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Teen Saved From Seizure After Online Gaming Friend Calls Police From 5,000 Miles Away

Aidan and Caroline Jackson

This 17-year-old gamer in the United Kingdom was given the medical attention he needed thanks to his online friend calling for paramedics from 5,000 miles away.

Earlier this month, Aidan Jackson had been playing video games from his bedroom in Widnes, England while his parents watched television downstairs. He had been playing with his 20-year-old friend Dia Lathora from Texas when he suddenly started to make sounds of what she could “only describe as a seizure”.

When Dia started asking her friend if he was okay, she heard no response—so she immediately began scouring the internet for the correct emergency phone number in the English town.

After Dia finally settled on dialing the non-emergency law enforcement number, she forced herself to stay calm and could explain to the dispatcher that she was calling from America to help her UK friend.

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Minutes later when paramedics arrived on Aidan’s street, his parents assumed that they were headed to a different household.

“We were at home watching TV and Aidan was upstairs in his room. The next thing we noticed was two police cars outside with flashing lights,” Aidan’s mother Caroline Jackson told The Liverpool Echo. “I assumed they were in the area for another reason and then they ran up to the front door.

“They said there was an unresponsive male at the address. We said we hadn’t called anyone and they said a call had come from America. I immediately went to check on Aidan and found him extremely disorientated.”

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The teen has since undergone a number of tests in order to determine the cause of the seizure. Since this is the second time in one year that Aidan has suffered from a fit, his parents are extraordinarily grateful for Dia’s actions.

“Dia had our address, but didn’t have any contact numbers, so it was amazing she managed to get help from so far away,” Jackson told the news outlet. “I’ve spoken to her and expressed our thanks—she’s just glad she could help.

“We always say to the kids, be careful who you speak to online, but in this case, it was invaluable.”

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JetBlue Going Carbon-Neutral in 2020 On All Domestic Flights —The First Major US Airline to Do So

Earlier this month, JetBlue announced that it will begin offsetting carbon dioxide emissions (CO2) from jet fuel for all domestic JetBlue flights starting in July 2020, making it the first major U.S. airline to take this step towards reducing its contribution to global warming.

JetBlue also announced plans to start flying with sustainable aviation fuel in mid-2020 on flights from San Francisco International Airport.

“Air travel connects people and cultures, and supports a global economy, yet we must act to limit this critical industry’s contributions to climate change,” said JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes. “We reduce where we can and offset where we can’t. By offsetting all of our domestic flying, we’re preparing our business for the lower-carbon economy that aviation—and all sectors—must plan for.”

JetBlue first began offsetting carbon dioxide emissions with programs to balance customer flying during specific times of year, but this most recent initiative expands the company’s efforts to reduce emissions associated with fuel use in a bigger way.

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JetBlue will continue to partner with Carbonfund.org—a leading U.S. based nonprofit carbon reduction and climate solutions organization. Since 2008, JetBlue has already offset more than 2.6 billion pounds of CO2 emissions in partnership with the organization. JetBlue’s new carbon offsetting partners now also include established experts in the space – EcoAct and South Pole.

This expansion is expected to offset an additional 15-17 billion pounds (7 to 8 million metric tons) of emissions per year—the annual equivalent of removing more than 1.5 million passenger vehicles from the road.

Carbon offsetting is a bridge to other industry-wide environmental improvements like fuel with lower emissions. JetBlue has agreed to purchase sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) from Neste, the world’s largest producer of renewable diesel and a pioneer in renewable jet fuel, starting in 2020.

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Neste MY Renewable Jet Fuel is produced 100% from waste and residue raw materials. Over the lifecycle, it has up to 80% smaller carbon footprint compared to fossil jet fuel. The fuel is fully compatible with the existing jet engine technology and fuel distribution infrastructure when blended with fossil jet fuel. The fuel is being shipped via the fuel pipeline to the airport where it will be safely used alongside regular fuel without safety or operational impact.

JetBlue’s carbon offsetting and sustainable fuel purchase is just one example of the efforts that JetBlue is making to mitigate its contribution to climate change in response to public and market demand. For instance, the airline’s incoming 85 new Airbus A321neo (new engine option) aircraft will help reduce carbon emissions more than ever before.

All A321neo aircraft improve fuel economy by 20% through newly-designed engine technology and cabin changes. In addition, the acquisition of 70 Airbus A220s to replace older aircraft marks a major investment over several years, reducing emissions per seat by about 40% compared to the older aircraft they will replace.

Reprinted from JetBlue

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More Than 220 Sheep Saved From Australian Bushfires After Heroic Pup Herds Them to Safety

 

This courageous pup is being credited for saving an entire flock of sheep from impending bushfires in Australia earlier this month.

On New Year’s Eve, Stephen Hill saw the wildfires approaching his sister’s farm in Corryong, Australia sometime around 4:15AM.

Hill and his 6-year-old pup Patsy then rushed over to the farm, hopped onto a 4-wheeler, and rode out to where the sheep were wandering the fields.

RELATED: Here Are a Dozen Different Ways the World Has Rallied Behind Australia During the Bushfires

Quick as a flash, Patsy rounded up the herd and ushered them into a barn while the owner of the farm fended off the flames with a tractor and water pump.

Thanks to Patsy’s quick actions, almost every single one of the roughly 220 sheep were saved from the fires.

“If you haven’t got a good dog, you can’t do so much with the sheep,” Hill told NBC News. “They’re really difficult to move in any way, shape or form unless you have a good dog.”

