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Mom With Rubber Glove Christmas Tree Turns Down Strangers’ Gifts, Asking People to Donate to Charity Instead

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A compassionate single mom who has been low on cash has created Britain’s most frugal Christmas tree – and it is made entirely of inflated rubber gloves.

23-year-old support worker Maxine Oliver says that she endured a tough November after being unable to pick up many shifts at work—and she feared she would have to cancel Christmas altogether.

But the mom-of-one came up with an ingenious way of keeping costs down by creating a handmade tree that cost just £2.

“During November there weren’t many shifts that I could take. They were all 12 or 14 hours long, or were really early or late which just couldn’t work with my childcare arrangements,” said Oliver. “I got a bit behind on bills, so this month I had to catch up and as a result there was no Christmas fund.”

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“I got really upset for a week and told myself that I wasn’t even going to do Christmas this year. But then my stubbornness got hold of me and I decided we were going to have a Christmas no matter what – [and] if I put my mind to something, I tend to do it well.”

Oliver started working on the tree after her son Charlie went to bed at 7:30pm and worked right through until 5am.

The tree was made out of Oliver’s own medical gloves; the ornaments were made from paper cupcake cups found at the back of her cupboard; and the hanging decorations were made from paper and tinfoil.

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She said she hopes her innovative creation will show people that they don’t have to spend tons of money to get into the Christmas spirit.

“I wanted to get it done by the time he came down in the morning so he wouldn’t see a half-finished tree,” says Oliver. “His reaction was amazing, he was shouting ‘Christmas tree, Christmas tree’, pointing at it and screaming.”

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Oliver, who is from Madron, Cornwall in England, has received a slew of praise after she shared a picture of her tree on Facebook, and she was shocked by the amount of positive feedback received.

“I haven’t had one negative comment and people have been so lovely,” says Oliver. “It has reminded everyone of what Christmas is all about, and [it has] spread the mindset that you don’t have to spend loads of money to make Christmas special.

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She even had people offer gifts to her and Charlie, but she says she would rather have people donate them to charity.

“It’s been a tough month but we can afford to put the heating on and have food in the fridge. Some people don’t have that.”

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“We have had a lovely time making our Christmas decorations and presents for everyone, and Charlie won’t go without some presents this year, as his family always gets him gifts every Christmas.

“I am so very grateful for everyone’s lovely gestures of kindness wanting to send us presents. But honestly, the best gift anyone could give us is to donate the money they would have used to get us something, to a local charity in their area.

“I would much rather the money goes towards making their day a little brighter,” she added.

“Our Christmas is a little hard, tight and by no means perfect this year—but it is perfectly imperfect, and we are happy.”

Spread The Christmas Cheer: Share This Sweet Yuletide Story With Your Friends On Social Media

“Decorate your life with only hearts that make yours stronger.” – Debby Ryan

Quote of the Day: “Decorate your life with only hearts that make yours stronger.” – Debby Ryan

Photo: by JD Lasica, CC license, Flickr

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

Inexpensive New ‘Virtual Fence’ Dramatically Reduces Rates of Road Kill in Australia

An innovative new conservation effort in Australia is dramatically reducing the amount of wildlife that are killed by cars and passing traffic.

Researchers have been testing a “virtual fence” system that alerts animals to oncoming vehicles.

The system involves installing small alarm units at 80-foot intervals along the edge of a road. When the alarms detect a car, they begin to emit sirens and flashing lights so that animals will be discouraged from approaching the highway.

Additionally, since the units are faced away from the road, they do not interfere with a person’s driving.

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“The virtual fence technology involves small devices, approximately the size of a mobile phone, mounted on a pole on the side of the road which are triggered by car headlights when they hit a sensor in the device,” Samantha Fox, the researcher who led the project, told Digital Trends. “This sets off blue and yellow flashing lights and a high pitched siren. These together warn local wildlife that a car is coming, and give the animal time to move away from the road.”

The system was tested for three years on a road in Tasmania, an Australian state that experiences the highest rates of road kill in the world. According to a study that was published in Australian Mammology last month, the system reduced rates of roadkill by a whopping 50%.

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The fence’s success means that it could become an inexpensive solution for endangered species that commonly fall prey to busy highways. Currently, wildlife corridors have been shown to be the most efficient in preventing road kill, but their construction is usually quite pricey.

