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“When one door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one that has opened for us.” – Alexander Graham Bell

Quote of the Day: “When one door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one that has opened for us.” – Alexander Graham Bell

Photo: by Marita Kavelashvili

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

Unaware She Was Pregnant, Lucky Lady is on Same Flight As NeoNatal Crew When She Gives Birth Prematurely

Hawaii Pacific Health

Some planes land late and others make it to the gate on time, but a recent flight from Salt Lake City to Honolulu is giving a whole new meaning to the term “early arrival.”

When the plane took off, Lavinia “Lavi” Mounga was headed for a family vacation, but unbeknownst to even herself, that family was about to get one bouncing baby boy bigger.

The soon-to-be mom had no idea she was already 29 weeks along. “I just didn’t know I was pregnant, and then Raymond (the baby) just came out of nowhere,” Mounga said.

Hawaii Pacific Health

Halfway through the fateful trip, the crew had to make an announcement seeking out medical personnel to help with the emergency.

Serendipitously, the passenger manifest included not only Hawaii Pacific Health physician Dr. Dale Glenn, but a trio of neonatal nurses, Lani Bamfield, Amanda Beeding, and Mimi Ho, who all work at Missouri’s North Kansas City Hospital.

Without proper neonatal equipment, Dr. Glenn and the nurses had to come up with some creative solutions to keep baby Raymond stable for the remainder of the three-hour flight.

Thanks to a mixture of wilderness training and ingenuity involving shoelaces, microwaved warming bottles, and an Apple Watch heart monitor, the newborn made it to Hawaii in good form.

CHECK OUT: Quick-Thinking Doctor Saves Man’s Life Mid-Flight After Making Makeshift Catheter Out of Oxygen Mask and Straw

“I don’t know how a patient gets so lucky as to have three neonatal intensive care nurses onboard the same flight when she is in emergency labor, but that was the situation we were in,” Dr. Glenn relayed in a hospital statement. “The great thing about this was the teamwork. Everybody jumped in together and everyone helped out.”

Hawaii Pacific Health

Passenger Julia Hansen captured the blessed event for posterity with a TikTok video that includes a rousing round of applause for mom, baby, and her medical guardian angels, and has been seen more than 15 million times by viewers around the world.

When the plane touched down it was met on the tarmac by a medical response who whisked mother and son to Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children.

Hawaii Pacific Health

As a premie, Raymond was placed in their neonatal intensive care unit where it’s reported he’s doing just fine.

RELATED: After Flight Delays Almost Prevented Sergeant From Witnessing Son’s Birth, Stranger Drove Him 8 Hours Home

Since his birth was unexpected, in lieu of a baby shower, Mounga’s sisters have set up a GoFundMe campaign to help with the expenses of their nephew’s unticketed entrance into the world.

(WATCH the NBC video about this story below.)

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Researchers Boost Performance of Solar Cells By Using Human Hair From a Barbershop

QUT
QUT

Researchers have used carbon dots, created from human hair waste sourced from a barbershop, to create a kind of ‘armor’ to improve the performance of cutting-edge solar technology.

In a study, the researchers led by Professor Hongxia Wang in collaboration with Associate Professor Prashant Sonar of QUT’s Centre for Materials Science showed the carbon nanodots could be used to improve the performance of perovskites solar cells.

Perovskites solar cells, a relatively new photovoltaic technology, are seen as the best PV candidate to deliver low-cost, highly efficient solar electricity in coming years. They have proven to be as effective in power conversion efficiency as the current commercially available monocrystalline silicon solar cells, but the hurdles for researchers in this area is to make the technology cheaper and more stable.

Unlike silicon cells, they are created with a compound that is easily manufactured, and as they are flexible they could be used in scenarios such as solar-powered clothing, backpacks that charge your devices on the go and even tents that could serve as standalone power sources.

This is the second major piece of research to come as a result of a human hair derived carbon dots as multifunctional material.

Last year, Associate Professor Prashant Sonar led a research team, including Centre for Materials Science research fellow Amandeep Singh Pannu, that turned hair scraps into carbon nanodots by breaking down the hairs and then burning them at 240 degrees celsius. In that study, the researchers showed the carbon dots could be turned into flexible displays that could be used in future smart devices.

CHECK OUT: World’s First Home Hydrogen Battery Powers Your House for 3 Days, is Recyclable, and Not a Fire Risk

In this new study, published in the Journal of Materials Chemistry A , Professor Wang’s research team, including Dr Ngoc Duy Pham, and Mr Pannu, working with Professor Prashant Sonar’s group, used the carbon nanodots on perovskite solar cells out of curiosity. Professor Wang’s team had previously found that nanostructured carbon materials could be used to improve a cell’s performance.

After adding a solution of carbon dots into the process of making the perovskites, Professor Wang’s team found the carbon dots forming a wave-like perovskite layer where the perovskite crystals are surrounded by the carbon dots.

“It creates a kind of protective layer, a kind of armour,” Professor Wang said.

“It protects the perovskite material from moisture or other environmental factors, which can cause damage to the materials.”

The study found that perovskite solar cells covered with the carbon dots had a higher power conversion efficiency and a greater stability than perovskite cells without the carbon dots.