 

 

Since Patsy’s heroic story has been shared across international news outlets and social media, her owners have started an Instagram account for the terrier-shepherd mix—and it has already garnered several thousand followers.

Thankfully, Australian meteorologists are hoping that this week’s forecast for upcoming rainfall will help bring a much-needed break to the province’s bushfires.

 

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“Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, ‘What are you doing for others?” – Martin Luther King, Jr.

Quote of the Day: “Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, ‘What are you doing for others?” – Martin Luther King, Jr.

Photo: by Ashley Webb, CC license on Flickr – tinted

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Denmark Researchers Use Seaweed to Power a Car

Seaweed algae by Peter Castleton

Each year, 25 million tons of seaweed is harvested, most of which is in Asia and used for human consumption and cosmetics. But what about using it to power our vehicles?

Danish scientists recently announced they have used a seaweed fuel to power an automobile, achieving speeds of 50 mph (80 kph), using a biofuel created by a Dutch company.

“We’ve looked to see if seaweed fuel works in the same way as ordinary fuel and what its effect is on the motor,” Jaap van Hal, who led the research team, told Noordhollands Dagblad.

One of the largest sources of clean renewable energy used today is biofuels. Produced from garbage or the agricultural byproducts from growing crops like sugar, corn, and soya, it contributes to energy security while also reducing carbon emissions.

Within Europe’s transportation sector the vast majority of renewable energy-powered solutions utilize these land-based sources of biofuel. However it requires land, fertilizer, and irrigation resources to produce these biofuels, so Europe is looking largely towards ocean-based sources of biofuel—namely algae and seaweed, which need nothing more than saltwater and sun to grow incredibly fast.

RELATED: US Airline Using Biofuel: United Flights From LA Are Now Powered By Biofuel

Dr. van Hal says learning to manage a 10-acre seaweed farm is similar to managing a 1,000-acre farm. To turn seaweed fuel into a reality, though, requires a supply on a “huge scale”. Even though one farm is currently a “dot on the horizon”, van Hal is nevertheless excited to move forward.

Van Hal is the scientific coordinator for EU-funded MacroFuels, aiming to create an entire industry around seaweed biofuels that includes cultivation and production and testing—specifically for heavy machinery like trucks and ships with diesel engines.

MORE: Toronto Garbage Trucks Will Soon Be Powered by Biogas From the Very Food Scraps That They Collect

Several other European firms are looking into increasing the proliferation of seaweed or algae biofuels for the EU energy sector.

Norway, for instance, is plotting a similar course, with a startup called Alginor planning the creation of a bio-refinery for seaweed and algae growing in the North Sea.

Be Sure And Share The Renewable Energy News With Your Friends On Social Media… (File photo by Peter Castleton, CC license)

Blankets of Hope Partners With Students to Deliver 20,000 Blankets to the Homeless, With Heartwarming Notes Attached

Brothers Mike and Nick Fiorito quit their jobs in New York City in 2016 after realizing how often they felt unfulfilled in their young lives. The move was scary, but eventually it led them to an idea for helping the homeless folks whom they so often passed on the cold city streets on their way to work.

They launched Blankets of Hope, which turned into a global nonprofit organization that also encourages kindness in schools. They began partnering with students so that every blanket includes an inspiring, motivational note handwritten in classrooms across the country.

To date, they have partnered with over 150 schools in 32 states across the United States—plus schools in Canada and Mexico—and have delivered nearly 20,000 blankets with the handwritten notes to those in need.

The lightbulb went off when Nick’s fifth grade teacher saw a news story about the brothers delivering blankets and then reached out asking how to get her students involved. Soon the Fioritos began teaching kindness and empathy workshops in classrooms.

“They close their eyes and put themselves in the perspective of someone who’s homeless and they really exercise that empathy muscle,” Mike told one news reporter..

Image from Blankets of Hope on YouTube

The brothers send the blankets to schools free of charge. The kids then write the notes, and deliver the blankets to homeless shelters in their local communities.

Adults can get involved, too. Donate on a GoFundMe page to help purchase the blankets, which the brothers buy for $5.00 a piece. Because the organization is an official non-profit, 100% of Americans’ donation is tax deductible—and, even better, 100% of any donation goes directly to buying blankets.

Their latest goal is to hand out another 20,000 blankets this winter, which not only keep people warmer, but provides a friendly connection to another soul, which people living on the street too often lack.

(WATCH the heartwarming video from KTVB News below)

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Wind Farms in Africa Aim To Power New Era of Clean Reliable Energy While Saving a Billion Tons of CO2

Senegal is preparing to take a large step in the emerging market of African renewable energy with the construction of the 340 million euro Taliba N’diaye Wind Farm.

Almost all of the 46 wind turbines planned for the site have been completed, with the first trickle of totally renewable energy finally flowing into the capital city of Dakar.

“The first megawatts of energy are today entering Senegal’s grid, giving the country its first taste of clean, renewable wind power,” said Massaer Cisse, General Manager for Senegal at Lekela Power, the farm’s manager.

“This is an exciting time and it brings us a step closer to our ultimate goal of providing power for millions of Senegalese”.

Located 100 kilometers (60 miles) north of Dakar, the turbines and substations erected so far are already generating 50 megawatts of the proposed total of 158 to be added to the grid when Taliba N’Diaye is finished.

RELATED: Europe Could Produce Enough Wind Farm Energy to Power the Whole World for 30 Years, New Study Shows

This will serve to increase the power supply of Senegal by 15% as well as save 300,000 tons of carbon from entering the atmosphere annually.