The fences, however, can easily be installed to cover large swathes of highway so that humans and animals can both be a little safer on the road.

(Visit their website for more info— wildlifesafetysolutions.com.au/ or email them at: [email protected])

Alert Your Friends To The Good News By Sharing It To Social Media – Photo by Save the Tasmanian Devil

Watch 3 People Give Gifts and Cash to Strangers (And How They Turned Out to Be Happiest of All)

One of the greatest gifts that you can give yourself is the wonderful feeling of giving something to someone else – which is exactly why these three athletes were asked to give cash and gifts to random people on the streets.

One of the athletes, an endurance runner named Marquise, was asked to hand out $100 bills to his fellow joggers.

Meanwhile, a personal trainer named Leslie was asked to hand out free iPads that were stocked with fitness apps and self-help books to people walking through the mall.

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Finally, a cyclist named Jeff was asked to give free bikes to people who were about to use a bicycle rental station.

The video was uploaded last month by media production company Soul Pancake in collaboration with fitness apparel brand luluemon as a means of celebrating the season of giving.

(WATCH the heartwarming video below) – Photo by Soul Pancake

Pay It Forward: Be Sure And Share This Sweet Story Of Kindness With Your Friends On Social Media

‘It’s Not Quite the Ant-Man Suit’ But Researchers Discover How to Shrink Objects to 1000th Their Original Size

Team invents method to shrink objects to the nanoscale
It’s not quite the Ant-Man suit, but the system produces 3D structures one thousandth the size of the originals.
Written by Anne Trafton
MIT News

It’s not quite the Ant-Man suit, but researchers have invented a way to shrink 3D objects of nearly any shape down to the nanoscale. They can also pattern the objects with a variety of useful materials, including metals, quantum dots, and DNA.

“It’s a way of putting nearly any kind of material into a 3D pattern with nanoscale precision,” says Edward Boyden, senior author of the research and associate professor of biological engineering and of brain and cognitive sciences at MIT.

Using the new technique, the researchers can create any shape and structure they want by patterning a polymer scaffold with a laser. After attaching other useful materials to the scaffold, they shrink it, generating structures one thousandth the volume of the original.

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These tiny structures could have applications in many fields, from optics to medicine to robotics, the researchers say. The technique uses equipment that many biology and materials science labs already have, making it widely accessible for researchers who want to try it.

“There are all kinds of things you can do with this,” Boyden says. “Democratizing nanofabrication could open up frontiers we can’t yet imagine.”

Existing techniques for creating nanostructures are limited in what they can accomplish. Etching patterns onto a surface with light can produce 2D nanostructures but doesn’t work for 3D structures. It is possible to make 3D nanostructures by gradually adding layers on top of each other, but this process is slow and challenging. And, while methods exist that can directly 3D print nanoscale objects, they are restricted to specialized materials like polymers and plastics, which lack the functional properties necessary for many applications. Furthermore, they can only generate self-supporting structures. (The technique can yield a solid pyramid, for example, but not a linked chain or a hollow sphere.)

To overcome these limitations, Boyden and his students decided to adapt a technique that his lab developed a few years ago for high-resolution imaging of brain tissue. This technique, known as expansion microscopy, involves embedding tissue into a hydrogel and then expanding it, allowing for high resolution imaging with a regular microscope. Hundreds of research groups in biology and medicine are now using expansion microscopy, since it enables 3D visualization of cells and tissues with ordinary hardware.

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By reversing this process, the researchers found that they could create large-scale objects embedded in expanded hydrogels and then shrink them to the nanoscale, an approach that they call “implosion fabrication.”

As they did for expansion microscopy, the researchers used a very absorbent material made of polyacrylate, commonly found in diapers, as the scaffold for their nanofabrication process. The scaffold is bathed in a solution that contains molecules of fluorescein, which attach to the scaffold when they are activated by laser light.

Using two-photon microscopy, which allows for precise targeting of points deep within a structure, the researchers attach fluorescein molecules to specific locations within the gel. The fluorescein molecules act as anchors that can bind to other types of molecules that the researchers add.

“You attach the anchors where you want with light, and later you can attach whatever you want to the anchors,” Boyden says. “It could be a quantum dot, it could be a piece of DNA, it could be a gold nanoparticle.”