Professor Wang has been researching advanced solar cells for about 20 years, and working with perovskite cells since they were invented about a decade ago, with the primary objective of developing cost-effective, stable photovoltaics materials and devices, to help solve the energy issue in the world.

“Our final target is to make solar electricity cheaper, easier to access, longer lasting and to make PV devices lightweight because current solar cells are very heavy,” Professor Wang said.

“The big challenges in the area of perovskite solar cells are solving stability of the device to be able to operate for 20 years or longer and the development of a manufacturing method that is suitable for large scale production.

“Currently, all the reported high-performance perovskite solar cells have been made in a controlled environment with extremely low level of moisture and oxygen, with a very small cell area which are practically unfeasible for commercialization.

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“To make the technology commercially viable, challenges for fabrication of efficient large area, stable, flexible, perovskite solar panels at low cost needs to be overcome.

“This can only be achieved through a deep understanding of the material properties in large-scale production and under industrially compatible conditions.”

Professor Wang is particularly interested in how perovskite cells could be used in the future to power spacecrafts.

The International Space Station is powered by four solar arrays, which can generate up to 120 kW of electricity. But one disadvantage of the current technology of space PVs is the weight of the payload to get them there.

MORE: New Zealand Designer Makes Ingenious Solar-Powered Skylight That Desalinates Water For Drinking

While perovskite would be much lighter, one of the challenges for researchers is to develop perovskite cells able to cope with the extreme radiation and broad range of temperature variation in space—from minus 185 degrees to more than 150 degrees Celsius.

Professor Wang said the solution could be ten years off, but researchers were continuing to gain greater insights in the area.

Currently Professor Wang’s research team is collaborating with Professor Dmitri Golberg in the QUT Centre for Materials Science to understand the properties of perovskite materials under extreme environmental conditions such as strong irradiation of an electron beam and drastic temperature change.

“I’m quite optimistic given how much this technology has improved so far,” Professor Wang said.

(WATCH QUT‘s video about the innovation below.)

Source: Queensland University of Technology

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FREE Master Classes in Nature Writing With Top Journalists and Authors Now Offered on Zoom

Pandemic University/Y2Y

The pandemic has gone on so long, it spawned an entire online university—one that offers masterclasses on writing, podcasting, photography, reporting, and other literary topics.

From May 11 through May 25, Pandemic University is offering an entirely free series of classes for writers looking to sharpen their skills in evoking the natural world.

From poetry to reporting to pitching articles to journals, “Writing is Your Nature” features six notable conservationists and journalists, each hosting 60-minute classes that provide the writer with the skills needed to produce gripping content that speaks the language of the natural world in elegant and understandable ways.

The live masterclasses are replayable and hosted on Zoom, and will include content for both professionals and beginners—with ample time for questions at the end of each session. Along with blending scientific accuracy and readability into prose, they’ll also cover writing in the environmental or conservation field as a career.

Freelance writer Sarah Gilman’s course, for example, will help you reach audiences and sustain your own writing career in the current media environment, while bestselling author Chris Turner will offer advice on how to “toe the line between reporter and advocate.”

Pandemic University/Y2Y

Writing is Your Nature is sponsored by the Canadian-US conservation non-profit Yellowstone to Yukon, which looks to guarantee better protection of the lands in and between these two great wildernesses.

MORE: UC Berkeley is Offering Up Their Popular ‘Science of Happiness’ Course for Free Online

With the pandemic winding down in the United States, one only has so much time left to sit in one’s house attending Zoom calls, and if you have May to spare and you’re interested in improving your nature-oriented writing skills, this is a great way to do so.

You can find the information for signing up entirely for free, here.

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Young Woman is Trying to Adopt Her New Friend to Keep the 27-Year-old Out of a Lifetime of Institutions

arina muratova and friend family photo arina muratova

A Russian woman is trying to become the legal guardian of a friend she made while volunteering at a care home.

Arina Muratova

27-year old Nina Torgashova was admitted to a psycho-neurological care home when she was 18. Then, when COVID-19 hit Russia, a charity called Life Route lobbied to allow people at state-assisted living facilities to move out to apartments. They could be accompanied by volunteers, and that would help protect them from mass infection in facilities housing hundreds.

31-year-old Arina Muratova has been volunteering at Nina’s care home for years and the pair have always got along well.

While Nina struggles with math and literacy, Arina noticed that she’s a really quick learner who’s well-adapted for day-to-day life.

“Nina was a very active person at her care home,” Arina told the BBC. “She took part in various creative activities: amateur dramatics, arts and crafts workshops. She took part in sporting competitions, too: she played darts, she played football. Football was something she really missed after leaving the home.”

Adopting your best friend

Arina Muratova

Once they moved into the flat together, their friendship blossomed like a meadow in spring. While admittedly nervous about taking Nina in—the pandemic has had its stresses for Arina: she had to take a pay cut, and has been working from home as a market research expert—she quickly found that her new best friend could cook, go shopping, and do most things on her own.

Arina hired a math tutor to help Nina make calculations—a suddenly important skill given she was now shopping independently.

Nina with her math tutor/Arina Muratova

She also started helping her with reading and writing by herself.