Africa Happenings reports that the lack of reliable access to electricity is a major contributor to unemployment and low manufacturing output, as power shortages often stall heavy machinery, making investments into capital goods such as electric forklifts or other construction equipment risky.

They estimate that 500 million Africans don’t have reliable access to electricity. For instance, Nigeria, another West African country, could be losing as much as 5% GDP per year due to power shortages. People resort to portable backup generators, which often run on dirty diesel fuel, contributing mightily to falling air quality due to the fumes.

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Bird Friendly Wind Energy Comes to Egypt

With recent successes in Senegal, Lekela Power has also recently secured financial investments worth $325 million for its 250 megawatt West Bakr Wind project in Egypt. Expected to be fully operational by 2021, West Bakr will produce over 1,000 gigawatts per hour, per year, of clean energy for the Egyptian grid.

Egypt’s ‘Build, Own, Operate’ plan is an ambitious project aimed at establishing an Egyptian-managed energy infrastructure that will be made up of 20% renewables by 2022.

The Suez Gulf is a high-traffic area for migrating birds, sometimes at risk from the windmill blades. Lekela and Egyptian Electricity Transmission Company have planned the West Bakr project to be more bird-friendly through the development of a “shut down on demand” program.

Lekela has partnered with the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency and its Migratory Soaring Birds project to help fund and eventually implement a Migratory Birds Monitoring training program that will help ensure birds survive the journey around their wind farms.

West Bakr near the Gulf of Suez Canal is far larger than Taliba N’diaye, and its massive energy output is expected to offset more than 550,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions annually.

Blow Some Good News Toward Your Social Media Feeds… (File photo by Daxis, CC license)

“Each of us chooses, by our ways of attending to things, the universe we inhabit and the people we encounter.” – William James

Hernán Piñera, CC license

Quote of the Day: “Each of us chooses, by our ways of attending to things, the universe we inhabit and the people we encounter.” – William James

Photo: by Hernán Piñera, CC license on Flickr – cropped

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How You Could Spend Your Heartbeats More Wisely, According to the Science of Kindness

Photo by Envision Kindness

Reprinted with permission from Envision Kindness

In my professional work as a scientist, I have spent a lot of time in meetings. There were meetings that were very well-organized and productive while there were others that regrettably were not.

It was during these disorganized meetings that my mind would begin to wander. I found myself estimating the average salary in the room and the resulting cost of this meeting depending on its length—and then I sighed about the waste of money.

While focusing on money was an “amusing” diversion, it was not satisfying and didn’t last long. My mind continued to wander during these unproductive assemblies and I began to think about heartbeats. I remembered that for most mammals, heart rate was inversely proportional to longevity; that is, research shows that across species, the faster the heart rate, the shorter the life span. For example, the heart rate of a mouse versus an elephant as compared to their respective lifespans.

That led to a more personal consideration: if my average heart rate was around 70 beats per minute, sitting in that room for an hour cost me 4,200 heartbeats.

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That’s when this epiphany sank in; I was spending a very precious resource doing something without substantive meaning. Heartbeats are a personal metronome that nature gave all of us to mark time—so I realized that I had to spend my heartbeats more wisely.

The heart is an amazing organ. If you think about it, we are walking around with a pump that circulates our entire blood volume approximately once every minute at rest (for an adult, roughly 5 liters). It works on demand; that is, it adjusts itself to our body’s needs. If we are exercising, bleeding, sweating, etc., our heart rate changes to keep providing blood flow to the rest of the body, especially the brain. It also adjusts how much force it will exert to meet those needs. An amazing variable demand-responsive pump.

In addition to exercise, stressors like anxiety or fear affect heart rate. These increase heart rate—a consequence of the shift between two major balancing aspects of the autonomic nervous system: sympathetic and parasympathetic, which respectively increase or decrease heart rate. This balance also affects something called “heart rate variability” (HRV). That variation is the time between beats. It turns out that lower variation in the time between beats is associated with worse health. People who have less variability have greater risk of death. Diabetes, heart failure, and stress are all major causes of decreased heart rate variability, which make sense as they all have increased risk of death.

A way of thinking about HRV is the beat of a drum. A drummer can strike the drum exactly once per second for a total of 60 beats in that minute so that there is little or no variation between beats. Or the drummer can vary that—making it slightly quicker and slightly slower so that although there were 60 beats in that minute, the time between each beat varied more.

MORE: The Science of Kindness—Biology Proves How We Are All Connected

HRV is higher in younger people and progressively declines with age. Some consider it a test of aging; and while psychological stress and different diseases decrease HRV, breathing—particularly slow breathing—increases it. Many forms of meditation increase HRV, including compassion meditation. That is, extending kindness and compassion to others through thoughts has a beneficial physiologic effect.

From ancient times, the heart was recognized as the center of emotion. Poetic expressions like “he wears his heart on his sleeve,” “follow your heart,” or ”a broken heart” point to how symptoms—such as what a person feels around the physical heart—probably reflected manifestation of different emotions like love and anxiety. In this model, the brain is the dominant feature telling the heart what it is perceiving. Yet the physiology is much more complex; it turns out that the heart has its own nervous system and provides feedback to the brain that can affect feelings as well as strategic thinking.