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“It’s a bit like film photography — a latent image is formed by exposing a sensitive material in a gel to light. Then, you can develop that latent image into a real image by attaching another material, silver, afterwards. In this way implosion fabrication can create all sorts of structures, including gradients, unconnected structures, and multimaterial patterns,” Oran says.

Once the desired molecules are attached in the right locations, the researchers shrink the entire structure by adding an acid. The acid blocks the negative charges in the gel so that they no longer repel each other, causing the gel to contract. Using this technique, the researchers can shrink the objects 10-fold in each dimension (for an overall 1,000-fold reduction in volume). This ability to shrink not only allows for increased resolution, but also makes it possible to assemble materials in a low-density scaffold. This enables easy access for modification, and later the material becomes a dense solid when it is shrunk.

“People have been trying to invent better equipment to make smaller nanomaterials for years, but we realized that if you just use existing systems and embed your materials in this gel, you can shrink them down to the nanoscale, without distorting the patterns,” says graduate student Samuel Rodriques, one of the lead authors of the paper.

Currently, the researchers can create objects that are around 1 cubic millimeter, patterned with a resolution of 50 nanometers. There is a tradeoff between size and resolution: If the researchers want to make larger objects, about 1 cubic centimeter, they can achieve a resolution of about 500 nanometers. However, that resolution could be improved with further refinement of the process, the researchers say.

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The MIT team is now exploring potential applications for this technology, and they anticipate that some of the earliest applications might be in optics — for example, making specialized lenses that could be used to study the fundamental properties of light. This technique might also allow for the fabrication of smaller, better lenses for applications such as cell phone cameras, microscopes, or endoscopes, the researchers say. Farther in the future, the researchers say that this approach could be used to build nanoscale electronics or robots.

Many research labs are already stocked with the equipment required for this kind of fabrication. “With a laser you can already find in many biology labs, you can scan a pattern, then deposit metals, semiconductors, or DNA, and then shrink it down,” Boyden says.

Reprinted with permission from MIT News

Be Sure And Share This Super Story With Your Friends On Social MediaPhoto by Daniel Oran

Man Uses Cast On His Broken Arm to Shatter Window and Rescue Senior From Burning Home

A resourceful Florida man is being hailed as a hero after his broken arm helped him to save an elderly woman from her burning home.

Earlier this week, 93-year-old Maria Cabral lit a candle in the window of her Miami Gardens home as she often does – except this time, the candle lit the walls on fire. Within minutes, the home was ablaze.

Luckily, her 27-year-old neighbor, Altavious Powell, saw the smoke coming out of the house and rushed to the rescue.

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With Cabral still trapped inside the home, Powell started trying to break the window so he could get her to safety. He eventually managed to succeed after he used the cast on his broken arm to help shatter the glass.

“I said, ‘[Maria, Maria], where you at?’ And she said, ‘I’m right here,’” Powell told WSVN. “She was right here like standing on the wall, so I just grabbed her with one arm. She looked up at me, she just said, ‘Thank you.’”

Powell and Cabral were both taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center for smoke inhalation. Though Cabral is still recovering, Powell was mostly unharmed form the incident.

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When Powell was told that he is being hailed as a hero, he simply said: “I’m just glad I was able to do it and I got it over with, and everybody is safe now.”

Cabral’s son, however, told WSVN: “She wouldn’t [have gotten] out of the house alive if that man didn’t come here.”

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by WSVN

Rescue Your Friends From Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media

Three Women Are Being Praised for Coming to the Rescue of Stressed Mother at the Airport

One mom is celebrating the season of giving by praising three compassionate strangers who came to her rescue in a bustling airport.

31-year-old Becca Kinsey had her hands full when she was preparing for her flight back to Texas. Since her husband had been unable to get time off from work, she had been returning home from taking her sons, 2-year-old Wyatt and 5-year-old James, to Disney World all by herself.

Though Kinsey said that the youngsters are usually very well-behaved, they were exhausted from fun and travel – and their stress finally came to a tee while they were at the airport.