After the lockdowns ended, the pair had a tough challenge ahead since Nina didn’t want to go back to her facility. And there were difficulties right off the bat: residents in Russia can’t be released from custody unless they are proven “functionally able,” or if someone takes legal guardianship over them.

Then one day it just clicked. Arina started the process to adopt her pal.

Currently Arina, who doesn’t count on being anything like a mom, is working on a plan to restore Nina’s legal right to full independence, which will require serious assessments of her capabilities, such as making sensible financial decisions.

CHECK OUT: Watch Driver Run into the Street So He Can Save Kitten From Moving Car Just in the Nick of Time

“Maybe I’m just the type of person that is not afraid of responsibility. It is an unexpected— but actually a good thing—that has happened to me,” she said. “I love her. There’s not much to it. I love her very much.”

(WATCH the BBC documentary about this amazing friendship below (Note: this video contains adult language that may not be suitable for young viewers.))

MORE: Orphaned Polar Bear That Loved to Hug Arctic Workers Gets New Life

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Muddy Bride Sacrifices Dress to Deliver Calf During Wedding Reception

Jessa Laws
Jessa Laws

Two Australian dairy farmers recently got married in the countryside.

Everything was going as planned for Ben and Jessa Laws—until one of their cows went into labor.

The couple didn’t think twice about interrupting their big day to help.

MORE: See Couple Adorably Recreate Their Wedding Album 50 Years Later, at the Same Church in the Same Dress

Of course, Jessa’s white wedding dress didn’t stay pristine for long—but cow and calf are now doing great. As for the newborn’s name? It’s Olivine Rager Destiny.

(WATCH the bridal adventure in the BBC video below.)

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“Trust love even if it brings sorrow. Do not close up your heart.” – Rabindranath Tagore (born 160 years ago today)

Quote of the Day: “Trust love even if it brings sorrow. Do not close up your heart.” – Rabindranath Tagore (born 160 years ago today)

Photo: by Andres Siimon

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

 

They Melted Down 22,000 Firearms in Belgium, Recycling Them Into Steel

West Midlands Police, CC license

Belgium recently melted down over 22,000 firearms into 60 tons of recycled steel.

Half of the firearms were collected from members of the Belgian public. The other half were police weapons that are no longer used.

Carina van Cauter, governor of East Flanders, said in a statement: “The result is impressive: 22,457 firearms have disappeared from our society… It is obviously positive for the security of our citizens that these weapons are no longer in use.”

MORE: This City’s Police Force Says No Officer Fired a Single Shot in 2020, Citing Successful De-escalation Training

This is the third time the Belgian police force has worked with the steel firm ArcelorMittal to recycle firearms—with this particular operation taking three days to complete, according to Reuters.

“Steel is endlessly recyclable without loss of quality. For us, steel is the cornerstone for a sustainable circular economy,” Karen Warnier of ArcelorMittal told Het Nieuwsblad.

(WATCH the Reuters video about this story below.)

Featured image: West Midlands Police, CC license

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He Saved a Stranger From Drowning in India, Now They’re Married in the Netherlands

Nupur Gupta/Attila Bosnyak
Nupur Gupta and Attila Bosnyak

In the real world, falling in love isn’t usually an adventure that literally begins with a daring ocean rescue—but sometimes that’s exactly how a story unfolds.

In February 2019, yoga instructor Nupur Gupta was swimming in the waters off a beach in Goa when the current got the better of her. While a strong swimmer, she feared she’d be unable to make it back to shore.

Hope came in the form of Hungarian-born financial adviser Attila Bosnyak, who’d spied his soon-true-love-to-be in trouble and was swimming to her aid.

Though a capable swimmer, once he reached Gupta, Bosnyak realized he wouldn’t be able to get both of them to safety on his own. Rather than towing Gupta in, he swam toward a nearby rock formation.

After several attempts in which he was pounded by fierce waves and smashed against the rocks, he was able to climb up and signal to the lifeguards on shore for help.

Once he saw a guard making a beeline for Gupta, a bleeding Bosnyak, who’d suffered numerous scrapes and bruises, swam back to shore and collapsed on a beach chair. A grateful Gupta, who’d quickly bounced back from her own ordeal, felt compelled to help the stranger who’d saved her life.

Swiftly procuring first-aid supplies—and chocolate ice-cream as a thank you—she returned to her hero’s side. After tending to his injuries, she tendered him the ice cream.

RELATED: Love in the Time of Corona: An American Traveler Survives Italian Lockdown, and Finds True Love

Some might blame it on the chocolate, but in that instant, Gupta’s emotional landscape underwent a sea change—and she wasn’t the only one. Bosnyak felt the “magic” surge of attraction, too.

Nupur Gupta and Attila Bosnyak

Gupta and Bosnyak were both staying at the same yoga resort; she, as a teacher and he, as a student (though not in any of her advanced classes). Over the course of the next few days, the promising relationship began taking shape.

However, since the retreat was soon to end and each was scheduled to go back to their respective lives—for Bosnyak, that meant his job in the Netherlands and for Gupta, home to Kerala—it looked as if the budding romance might never get a chance to blossom.