The heart also is affected by oxytocin—which is known as “the love hormone”. Released in response to different (particularly prosocial) stimuli like hugs or massage, oxytocin also directly affects the heart and cardiovascular system. In response to oxytocin, the heart in turn releases another hormone called atrial natriuretic peptide that can lower blood pressure. Oxytocin appears to lower blood pressure and heart rate through other mechanisms, too; a physiologic way of saying that love is good for the heart.

Each heartbeat, therefore, is a reflection of a lot of complex interactions between our mental and physical states—and how our heart beats, in turn, affects how we feel. Beyond being a pump, each heartbeat is an important part of appreciating and living life. We feel love, suffering, sadness, joy, and amazement through it. We place our hand over it when expressing emotion or making a pledge. All because the heart allows us to feel the wonders of being alive.

CHECK OUT: Instead of ‘We Are What We Eat,’ the Science of Kindness Says ‘We Are What We See’ in Daily Life

Yet it is easy to forget about how precious each heartbeat is and take its continuous operation for granted. What if we changed that? How could we honor the gift of each heartbeat to attain greater meaning? It might show itself as gratitude for being alive and drive the focused pursuit of doing good with the limited number of heartbeats that we each have. And with my newfound respect for heartbeats, it is not just mine that matter—I also needed to respect everyone else’s.

After I realized the significance of heartbeats, I changed how I ran meetings; I would prepare extensively so that everyone would find the meeting productive, emphasizing a culture of listening to each other and openly seeking the truth. The result was really positive, likely because they found meaning through doing good work that honored their own heartbeats. Kindness here was motivated by the significance of heartbeats.

Of course, there are many other ways to honor heartbeats, not just through meetings. We honor heartbeats when we take care of ourselves (rest, exercise, eat well, etc) and we take care of others (family, friends, coworkers, and strangers).

RELATED: The Science Behind Why We Need More of the ‘Secret Sauce’ of Kindness

Additionally, this does not mean that we should not watch a silly movie or do something that might be viewed as goofing off (that’s actually relaxing). It simply means that we should be more conscious of our heartbeats so that, overall, we spend them wisely.

Go ahead—feel your own heart. Marvel at what you have been given. And then decide what you want to do to make the most of them. Their yours to make a meaningful life with.

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Businessman Needing a Warehouse Stumbles Upon World’s Largest Train Set—And Refuses to Simply Tear it Down

Of all the things you could think to do in New Jersey, seeing the world’s largest functioning model train set meandering around its own museum probably doesn’t immediately come to mind. But, it’s thanks to a man who isn’t even an enthusiast that this glorious creation was saved from ruin.

Bruce Williams Zaccagnino, a resident of Flemington, New Jersey, spent 18 years creating the technological marvel in a building now called Northlandz—but the winding tracks and breathtaking miniature scenery through which the toy train rambled eventually fell into disrepair as the price of maintaining it inside its large building became too high for a man who was essentially just an extraordinarily passionate hobbyist.

A large warehouse such as Northlandz is necessary if you want to build a model train setup with more than 8 miles of track. Zaccagnino continued to imagine more and more artistic scenery, which led him to expand the basement 5 times.

The little trains start their journey from a depot, fix onto a track through a functioning and amazing turnstile, and then run through model America. They pass over bridges spanning canyons and dusty gorges, along scenic riverways, by industrial mining pits and exquisitely detailed villages, and through tunnels carved through miniature mountains. (See the video below…)

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Zaccagnino began to open the basement twice a year to tours at the suggestions of his friends, allowing him to share his incredible Wonka-like creativity and imagination with others. In 1996, he made Northlandz a year-round attraction.

At that point the train exhibit included 1,200 buildings and 100 trains. The museum also included a historic American Doll collection and a 2,000-pipe organ. However, such a large building created a substantial overhead—too large for Zaccagnino, even after opening it to the public, and the project had to be abandoned.

Demolition Discovery

Businessman Tariq Sohail is the new owner of Northlandz after he purchased it from of Zaccagnino last November when he was looking for additional warehouse space.

Sohail runs a distribution business and was told by the former owner that he could “demolish what was inside”.

“But, when we saw it, we said, ‘No way we could demolish this’,” Sohail told My Central Jersey.  “What this guy built is amazing.”

“Bruce was running it by himself so there was a lot of wear and tear—it looked like a ghost house. We wanted to preserve it so it was here for the people.”

Spurred on by the amazing place, Sohail invested a quarter-million dollars into renovation, repairing lights, flooring, and much of the train scenery—so the miniature world could once again delight audiences throughout the year.

WATCH: Artist Hides Intricate Glass Creations All Over the World for Delighted Strangers to Find

The renovations have also included a gift shop and private event space, with plans for a movie theater, climbing walls, and model train set classes for kids slated for the near future.

“Every single person has commented on how clean it now is and how they can see a lot more with our new lights,” said Sohail. “They like how there are more trains and the scenes aren’t damaged anymore. Plus, they love how there is space for them to sit and eat and also host birthday parties and other events.”

(WATCH the news coverage below) – Photo by My Central Jersey

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Eager Beaver: 10-Year-old Girl Becomes One of the First Scouts in the UK to Earn Every Activity Badge

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SWNS

A 10-year-old Girl Scout has become one of the first in the United Kingdom to get every single Beaver and Cub Scout activity badge.

Willow Woolhouse completed every activity badge possible while she was in the Beavers, and last week, she received her final Cub achievement—but, getting all 57 badges was far from easy.

She had to learn to horse ride, become proficient in Morse code, teach herself to cook the perfect omelette, and master the martial art of Tang Soo Do.

