through which much of India’s greatest science, philosophy, poetry, and other secular literature have been communicated for centuries.

While only spoken in India by an estimated 25,000 people today, Sanskrit has influenced many other languages and cultures around the world.

Rajpopat, who was born in Mumbai and learned Sanskrit in high school, explained, “Some of the most ancient wisdom of India has been produced in Sanskrit and we still don’t fully understand what our ancestors achieved.

“I hope this discovery will infuse students in India with confidence, pride, and hope that they too can achieve great things.”

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He said that a major implication of his discovery is that now we have the algorithm that runs Pāṇini’s grammar, we could potentially teach this grammar to computers.

“Computer scientists working on Natural language processing gave up on rule-based approaches over 50 years ago. So teaching computers how to combine the speaker’s intention with Pāṇini’s rule-based grammar to produce human speech would be a major milestone in the history of human interaction with machines, as well as in India’s intellectual history.”

IT’S NO MYSTERY That You Should Share This Breakthrough on Social Media…

Breeding Big Cats for Pets or the Petting-Trade Will Soon Be Illegal as US Senate Passes Law

By Tambako The Jaguar, CC license
By Tambako The Jaguar, CC license

Monumental U.S. legislation sparked by the exploitation depicted in the TV series Tiger King was passed this week by the U.S. Senate to ban public contact with lions, tigers, leopards, cheetahs, jaguars, and cougars.

The Big Cat Public Safety Act, which will prohibit keeping big cat species as pets, along with the practice of ‘cub petting’. It also makes it illegal for members of the public to have close contact with the animals, including bottle-feeding or handing any cubs.

The bipartisan legislation was passed in the Senate by unanimous consent. It was already passed in the U.S. House of Representatives, so now goes to the White House to be signed into law by President Biden, who has expressed support.

The legislation was sponsored and championed by Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, Rep. Michael Quigley, D-Ill., and Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa.

“We’ve been fighting for this moment for years because so many so-called ‘Tiger Kings’ have been breeding tigers and other big cats to use them for profit,” said Kitty Block, president and CEO of the Humane Society. “It’s the beginning of the end of the big cat crisis in the U.S.”

Keeping big cats as pets is not only inhumane but it’s also a serious public safety issue. In the last 30 years there have been more than 400 incidents involving captive big cats that resulted in hundreds being injured and 24 deaths to adults and children.

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“These beautiful but powerful predators deserve to live in the wild, not be kept in captivity for people’s entertainment,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn. “I’m thrilled that, after a groundswell of public and bipartisan support, this bill I’ve long advocated for will become law.”

The legislation would limit ownership of these animals to zoos, universities, and sanctuaries, such as the Black Beauty Ranch in Texas run by the Humane Society as a home for big cats that were languishing after being used by the cub-petting industry.

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“You don’t always need a plan. Sometimes you just need to breathe, trust, let go and see what happens.” – Mandy Hale

Quote of the Day: “You don’t always need a plan. Sometimes you just need to breathe, trust, let go and see what happens.” – Mandy Hale

Photo by: Ben White

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 Paralyzed from the Neck Down from Rare Disease Makes Incredible Recovery, Now Back at the Gym

Guillame-Barre Syndrome - SWNS
Guillain-Barre Syndrome – SWNS

A man who was paralyzed from the neck down has made an incredible recovery and is back in the gym just six months after becoming ill with a potentially deadly immune disorder.

Actor Cody Hively was just 27 when he received a diagnosis for a severe form of the Guillain-Barre syndrome, a lethal condition in around 1 of 20 patients.

Guillain-Barre syndrome is an immune disorders that causes the immune system to attack the patient’s nerves.

Hively spent three months in a hospital receiving intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), a treatment for patients with antibody deficiencies.

But he is now back in the gym, just six months after falling ill and after having to learn how to walk again.

It began in mid-January 2022 with numbness and tingling in the feet, and progressed to complete numbness up to the shoulders.

In early February Hively was hospitalized, where he became completely paralyzed two weeks later.

“Every day the doctors said the same thing, this could stop tomorrow, or it could just keep getting worse,” said Hively

The symptoms were so severe that he was only able to nod his head slightly and nurses had to use an alphabet board to talk to him. He had to be intubated because he was unable to breathe or swallow properly.

“It was really disturbing,” he recalled. “I was a prisoner to my own body, minutes turned into days turned into weeks turned into months. My whole body felt like it was on fire.”

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Fortunately for a physically active young man with his whole life ahead of him, the treatment was successful, and sensation gradually returned to his body. He was moved to an in-patient rehabilitation clinic on March 17th, where he began recovery.

Hively had to re-learn to use most of his muscles and underwent four hours of physical therapy a day, but by early-July was able to walk short distances with some help.

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“I’m a person who enjoys being physical and active, so I’m used to working for things like this,” said Hively. “When I began walking it felt like I was alive again, each week I would make progress even if it was a couple of extra steps.”

By August, he was back in the gym, admitting that he didn’t think he was going to be that 1 in 20; he never lost hope.

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