But the pair of them decided to take a chance on love. Putting their real lives on hold for another week, the couple spent Valentine’s Day together. In the coming months, thanks to social media, their bond continued to grow, albeit long distance.

LOOK: Flood Waters Couldn’t Stop This Australian Miracle Wedding From Happening

After a month of back and forth, Bosnyak knew he wanted to see where the relationship could go. He asked Gupta how she felt. She too wanted to move ahead.

“I immediately agreed without any second thoughts, despite knowing that it’s a huge distance, different cultures, continents, countries, cities,” she told CNN. “I wanted to do this. I mean, I wanted to have this experience. I loved his vibe for that time when I was around him and I was very happy.”

While the sweethearts hoped to meet in person for some quality couple time, plans for a vacation had to be put on hold when it was learned Gupta’s mother required emergency surgery for a brain tumor. After Gupta explained why she had to cancel their plans, without missing a beat, Bosnyak offered to fly there to be with her.

Once Gupta’s mother recovered, the pair embarked on a series of meet-ups in Dubai, Serbia, and eventually, Thailand. The sites weren’t chosen for their romantic potential but by what their travel visas would allow.

READ: This Romantic Husband and Wife Broke the Record for World’s Oldest Married Couple

In September 2019, Gupta was granted a Dutch visa. She joined Bosnyak in the Netherlands and traveled with him to meet his family in Hungary. While it took her time to adapt to both the culture and the climate, in her heart, she knew the move might prove to be a permanent one—and it did.

Bosnyak and Gupta were wed on March 21, 2020, at Trouwlocatie Groenmarkt which once served as city hall to The Hague. In fact, they were the last couple to marry at the prestigious site prior to the pandemic lockdown.

Nupur Gupta and Attila Bosnyak

The newlyweds spent the next few months pretty much exclusively in one another’s company. “It’s the acid test, I think, for a relationship,” Bosnyak told CNN. “That you can live with that person for months and months and months with no events around, no places to visit, no fun activities apart from the ones you can invent inside your apartment—or during your short walks in the next one and a half, two kilometers in your neighborhood. So if you can make it, and keep on your happiness, then that relationship is rock solid.”

The couple’s road to a fairytale ending hasn’t been without its bumps, with Gupta recently contracting coronavirus. But she’s now on the mend, and she and Bosnyak are currently doing what they can to help friends and family as the pandemic continues to rage in India.

Nupur Gupta

Next summer, Gupta and Bosnyak, along with their dog, Sukhi Ram, should be moving to Athens where Bosynak has been offered a job. If all goes according to plan, it looks as if an addition to the family might be in the cards as well.

CHECK OUT: Caring Hospital Staff Help COVID-Stricken Groom Say ‘I do!’ in Heartwarming Bedside Wedding Ceremony

And while “happily ever after” is never guaranteed, we think that for a real-life romantic tale that started out with soggy Prince Charming and a damsel in distress, that sounds pretty darn close.

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79-Year-old Diver and This Fish Have Been BFFs for Nearly 30 Years After He Nursed Her Back to Health

Great Big Story/YouTube
Great Big Story/YouTube

In fishing lore, tall tales abound. Whether it’s ‘the one that got away’ or ‘the one that jumped right into the boat,’ pretty much every story involves a fisherman catching a fish—not the other way around.

But in a plotline straight out of Disney, an adorable aquatic denizen of Japan’s Tateyama Bay has captured one man’s heart in a friendship that’s lasted close to three decades.

Yoriko, an Asian sheepshead wrasse (kobudai in Japanese), first met scuba diver Hiroyuki Arakawa nearly 30 years ago when he was supervising the construction of an underwater Shinto temple gate 56 feet beneath the surface of the bay.

Arakawa started diving at the age of 18. Now 79, he still loves his sojourns in the deep water. His longstanding kinship with Yoriko is certainly one of the highlights.

“I’d say we understand each other,” Arakawa said in an interview for Great Big Story, “not that we talk to each other… I kissed her once. I’m the only person she’ll let do it.”

Over time, the fish with an almost human-looking face—“When you look really close, you’ll think [she] looks like someone you know,” Arakawa jokes—and her human companion became UWBFFs (underwater best friends forever).

MORE: Believed to Be Solitary, Male Sperm Whales Actually Hang With the Boys – In Friendships That Can Last Years

On one dive when Arakawa was visiting, he noticed Yoriko’s mouth had been badly injured. Even so, she came to greet him.

Realizing she’d be unable to catch her own food, Arakawa spent the next 10 days hand-feeding Yoriko meat from crabs he hammered open for her near the submerged temple gate.

Thankfully, Yoriko bounced back from her injuries fairly quickly. After her recovery, the bond between the pair seemed to grow even stronger.

“I’m not sure if it’s the nature of the kobudai or not. It’s probably because there is a sense of trust between us. I guess she knows that I saved her… that I helped when she was badly injured. So for me to be able to do that, I am proud,” Arakawa told GBS. “I have an amazing sense of accomplishment in my heart.”

CHECK OUT: Belgian Man Strikes Up Friendship With Owl Family After They Discover Mutual Love of Television

It sure sounds like this is one human who’s been truly caught in a net of love—and we’ll bet Yoriko has no plans to toss him back, either.