RELATED: 4-Year-old Girl Saves Mom’s Life With ‘Bravery and Poise’—All While Calming Her Siblings and Dogs

School prefect Willow also had to impress her scout leader with her stargazing skills and make her own bird box to get her DIY badge.

The only girl in her cub pack, Willow picked up her final badge last week—a photography patch—awarded for her series of snaps of her proud mum 42-year-old Beth Shaw.

Willow is one of very few girls in history to get every Beaver and Cub activity badge—Rebecca Hooper, at 10-years-old, accomplished the same feat in 2009, but it was at a time when there were fewer cub badges available.

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Cub “sixer” Willow, who is set to move up to the Scouts this season, already has her sights set firmly on achieving all 62 badges there as well.

“I feel really happy about getting them all. When I look back on my life I can’t picture myself not being a cub or a beaver,” said Willow, from Stockport, Greater Manchester. “It’s just that friendship with everyone there that’s really got me.”

Willow joined the 3rd Bramhall Beavers when she was 5 years old because she lives opposite the scout hut with mum Beth, and scientist teacher dad Robert, 39.

It took her three years to get all 20 Beavers activity badges she could achieve—plus the Chief Scout Bronze award.

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She gained her first—and favorite—badge for cooking after mastering a series of culinary skills, which included being able to make an omelette for her mom.

“It was the first time I’d used a frying pan. Since then though, eggs are my speciality and I’ve even invented some original recipes,” says Willow.

WATCH: Soccer Team is Winning Hearts After They Stopped Championship Play to Help Opponent Fix Her Hijab in Privacy

She then got 19 more, including ones for cycling, disability awareness, and collecting. Some were completed at her weekly session, and others were finished at school or home, although all of them were documented with photographs to submit to her leaders.

Willow graduated to Cubs at age 8, and began to work through all 37 available badges.

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Her favorite was fire safety, which involved an exciting visit to the local station. However, she only recently realized she’d got all available badges.

“Because it was so long ago that I started beavers and I was so young,” says Willow. “My mum probably told me I had all my beaver badges, but I’m not the type of person who remembers that kind of thing.

“Of course, I will be involved with scouts when I am an adult, even though I have ambitions to be a cosmologist,” she added.

She got into star gazing thanks to a scout badge, which prompted her to get a telescope for her birthday—but despite all the badges, it’s the friendship that keeps Willow going back to her weekly club.

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She wrote a novel called “Survival Girls” about her pals’ camp adventures, which she hopes will be published one day.

“I’m really pleased and proud of her, because these badges are quite difficult to get,” said her proud mum Beth, an operations manager who volunteers with the pack. “And she never doesn’t want to do them. She’s so enthusiastic about putting the work in to get them.

MORE: 14-Year-old Awarded $25,000 For Her Invention That Totally Eliminates Blind Spots in Your Car Using a Projector

“Sometimes you can submit school work in order to achieve them—sometimes you have to put a lot of new effort into it,” she added. “One of the harder ones she had to learn how to horse ride—but she did it. For her communications badge, she needed to learn morse code. They all have to put in a lot of effort.

“At school, they say she’s very interesting to talk to. She’s got a lot of different aspects to her. She doesn’t play on computer games, and she’s not into TV. She knows about the outdoors and nature and DIY though!

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“Her leaders have given her so much support and guidance,” she added. “They are fantastic role models.”

A spokesman for The Scout Association said: “Well done Willow—it’s a real achievement to develop all the skills required to achieve all the Beaver Scout Badges and the Cub Scout Badges. To achieve this feat, Willow must have shown grit, determination, and resilience.

“She joins an exclusive and very small group of other Cub Scouts who have gained all their badges and in doing so have develop the skills they will need to make their way in life,” they added. “We are very proud of Willow and of the volunteer Leaders from 3rd Bramhall Cubs that have supported her on her journey. Well done.”

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Impelled by Reactor Meltdown, Fukushima Japan Vows to Achieve 100% Renewable Energy Use in 20 Years

Nine years ago, an earthquake and tsunami off the coast of Japan caused one of the most significant nuclear disasters in human history in the area around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, where the resulting reactor meltdown led to the evacuation of 150,000 individuals.

Now, the local government has vowed to restructure the grid of the north western prefecture to use entirely renewable energy sources by 2040. Fukushima is the third largest administrative district in the country, and uniquely includes a variety of energy resources like prime spots for solar and wind farms, and also opportunities for geothermal power as well.

Working to achieve these ambitious goals, Fukushima Prefecture signed a memorandum of understanding in the field of renewables with the Ministry of Environment for the German state of North-Rhine Westphalia, the largest energy-producing state in Germany—and Europe as well—in August of 2017.

North-Rhine Westphalia has doubled their renewable energy infrastructure over the last 15 years—growing it to deliver 9% of total energy production.

LOOK: New Power Plant Turns Waste into Energy—and Doubles as a Ski Slope and Climbing Wall

Since 2012, however, Fukushima has tripled its renewable energy production, with solar, wind, water, thermal, and biofuel resources totaling 1,500 megawatts of electricity, delivering a contribution of nearly 18% of Japan’s total yearly energy consumption.

Additionally, 300 billion yen ($2.75 billion) for the project has already been fronted by sponsors such as the state-owned Japan Development Bank and Mizuho Bank. The funding will be used to construct 11 solar farms and 10 wind farms over the next 4 years. The new projects also include biomass plants, geothermal stations, even fleets of sea-going windmills.