“We were standing in line in security, on the verge of tears because Wyatt was screaming and James was exhausted,” Kinsey wrote in a Facebook post. “Out of the blue, one mom stops the line for security and said, ‘Here, jump in front of me! I know how it is!’ Wyatt fell asleep and I was trying to carry everyone’s carry-on when another mom jumps out of her place in line and said, ‘Hand me everything, I’ve got it.’

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“When I said thank you to both of them they said ‘don’t you worry, we’re going to make sure you get on that flight.”

True to their word, the second woman helped the little family through security before grabbing Kinsey’s luggage and escorting them all the way to their gate.

To top it all off, Kinsey was sitting at the back of the plane when Wyatt started to scream once more – and a third woman stepped in to offer her assistance.

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“After about 45 min, this angel comes to the back and says ‘you look like you need a break’ and holds Wyatt for the rest of the flight AND walks him all the way to baggage claim, hands him to [my husband], hugs me and says ‘Merry Christmas!!’”

Kinsey was so overwhelmed by the women’s kindness, she posted a photo of the third woman to Facebook, asking her social media followers to donate to charity as a means of paying it forward.

Fly This Sweet Story Over To Your Friends On Social Media – Photo by Becca Kinsey

“Life is always at some turning point.” – Irwin Edman

Quote of the Day: “Life is always at some turning point.” – Irwin Edman

Photo: by Jonathan, CC license, Flickr

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

IQ vs. Willpower: One is a Much Better Predictor of Success

The Lesson: Willpower is a teachable and accessible skill – and it is a much better indicator for success than an IQ score. Being intelligent, although a desirable trait, is not directly correlated to success. We can, however, teach ourselves and others to become successful simply by exercising and developing our willpower. So why don’t kids have a “willpower class” in school?

Notable Excerpt: “…if you know a kid’s willpower and you know their IQ, knowing their willpower score will make you twice as effective at predicting how well they’re doing in school than knowing their IQ … Then, know this: willpower is also the best predictor of pretty much everything else we want in life: great relationships, health, wealth, etc. Most importantly, know this: willpower is 100% teachable.”

The Speaker: Brian Johnson is a philosopher and founder of Optimize.me, a website, app, and free video series that help people to optimize their lives so they can be their best selves. He studies self-improvement books, then breaks them down into bite-sized chunks and ‘Philosopher‘s Notes’ for busy people who want ‘more wisdom in less time’. He also offers Optimal Living classes and online training for your Hero’s Journey.

Podcast: Brian’s podcast, OPTIMIZE with Brian Johnson, features the best big ideas from the best optimal living books. More wisdom in less time (between 4-19 minutes each) to help you live your greatest life. Subscribe: Stitcher — iTunes — Podbean.

Books: In this talk, Johnson refers to a book by David Servan-Shreiber called “Anticancer: A New Way of Life”.

(LISTEN to the intriguing talk below or check out Brian’s website for more information on his Conquering Cancer class)

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Santa is FaceTiming Kids in the Hospital So He Can Surprise Them From the ‘North Pole’

Hospitalized children are getting a healthy dose of holiday cheer thanks to a sweet little initiative from Santa’s workshop.

This week, Nemours Children’s Health System is utilizing their telemedicine service, CareConnect, to allow hospitalized children to have a face-to-face conversation with Santa who will be speaking to them from the “North Pole.”

The children at Nemours hospitals in Orlando and Delaware and will be able to share their Christmas wishes and interact with Santa’s elves who will be helping manage the videoconference in person.

“Being hospitalized at this time of year can leave kids feeling left out of the holiday season. Santa’s virtual visits from the North Pole offer these kids a fun and special experience,” said Carey Officer, Operational Vice President of Nemours CareConnect and Center for Health Delivery Innovation.

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And judging by the reactions of the kids, the initiative has been a huge success.

“I wasn’t expecting this visit at all,” said Rebecca Merrifield, a mother of a Nemours Children’s Hospital patient. “It’s nice to get a little surprise for the children. When we come to the hospital, he can be a little down, but to get lifted up a little bit from a simple virtual call from Santa, is just awesome.”

(WATCH the sweet video below)

Be Sure And Share This Story Of Yuletide Cheer With Your Friends On Social Media

World’s Largest Shipping Company is Ditching Fossil Fuels and Challenging Their Competitors to Do the Same

The world’s largest maritime shipping company has just announced that they are ditching fossil fuels in a bid for carbon neutrality – and they are challenging other companies to do the same.