(WATCH the Great Big Story video about this friendship below.)

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Toddler Without Hands Gets a Puppy Without Paw: It’s Fate and ‘A Beautiful Thing’

@vanessamcleod_/Instagram

Like any happy toddler, Ivy McLeod is full of smiles and filled with wonder as she discovers the world around her. Ivy’s favorite activity is coloring, but since she was born without hands, Ivy holds the markers between her toes to create her kiddy masterpieces.

At age 2, Ivy’s mom Vanessa says her daughter isn’t fully aware of the reason other kids have hands and she doesn’t. She knows it’s only a matter of time before Ivy is going to start asking some tough questions.

To prepare for the inevitable conversation, McLeod came up with the idea of getting Ivy a puppy that had similar limb differences as a way to show that being different and being beautiful aren’t mutually exclusive.

She wanted to be able to tell Ivy: “You know you were born that way but different is beautiful and this puppy was also born that way and that is also a beautiful thing,” McLeod explained in an interview with CTV News.

CHECK OUT: ‘Frankie the Adventure Goat’ Has Traveled Over 60,000 Miles Across America in Epic Road Trip – LOOK

McLeod was worried finding a pup to fit the bill might be a long haul, but it just so happened that a three-legged fur-baby was born in their Vancouver, British Columbia neighborhood just a few short weeks after the search began.

As it seemed like fate, they named the pup Lucky, of course.

In addition to being a way to help Ivy understand what makes her different need not set her apart, McLeod sees the bond her daughter and the Lucky share as they grow and face new challenges as an opportunity to shift people’s perceptions.

MORE: Woman Uses Lockdown to Teach Her Clever Dog Math And Colors With Homemade Flash Cards

“I love everything that is different about her,” McLeod told CTV, “so I encourage people not to view disabilities as sad or something to be pitied but something to be celebrated.”

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World-Renowned Psychiatrist is Writing COVID Prescriptions… For Daily Poetry Reading

Dr. Rosenthal, Poetry Rx
Dr. Rosenthal, Poetry Rx

One doesn’t need Good News Network to tell them there are a lot of people whose minds and moods have been darkened by the last 14 months.

The mental health crisis that many immediately saw as a great threat from government-enforced business closures, quarantines, and travel restrictions was a very real thing before COVID-19, and as a report from global medical care knowledge provider BMJ states, 2018 saw over 70 million prescriptions for antidepressants written in the U.S., compared to just 36 million ten years before.

Yet Norman Rosenthal M.D., a renowned figure in the psychiatry field, is tackling both crises with a different kind of prescription: a little bit of “Do not go gentle into that good night,” or a 30-day course of “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.”

Having just released Poetry Rx: How 50 Inspiring Poems Can Heal and Bring Joy To Your LifeDr. Rosenthal is trying to show insights into love, sorrow, ecstasy, and everything in between using poems and the stories of their famous writers. 

“You know, as an adolescent, as a teenager, I wrote poetry and I loved it, but truly I was not destined to become a poet,” Dr. Rosenthal told GNN. “But luckily, even though I could not produce wonderful poetry, I could always appreciate it, not just intellectually, but for the emotional gifts it presents.”

Separated into five parts, titled: Loving and Losing, That Inward Eye, The Human Experience, A Design for Living and the Search for Meaning, and Into the Night, Rosenthal offers a variety of literary keys to unlock the words needed for one’s inner dialogue to start, fortify, or complete the healing process of trauma, grief, or perhaps the general COVID-19 malaise.

“Over the years I collected poems I found either were wonderfully helpful to me, or to my patients or clients, and the effect of that is that I had this collection and I thought, ‘you know that would make a wonderful book’.”

CHECK OUT: If Anyone Needs to Stay Positive, Just Validate Their Feelings—Study Says

The pandemic, as for so many of us, offered the time and the seclusion required for Rosenthal to organize these poems into the different parts and write all the accompanying stories, including brief bios on the poets, and excerpts from friends’ and clients’ experiences with the poems.

Literary healing

“I might prescribe exercise, I might prescribe meditation, I might prescribe rest… and in that sense I could also prescribe a poem, they’re [clients] not going to go to a pharmacy but they could take it as a serious suggestion,” says Rosenthal.

As the book has made its rounds along the PR circuit, it’s won the praise of The New York Times’ “High Priestess of Health” Jane Brody, who for over 40 years has been their personal health columnist.

“The special beauty of Dr. Rosenthal’s book for me is his discussion of what each poem is saying, what the poet was likely feeling, and often how the poems helped him personally, as when he left his birth family in South Africa for a rewarding career in the United States,” she wrote in her column.

“The wonderful thing about poems are they’re relatively short, so in just a few minutes, you can read, enjoy, appreciate, and benefit from a poem; as such they can often be squeezed in between all the things of a busy life,” says Rosenthal, whose extensive body of work also includes a publication on the practice of transcendental meditation, and the pioneering of the understanding and treatment of seasonal affective disorder.