The proposed new grid, spanning 80 kilometers, would reach the Tokyo metropolitan area and contribute 600 megawatts of electricity, replacing much of the power which, up until recently, the city had received from the pair of Fukushima atomic energy plants.

MORE: This Revolutionary Blast Furnace Vaporizes Trash and Turns It into Clean Energy (Without Any Emissions)

Beyond moving away from its robust infrastructure and dependence on atomic energy, Japan is also the third largest importer of coal and natural gas, and a massive change in energy independence would help Japan reach its ambitious goals set forth in the recent UN climate change panel in Madrid last month.

The country’s Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, irrespective of the Fukushima Prefecture’s own energy objectives, is targeting 24% total energy from renewables nationally by 2030.

Power Up With Positivity By Sharing The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media — File photo by Tokyo Electric Power Co., TEPCO, CC

“How long after you are gone will ripples remain as evidence that you were cast into the pool of life?” – Grant M. Bright

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Quote of the Day: “How long after you are gone will ripples remain as evidence that you were cast into the pool of life?” – Grant M. Bright (unconfirmed)

Photo: by 白士-李, CC license on Flickr – cropped

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Rather Than Shredding Food Scraps With Your Garbage Disposal, This Device Collects It All for Composting

Rather than shredding up your food waste and sending it into the sewers with a garbage disposal system in your kitchen, this contraption collects all of your dinner scraps for composting.

Composting is a sure way to combat climate change while also relieving additional burden on local landfills and using valuable nutrients to nourish the earth. However, handling smelly old food scraps might deter some people from composting at home.

That’s where the Sepura Home comes in.

The Sepura is a new kind of garbage disposal that can attach to any kitchen drain so homeowners can flush all of their food down the sink. The food is then collected into a sealed, scent-proof container that can hold up to four weeks of waste before it needs to be emptied.

MORE: Instead of Dumping Rejected Food Shipments into Landfills, Truckers Are Donating Them to Local Charities

Since the Sepura also eliminates the problem of garbage disposal blades becoming dulled over time, users can dump pretty much any kind of solid food down the sink so long as it fits through the drain hole.

The contraption, which was designed by Canadian engineering company Anvy Technologies, is being hailed as “the only sustainable food waste disposing device available” which can be permitted in any municipality.

According to Engadget, the Sepura is slated to go on sale this fall for $340.

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The 50 Best Images From Around the World That Illustrate Freedom

“Happy High Jump” by Aung Thu Ya in MyaTheinTan Pagoda, Saggaing, Myanmar also focuses on the joy of a child for the contest theme.
“F*** Yeah” by JPR Photos in the Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada.

These incredible pictures show what freedom means to 50 top photographers from around the world.

 

“Jump” by Anskar Lenzen in Montenegro.

Free-to-use photography app Agora asked its multi-million user base to submit their photos which would best illustrate the theme of “freedom”.

 

“Silks” by David Martinez in Moab, Utah.

After nearly 20,000 entries, 50 images have made it to the finals and are now being voted on for the “World’s Best photo of #Freedom2020”.

 

“To give free” by Swe Tun depicting a farmer and his son in Myanmar.

The winner, who will also win a prize of $1,000, will be selected by January 23rd.

 

“Untitled” by Agora user Brodsla depicting a woman at Lempuyang Temple in Bali.

One of the images named “Free Jump” by Shibasish Saha, shows a child jumping in the air after throwing a traditional umbrella above themselves in India.

 

“Free jump” by Shibasish Saha in North Bengal, India.

“I was shooting a buddhist school when I saw this little child returning home from school,” said the photographer. “The child was so happy that he threw his umbrella and jumped all of a sudden … [so for the contest], I wanted to relate that the childish mind has no boundary and can express one feeling freely.”

 

“Happy High Jump” by Aung Thu Ya in MyaTheinTan Pagoda, Saggaing, Myanmar also focuses on the joy of a child for the contest theme.

Agora has a community of more than 3.5 million users from 193 countries where people create, vote, and curate the best images made worldwide.

 

“Breaking Free” by Tom Bridges.

“Agora is built between all: we want to empower people all over the world, because we believe that every point of view is important,” said Octavi Royo, Agora’s CEO and co-founder. “We’re creating a global democratic system where everyone can create, vote and enjoy the best creations of Humanity.”

 

“Above the clouds” by Pitkovskiy Oleg Viktorovic on Hafelekar Mountain, Austria.

If you want to check out all the finalists from the contest or vote on your favorite, be sure and visit Agora’s #Freedom2020 website page.

 

“Fly high” by Martina Birnbaum in Seattle, Washington.

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Homicide Rates Around the World Continue to Fall to Record-Low Levels Year After Year

Despite having different languages, cultures, and gun laws, homicide rates across much of the world have been falling since the 90s—and those rates are continuing their positive trajectories into 2020.

Between 1990 and 2015, the number of homicides per 100,000 people fell by 46%, with countries in Oceania experiencing a 22% drop over the same period, and 36% in Asia.

Asia and Western Europe, where one is already the least likely to become a victim of a homicidal act, saw the most significant decreases over that period of time.

WATCH: Study of Surveillance Cameras Proves That Strangers Will Almost Always Intervene to Help

Homicide in Eastern Europe also fell by 18% over that time period, which is remarkable when you remember the Soviet Union collapsed with the Berlin Wall just a year before this period began, and many East European countries were facing governmental collapses, war, and economic depressions, and even genocide throughout the 90s.