According to the United Nations, oversea shipping contributes to roughly 3% of the world’s total carbon emissions while handling 90% of the world’s trading. Though phasing out fossil fuels will prove to be difficult, Danish-based shipping company Maersk plans to lead the shift towards sustainability by investing in renewable fuel sources and cleaner shipping models.

“The only possible way to achieve the so-much-needed decarbonization in our industry is by fully transforming to new carbon neutral fuels and supply chains,” says Søren Toft, Chief Operating Officer at Maersk.

“The next 5 to 10 years are going to be crucial. We will invest significant resources for innovation and fleet technology to improve the technical and financial viability of decarbonized solutions. Over the last four years, we have invested around $1 billion and engaged over 50 engineers each year in developing and deploying energy efficient solutions. Going forward we cannot do this alone” adds Søren Toft.

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Developing carbon-neutral shipping vessels is no easy task. According to the company, an electric cargo truck used for shipping purposes is expected to be able to carry two containers and run for 500 miles (800 kilometers) per charging. In comparison, a container vessel carrying thousands of containers sailing from Panama to Rotterdam will need to be able to travel 5,400 miles (8,800 kilometers). With short battery durability and no charging points along the route, innovative developments are imperative.

Since shipping vessels typically run for 20 to 25 years, the company hopes to meet their 2050 carbon neutrality goal by replacing their shipping fleet with clean energy-powered vessels within the next few decades.

Maersk has already gone to great lengths to reduce their carbon footprint. At the end of 2016, Maersk had reduced carbon emissions by 42% per container and reduced their total amount of carbon emissions by 25%.

Be Sure And Ship This Good News Story To Your Friends On Social Media

Rapper’s Insistence on Featuring Homeless People in Music Video Results in Family Reunion

An English rapper’s insistence on paying homeless people to be extras in his music video has resulted in a long-lost family reunion.

Back in August, Manchester-based musician Bugzy Malone was shooting a music video for his song called “Run”.

Instead of recruiting actors for the shoot, however, he wanted to feature some of the city’s rough sleepers as a means of spotlighting homelessness.

“We went out and got proper homeless people. We had a chance to chat [with] them and give them a little something,” Malone told BBC 1Xtra’s DJ Target in the video interview below. “We got proper people off the streets of Manchester in there.”

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After the video was published, Malone received an email from a local mother who recognized one of the homeless men as her missing son.

The young man had reportedly been missing for almost a year – and his appearance in the video prompted his mother to go out and find him.

Malone then goes on to say in the interview that the homeless man later ended up in the hospital after trying to commit suicide.

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As the mother was at his bedside, she showed her son all of Malone’s social media posts about the video shoot.

In one post, Malone says: “I’ve been at the bottom, it’s not easy. Homeless or not, you must treat people with respect, rich or poor. People that have struggled are the special ones out here!”

In another post, Malone can be seen giving some money to the man. The caption reads: “Life might get you down, just do your best not to stay there for too long. My guy was special regardless of his circumstances. You never know what people have been through. Good to meet you my brother.”

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The man was so touched by Malone’s kind words, he reunited with his family and committed to getting his life together.

According to Malone, the young man now has a job and a girlfriend – and the rapper says that his hand in the young man’s inspiring tale is easily the highlight of his entire career.

Be Sure And Share This Wonderful Story Of Fate And Family With Your Friends On Social Media – Feature photo by Riad Ariane via Instagram

Veteran Who Was Given 4 Months to Live Transforms Polluted Creek – and Lives 27 Years Longer Because of It

Want to LISTEN to this story? Hear the short segment from The Good News Guru (GNN Founder) on our Friday radio broadcast with Ellen K on KOST-103.5 — Or, READ the story below…
(Subscribe to our podcast on iTunes – or for Androids, on Podbean)

 

Though John Beal was able to make it home to his family after the Vietnam war, he was still in dire straits – not because of the gunfire, but because of his health, a story that was first told by KUOW’s RadioActive Youth Media program at Puget Sound Public Radio.

After settling in with his family in Seattle, Washington, the veteran suffered three heart attacks within a year of returning from the war.

At the VA hospital, he was not only told that he had PTSD, but the doctor said that he only had about four more months to live – so the doctor recommended that he “get a hobby”.