RELATED: Being Around Birds Makes Us Much Happier Says New Science

The collected poems, largely originating from the English poets, include not only ones which he or his friends and family have enjoyed, but ones that he uses in his psychiatric practice. In particular he told GNN of a Rumi passage, pulled from memory, which he often reads with clients having marriage difficulties.

Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and rightdoing
There is a field
I’ll meet you there

“When the poet says, ‘I’ll meet you there,’ he’s making the first move, he wants to make things better, he wants to suggest taking the squabble to a different plain, to a plain of sharing,” explains Rosenthal.

A daily dose of a poet’s insight

“I personally take information in in chunks, and I think a lot of people do especially these days, very few people have time to read War and Peace or Paradise Lost,” says Rosenthal “We like to get information in satisfying chunks, so I thought it would be more digestible if I broke it down into logical groupings.”

MORE: Wisdom and Loneliness May Be Shaped by Healthy Gut Microbes, Researchers Believe

Poetry Rx really does work like a 30-day prescription, with poems and the related commentary satisfying a day’s worth of ponderances, while being grouped together in various stages of the emotional journey of life, one can jump around to whichever words are needed at a particular time.

Another way to look at it might be as a poetry Almanac, giving the book tremendous re-reading potential, as there’s no guarantee a reader would relate to all of the content in a single period of their lives.

“Loving and Losing was an obvious first [section], poems are things to which we turn when we’re in or out of love. They console us when we’re our of love and they enliven us when we’re in love,” he says. “The second one is responsiveness to nature, because poets tend to be extremely sensitive to their surroundings.”

“Above all, it’s [a book] about human beings and how to experience your life in a way that enhances it, and if you’re suffering in some way, alleviates that pain.

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“I never had any training… When I was growing up, I was the last guy to get picked for every team that I was on.” – Willie Mays (Happy 90th birthday today)

Quote of the Day: “I never had any training… When I was growing up, I was the last guy to get picked for every team that I was on.” – Willie Mays (Happy 90th birthday today)

Photo: by Ben Hershey

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

How One Developer is Turning Farm Storage into Soaring Yet Affordable Apartments

Chris Miele/Prince Concepts

Produced by the U.S. Navy for use in World War II, and now consigned primarily for storage use on farms, the Quonset hut is experiencing a rebirth within the residential neighborhoods of Detroit.

Chris Miele/Prince Concepts

The long half-cylinder of corrugated steel, prefabricated in factories, was used by development company Prince Concepts to create a unique apartment building of eight high-ceilinged units for 30% less than comparable affordable housing in up-and-coming neighborhoods in the city.

“A Quonset hut isn’t a design, it’s a tool—think about it the same way you’d think about a brick, it’s a tool to achieve a purpose,” explains their website. “For Caterpillar, Prince Concepts challenged architect, Ishtiaq Rafiuddin, to create an 8 unit project within one massive hut, as a 9,000 square foot sculpture with 6 residences and 2 Live/Work spaces that anchors a public park where people can soak up the majesty of a new age monument.”

The Caterpillar’s designer and financier, Philip Kafka, has been using Quonset hut architecture to cut costs and offer unique housing and business opportunities in Detroit. Between the low cost of the hut, and of the land in the city, his projects offer perspective renters something totally unique in terms of price and style.

“With True North [another rental project that consists of live/work spaces, which gave rise to an art gallery and a yoga studio] we used the Quonset hut to create a sculptural community with public and semi-private outdoor nooks that residents and neighbors, alike, could enjoy, marvel at and marvel in,” Kafka explains.

In an interview with Fast Companythe Texas-born, former-NYC advertisement mogul describes his work as “Home-Depot architecture.” The Caterpillar rooms are between 750-1375 square feet, with walls pock-marked with symmetrical window arrangements, hardwood floors, and a 23-foot high vaulted ceiling.

Chris Miele/Prince Concepts

“You get a sunrise view in your bedroom and a sunset view in your living room. That was intentional. It’s all about light, this project,” Kafka explained. “The real benefit isn’t that the Quonset hut lets me build a project so inexpensively, it’s that it lets me give people extremely high-quality space for a reasonable price.”

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In addition, the landscape is bespoke, and features a wrap around deck, gardens, and forty trees. The project was fully leased months before it was officially finished.

Chris Miele/Prince Concepts

With raw wood, steel, pipes, and other construction materials fully visible inside, the Caterpillar, and True North for that matter, were designed with artists in mind, whose creativity would be able to be unleashed upon the raw space.

RELATED: The New Green Building Revolution Uses Timber to Build ‘Plyscrapers’ That Save Tons of CO2

Kafka says he doesn’t want to become the Quonset hut guy, only that it allows him to build bold spaces and buildings on the cheap side. As he mentioned earlier, they are merely a tool for him to do a job, which is hopefully bring a bit of creative artistry to dilapidated neighborhoods of the Motor City.

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Brave Boy Who Was Told He’d Never Speak is Now Honored in Disney Storybook of Pocahontas

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A brave 11-year-old boy who was told he’d never speak has been honored in a Disney storybook all about kindness.

Zac Du Boulay, who was born with Moebius Syndrome, won $5,000 in a recent ‘Inspire Like Churchill’ speech competition, but decided to donate all his winnings to Great Ormond Street Hospital Children’s Charity.