According to crime statistics released by the FBI in September, large cities that had experienced an uptick in murders during 2015-2016 had fewer killings in 2018. In Chicago, the murder rate declined substantially, by 14 percent, and in Baltimore by 9 percent. in cities with populations of more than a million people, it fell by an average of 8.5 percent in 2018.

The less than optimistic news in the UK was reversed during 2019.

According to BBC, the majority of UK police forces saw a fall in homicides compared with 2018 which was the highest year of the decade. This includes reported homicides in West Yorkshire, Merseyside, Greater Manchester, the West Midlands, West Mercia, Devon and Cornwall, Sussex and Cheshire.

RELATED: World’s Largest Holocaust Archive is Now Making Their Records Available to Everyone on the Internet

Scottish police said homicides fell by 11% from the previous year, including in Glasgow. 2016-2017 was the second lowest year on record, a triumph in a 15-year downward trend for the Scottish city.

Growing up in Glasgow, there were places “you absolutely didn’t venture,” Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s justice secretary, told The Washington Post. “[Now]… there’s not a place in Glasgow that I wouldn’t go to”.

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Labrador Retriever Has Been Helping Owner Collect Hundreds of Pounds of Trash From Beach Since She Was a Pup

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This 2-year-old pooch has been doggedly helping her owner pick up trash from their local English beach—and together, they have collected hundreds of pounds of garbage.

As a puppy, Molly the Labrador retriever would always find pieces of trash to play with—which inspired her owner Fliss Cater to turn the pup’s habit into a good cause by encouraging her to deposit all the garbage into a trash bag.

“I’ve had Molly since she was just nine weeks old and she’s always loved picking up plastic bottles,” says Cater. “Labradors are quite inquisitive and energetic so I was lucky that she immediately had a knack for it.

RELATED: Dutch Guy Famous for Cleaning Up Pacific Garbage Patch is Now Clearing the World’s Rivers Too

“We’ll pick up hundreds of items every single day, and I’ve had to upgrade from small bags to massive bin liners,” she added. “She loves it so much she doesn’t ask for treats when she finds something, all she wants is a ‘good girl Molly’ and she’s a happy dog.”

When Cater moved to Scarborough, North Yorkshire to open a bath and skincare shop in 2017, she says she couldn’t believe how much litter she was left “senselessly” on the nearby beach.

She was shocked and appalled by the “unavoidable” amount of litter she found while taking Molly for walks along the coastline.

CHECK OUT: Students Design Beach Vacuum That Can Suck Up Microplastics While Leaving All the Sand

“If you live by the beach and enjoy it, I think it’s our responsibility to keep it clean,” says Cater. “In the summer it was impossible to avoid the litter—it was just everywhere.”

After just a few months of training, however, Molly and her owner began collecting all of the ropes, discarded toys, and plastic bottles.

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“I taught her different commands to keep her safe, because there’ll be things on the beach that could harm her,” says Cater. “There are needles and sharp objects or just things you wouldn’t expect, so I wouldn’t let her go and pick anything up on her own.

“As a puppy, she picked up a dead animal once or twice, but I told her off and put on my angriest voice and she’s never done it since.

LOOK: 633 Divers Just Set the World Record for Largest Ocean Cleanup After Collecting 1,600 Pounds of Trash

“She’s such a good girl and she’s never had any issues unless she spots a tennis ball—tennis balls take precedence over everything.

Cater says she never leaves the house without stuffing her bag with bin liners and plastic gloves because she knows Molly will always find something.

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“We always pick litter when we go on walks, no matter what … I can’t take credit for her great work, she’s the best dog and it’s really just the way she is.”

Their daily walks have since made Molly somewhat of a celebrity among the beach-goers, too.

“She still doesn’t know the difference between an empty discarded bottle and a bottle that is still full which has led to some interesting situations. She’ll sometimes come back to me with a full bottle and I’ll look across the beach and there’ll be a confused person wondering why this dog has just stolen their drink.

“Her intentions are good though, and she’s just trying to do the right thing,” says Cater. “Thankfully no one ever gets angry because she’s so cute.

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“We get stopped all the time by people who think it’s adorable that she’s cleaning. She gets so much attention and she loves it, she knows she’s a bit of a star.”

Cater hopes Molly’s unique skill set will not only help clean up the beach, but also make people think twice before littering.

“Unfortunately Molly can’t clean the beach on her own, but she’s trying,” says Cater. “We want to get people involved or at least make them think twice before disposing of their litter so carelessly.

“It’s particularly alarming on the beach because people will drop rubbish in the sand, and then it’s a battle against the tides to beat them to it.

LOOK: Group of Birds Employed by French Theme Park to Pick Up Trash

“Once the tide comes in, the litter is gone and will make its way into the sea and threaten our marine life.

“If you’re a business here, who relies on people coming to the beach, I think you’ve got a responsibility to protect it.”

The cleaning duo don’t expect to ever complete their task, but Cater says they won’t stop until the beach is clean.

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“Just like the heart beats involuntarily, the mind thinks involuntarily. Thinking during meditation is actually an indicator that stress is leaving the body.” – Emily Fletcher

Quote of the Day: “Just like the heart beats involuntarily, the mind thinks involuntarily. Thinking during meditation is actually an indicator that stress is leaving the body.” – Emily Fletcher

Photo: by Betty Nudler, CC license on Flickr – cropped

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Doing Something Nice For Others Can Immediately Relieve Sensations of Physical and Mental Pain, Says New Study

Have you ever felt warm and fuzzy inside after doing something compassionate for someone else? Well, this impressive new study shows there might be a lot more serious science behind that warm and fuzzy feeling than we originally thought.