“I didn’t want the [sick children’s] parents to be sad or lonely, so I wanted to help,” he said of his generosity.

Now Zac has been honored by Disney—in its just-launched Tales of Courage and Kindness—a digital storybook collection.

14 young people from around the world have been given dedications in the storybooks, which feature 14 original Disney Princess stories aimed at inspiring children to help create a kinder world.

A difficult start

Zac was born with facial and oral paralysis which left him unable to breathe or eat.

“I put so much time and effort into trying to speak, and I did the impossible, I proved the doctors wrong,” said Zac. “I didn’t worry about people bullying me, I kept strong in my heart.

“I’ve always been determined, kept strong, and tried not to worry about anything. ‘Hakuna-matata’, as they say in Disney’s The Lion King.”

Zac’s mom spoke of the difficulties the family faced when he was born: “Zac spent his first five months fighting for his life in intensive care.

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“We were then trained by intensive care nurses to care for him at home, where we were resuscitating him several times a day under emergency conditions, so life as a family was very stressful and restrictive.

“However, Zac is a fighter. He defied all the odds, firstly, by surviving. Then on Christmas Day, when he was three years old, he said his first word. ‘Mama’.

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“It was the first sound he had ever made other than crying and laughing. From that moment on, he was on a mission to teach himself to speak. Then, once his airway had stabilized somewhat, he was determined not only to speak, but to teach himself how to eat orally.

“So we had another couple of stressful years, finding him raiding the fridge and choking on food, until he worked out a way in which to eat despite the nerve palsy to his face, mouth, and throat.

CHECK OUT: Boy Hero Saves Sister From Choking After Watching John Cena, Who Congratulated Him With a Video

“Similar to his incessant talking, he now never stops eating either,” she joked.

And now? Zac loves using his own experiences to support other children and help them to overcome challenges like he has.

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“I feel amazing, excited, happy, and proud to be honored [by Disney]” he said. “It has inspired me to keep on doing what I’m doing, giving more speeches, and hopefully inspiring more people.”

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Farms in UK Saved This Beautiful Duke of Burgundy Butterfly From Extinction

Charlie Jackson, CC license
Charlie Jackson, CC license

The United Kingdom loves its butterflies: Its Butterfly Conservation is the world’s largest insect-focused conservation organization, and it’s just helped yet another species recover from dangerously low numbers.

Ten years ago the Duke of Burgundy butterfly, named after an aristocrat from a faraway land, was found only in the southern Lake District and the North York Moors. At that point it was Britain’s rarest butterfly.

In the two decades prior, its numbers had fallen 46%. Now its population, of which the newly emerged adults will be preparing to take flight on May winds, has grown 25% between 2010 and 2020.

The Dukes on the Edge conservation program by the Butterfly Conservation was launched in 2011 in response to the dismal population surveys, and included 23 hectares of habitat restoration, management advice for 147 different sites where the Dukes were present, and rallying 1,000 volunteers ranging from land owners to concerned local citizens.

The Duke’s recovery was well-summarized when last spring a butterfly enthusiast and writer stumbled upon the largest single colony in the country.

MORE: Photographer Captures His Passion for the Flight of the Butterfly, Detailing 17 Species in 3-Year Study

The colony was found, according to the Guardian, on the hills of a Dorset organic dairy farm, whose owner has proudly supported habitat for butterflies, including the Duke, in his fields for 20 years.

A force for good

Charlie Jackson, CC license

The Butterfly Conservation has championed the cause of hundreds of different species in decline. They convinced the UK government to use moths and butterflies as official biodiversity indicators, and manage 190 nature reserves in the country while conducting 1,600 events yearly to promote awareness of such insects and what they need to thrive in and around human civilization.

RELATED: Large Blue Butterflies Were Extinct in England, But Now Those Beauties Are Back After 50 Years

Dark brown with orange-peel spots on the outer halves of its wings, it’s no surprise the Duke of Burgundy butterfly could remain hidden in such large numbers. The males are solitary but for the mating season when they compete with other males for territory, while the females and caterpillars deliberately hide themselves under leaves in scrubland and sunny forest clearings.

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5-Year-old is a Neighborhood Hero For Drawing Colorful Messages of Hope on Her House During Lockdown (Look)

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A little girl has become famous in her neighbourhood after drawing colourful messages of hope on her family’s garage door in lockdown.

Mom-of-two Christine Hilditch has been letting her five-year-old daughter Eilidh turn their black glossy garage door into a massive art project.

Twice a week since April 2020, Eilidh has let her imagination run wild, covering the space with mermaids, dolphins, Spiderman, and dinosaurs.

She has this week illustrated it with a rainbow, flowers, and the word ‘Hope’ as lockdown is further eased in Scotland.

Eilidh has a little stool she can stand on to help her reach higher up, and her artist mom gives her a hand with things she struggles to reach.

People stop them in the street to ask if the drawings are hers, and an adoring fan club has begun leaving boxes of chocolates on their doorstep.

Proud mom Christine said: “Whatever comes into her head she does… It could be quite random, one week we had a fairytale as she had been learning about them at school so there was a fairy godmother and it began ‘Once upon a time’ and ended ‘Happily ever after’.