Researchers from several Chinese universities put together the study in order to more closely examine why humans might act altruistically at their own expense.

Devising a number of tests, the researchers were able to measure charitable actions—mostly altruistic giving—in parallel with pain sensitivity and management. Their work, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), reveals some startling insights into different reasons why we may choose to give or help others at the cost of our own livelihood.

Notably, the scientists found that “acting altruistically relieved not only acutely-induced physical pain among healthy adults, but also chronic pain among cancer patients”.

Effective Evolutionary Altruism

In early human societies—or even in those of our earlier ancestors—intelligence and social cooperation were our only tools for survival along with more time-tested evolutionary strategies like tooth, claw, strength, speed, venom, or camouflage.

RELATED: Man’s Cancer is Healed After Doing Random Acts of Kindness for a Year

In order for us to survive and reproduce, our brains evolved to make sacrifices for the sake and wellbeing of our social groups, even going so far as to risk personal injury or death to do so.

The newly-published paper demonstrated that acute pain was reduced when subjects acted for the benefit of others; indicating a sort of biological incentive.

“The prevalence of altruism under life-threatening circumstances raises an important yet poorly understood question: what is happening within the individual at the time when he or she helps?” ask the scientists in their foreword.

It wasn’t an obvious question for them since there are—as the paper details—two prevailing and competing hypotheses.

RELATED: Learn What 370 Schools Are Now Teaching in a Massive New Mental Health Research Trial

Previous theories suggested that the unilateral nature of acting altruistically leads to painful sensations because it involves objective loss (time, money, blood, effort, food, etc.), while a competing view suggests that while tangible loss is involved with altruistic actions, intangible gains are received, such as reductions in depression, increases in self-esteem and sense of purpose.

Using fMRI machines and other methods, the Chinese researchers could test these competing views in randomized, placebo controlled-trials.

No Pain, No Gain

In just their first pilot study, dramatic results were found after individuals were reported to have experienced more pain when having blood drawn for regular lab tests than when their blood was drawn for donations to earthquake victims—even though the needle used was larger and the quantity of blood taken was greater in the donation subjects compared to the test-taking subjects.

WATCH: Study of Surveillance Cameras Proves That Strangers Will Almost Always Intervene to Help

In their second pilot study, subjects were asked whether they would participate in an altruistic activity, in this case revising a handbook for the children of migrant workers. The test groups were sorted by those who chose to (altruistic) those who chose not to (non-altruistic) and those who did so as a mandate (control).

Sinking their hands into cold water, participants were asked to report their pain every 15 seconds after a reminder, and once again it was the altruistic group who experienced the smallest degree of pain. It was also the altruistic group who managed on average to keep their hand submerged in cold water the longest.

Another test involved a session of wearing a blood pressure tourniquet for three minutes while reporting on pain they experienced every 15 seconds. It had participants complete a survey on consumer decision-making—and upon completion they earned 10 yuan for earthquake victims as opposed to themselves. Donating participants reported less pain experienced during the tourniquet pain session.

RELATED: She Conquered Fear of Cancer‘s Return by Giving Unconditional Love to Strangers

In the final experiment the researchers examined the effects of altruistic analgesia on chronic cancer patients. Over the course of a week, the group which chose a daily altruistic activity, in this case cleaning the common areas for their wardmates and preparing a nutritional diet plan for their wardmates, had a gradual reduction in pain symptoms throughout the week, compared to the non-altruistic and control groups.

“Our research has revealed that in adverse situations, such as those that are physically threatening, acting altruistically can relieve unpleasant feelings, such as physical pain, in human performers of altruistic acts from both the behavioral and neural perspectives,” the conclusion reads.

“The finding that the incurrence of a personal cost to help others may buffer performers of altruistic acts from unpleasant conditions contributes to a more comprehensive understanding of human altruism.”

Help Your Friends See This Inspiring News By Sharing It To Social MediaFile photo by Shane T. McCoy / US Marshals, CC

Single Mom Who Grew Up in Foster Care Adopts Six Brothers So They Can All Stay Together

After experiencing years of childhood loneliness in the foster care system, this single mother has just adopted six young boys into her home.

Jessica Benzakein was only 12 years-old when her mom surrendered her to the state. Since older foster kids are far less likely to get adopted, Benzakein languished in the foster care system until she turned 18, and then headed off to college.

Benzakein spent many holidays as a young woman wishing for a family—so when she finally had a house of her own in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, she decided to open her heart and home to foster kids and siblings who were enduring the same struggles she had as a child.

In addition to co-parenting two biological sons with her ex-husband, Benzakein welcomed the six boys from the foster care system several years ago.

RELATED: Hundreds of Americans Become Foster Families to Ailing Senior Veterans, Opening Up Their Hearths and Homes

Four of the boys are biological brothers currently ranging in age from 8 to 18; the other two boys, aged 4 and 6, are also related.

The youngsters were originally only supposed to stay with Benzakein for a weekend, but those few days quickly turned into several years as a happy family—which was officially sanctioned earlier this week when Benzakein adopted the boys to become their legal guardian.

“Everybody tells me how lucky these kids are and what a good thing I did,” the 46-year-old mother told TODAY. “But … I’m going to cry … they grounded me. I went through my 20s thinking I didn’t really need a family. But I did.”

“They give me purpose.”

(WATCH the news coverage below) – Screenshot image from WTMJ-4 News video

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