MORE: Sister Makes Video For the Classmates of Her Brother With Autism Who is Starting First Grade – And it’s Adorably Helpful

“She did poppies for Remembrance Day, and one for Valentines’ Day. It depends on what is happening around her.”

When neighborhood shops ran out of chalk, rather than paying more for it online, Christine decided to make some from scratch using plaster of Paris, food coloring, poster paint, and flour.

CHECK OUT: Boy Hero Saves Sister From Choking After Watching John Cena, Who Congratulated Him With a Video

Christine added: “She is just drawing outside to make people happy.”

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Christine has already worn out one broom by scrubbing down the garage but when it rains the chalk is washed away, and Eilidh starts from scratch on the next dry day.

In August Eildih was rushed to hospital by ambulance after she flew off a roundabout in a playpark and broke her elbow, needing an operation to fix it.

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But while she couldn’t draw with her right arm she became ambidextrous.

RELATED: This Teen Makes Tiny Bow Ties for Shelter Dogs to Help Them Look Spiffy and Get Adopted

Christine said: “She was learning how to draw with her left hand, she just wanted to keep going. She was going into P1 [first grade] so she was really anxious about not being able to do stuff. Now she can write with her left hand as well as her right.”

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Eilidh is now loving being back at school as lockdown in Britain eases. And one thing is for sure—this little girl is no doubt excelling her art classes.

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Floating Dandelion Seeds Produce Vortex Not Noticed Before By Scientists

Ilmunho, CC license
Ilmunho, CC license

The extraordinary flying ability of dandelion seeds is possible thanks to a form of flight that has not been seen before in nature, research has revealed.

The discovery, which confirms the common plant among the natural world’s best fliers, shows that movement of air around and within its parachute-shaped bundle of bristles enables seeds to travel great distances—often a kilometer or more, kept afloat entirely by wind power.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh carried out experiments to better understand why dandelion seeds fly so well, despite their parachute structure being largely made up of empty space.

Their study revealed that a ring-shaped air bubble forms as air moves through the bristles, enhancing the drag that slows each seed’s descent to the ground.

This newly found form of air bubble—which the scientists have named the separated vortex ring—is physically detached from the bristles and is stabilized by air flowing through it.

The amount of air flowing through, which is critical for keeping the bubble stable and directly above the seed in flight, is precisely controlled by the spacing of the bristles.

MORE: The Mind-Blowing Mathematics of Sunflowers… From Scientific American Magazine on Their 175th Birthday

This flight mechanism of the bristly parachute underpins the seeds’ steady flight. It is four times more efficient than what is possible with conventional parachute design, according to the research.

Researchers suggest that the dandelion’s porous parachute might inspire the development of small-scale drones that require little or no power consumption. Such drones could be useful for remote sensing or air pollution monitoring.

The study, published in Nature, was led by Dr Cathal Cummins, who said: “Taking a closer look at the ingenious structures in nature—like the dandelion’s parachute—can reveal novel insights.

“We found a natural solution for flight that minimizes the material and energy costs, which can be applied to engineering of sustainable technology.” That’s exciting news indeed.

Source: University of Edinburgh

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“Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Quote of the Day: “Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Photo: by Alexander Schimmeck

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

 

India’s Richest Man Retools Factories to Provide FREE Oxygen to 1 in 10 COVID Patients Across Country

Mukesh Ambani cc wikimedia commons kumawat;covid 19 cc license wikimedia commons NIAID
Mukesh Ambani, kumawat, CC license/COVID-19, NIAID, CC license

As India grapples with an unprecedented new wave of COVID-19, one of the country’s major companies is working round-the-clock to get free oxygen out to people in need.

Traditionally, Reliance Industries is not a manufacturer of medical-grade liquid oxygen. But over a year into the pandemic, the company—which is owned by India’s richest man Mukesh Ambani—has gone on to become the nation’s largest producer from a single location, supplying over 55,000 MT of medical-grade liquid oxygen to people since March 2020.

At its refinery-cum-petrochemical complex in Jamnagar and other facilities, Reliance is producing over 1000 MT of medical-grade liquid oxygen per day—or over 11% of India’s total production—meeting the needs of nearly every 1 in 10 patients needing the life-saving treatment across the nation.

“Nothing is more important than saving every life as India battles against a new wave of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Chairman Mukesh Ambani said in a statement.

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The switch-over to producing high-purity medical grade oxygen hasn’t been too difficult for Reliance engineers—the main facility is already designed for refining and petrochemicals-grade oxygen.

That said, medical grade oxygen has to be produced in liquid form at -183°C with almost 99.5% purity, which poses extraordinary challenges and risks in production and maximizing tonnage.

RELATED: 60 Years Ago He Couldn’t Afford College–Now He’s Donating $20M to Fulfill the Dreams of Students Today

“I am proud of our engineers at Jamnagar who have worked tirelessly, with a great sense of patriotic urgency, to meet this new challenge… [They’ve] risen to the occasion and delivered when India needs it the most,” said Ambani of his staff, who are now bringing immediate relief to over 100,000 COVID-19 patients on a daily basis.

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