As a means of clearing his head, Beal walked to Hamm Creek to contemplate his future. Though he was being faced with an immediate death, he took particular notice of how polluted the waterway was. The yellowed water, which had been sullied by a nearby sewage plant, was filled with broken cars, dead fish, and rotting debris. Local children would caution people to avoid getting into the water, otherwise they might emerge from the creek covered in rashes.

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But according to Beal’s daughter Liana, the creek inspired her father.

“He thought, well, I did a lot of damage in Vietnam, so why not clean up where I am now before I pass?” she recalled to KUOW.

Beal started cleaning the river by removing all the trash and garbage. He then realized that aquatic wildlife were still unable to survive in the creek because the water flow continued into a series of underground pipes – so he removed the pipes.

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Even though he sometimes got overwhelmed by his new “way of life,” the determined veteran persevered.

After years of work, Hamm Creek is now a flourishing wildlife oasis that is resplendent with healthy greenery and wild salmon.

“I was told the first year that I took this job on that you can’t change it, you’ll never bring it back to what it was,” John said in a video quoted by KUOW. “Well, it is restored.

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“You can do anything you want if you possess an idea with a passion. If you pursue that, and if you stick with it long enough, you’ll change the world.”

As fate would have it, Beal passed away in 2006 – which is 27 years later than the doctor’s original prognosis. In the years after his passing, conservationists have honored him for his work and labored to carry on his legacy so Hamm Creek can improve the lives of other people the same way it saved Beal.

Clean Up Negativity By Sharing The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media – Photo by John Hogg / World Bank, and Chesapeake Bay Program, CC license

“Love does not consist of gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction.” – Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Rebekah, CC license

Quote of the Day: “Love does not consist of gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction.” – Antoine de Saint-Exupery, Airman’s Odyssey

Photo: by Rebekah, CC license, Flickr

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

One Cat’s Obsession With Hunting Birds Leads to Invention That Has Saved Hundreds of Thousands

LISTEN to this story from our podcast, told by The Good News Guru (GNN Founder) on Friday’s radio broadcast with Ellen K on KOST-103.5 — Or, READ the story below… (Subscribe to our podcast on iTunes – or for Androids, on Podbean)

Cats kill a staggering number of birds in the U.S. every year—estimated to be in the billions—but one feline’s affinity for hunting them has inadvertently led to the salvation of hundreds of thousands of other feathered prey.

Back in 2008, Nancy Brennan was sick and tired of her cat George bring dead birds into her home. Not only was it a distasteful thing to find on her living room floor, it was also heartbreaking for the enthusiastic birdwatcher.

“His first catch one spring was a ruffed grouse, which he killed and brought into the house,” Brennan told the Burlington Free Press. “I was so disgusted, I literally said out loud, ‘I’m going to stop you, George.’”

As she pondered how to curb George’s hunting habits, she recalled reading an article about how birds notice bright colors. So she grabbed some rainbow fabric and sewed up a bright collar that he could wear around his neck as an early warning system for the birds.

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A week went by and Brennan did not find a single bird on her living room floor in Duxbury, Vermont. She waited a few more weeks to judge the collar’s efficacy, and after one month knew her little invention actually worked.

She also knew that she wasn’t the only pet owner who was tired of finding dead birds on their doorstep, so Brennan launched a website called “Birds Be Safe” and crafted 500 colorful collars to sell online to her fellow cat lovers.

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For the next six years, the 60-year-old birder sold the quick-release collars from her home to hundreds of customers describing similar success with the product.

Then in 2015, an ornithologist and St. Lawrence University professor named S.K. Willson was so happy with the collar that she decided to do a scientific study to test its efficacy.

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Her 12-week studies, conducted in spring and fall, were published in the Global Ecology and Conservation journal, and showed that the cats donning the colorful Birds Be Safe collars were, in fact, killing 19 times fewer birds than those who did not.

The study brought a flood of new customers to Brennan’s website, turning her small business turned into a booming success. She now has a manufacturer creating the collars and says that she has orders coming in from Australia, New Zealand, Europe, South Africa, Iceland, and all fifty of the United States.

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While George passed away some years ago, his antics have saved hundreds of thousands of birds so far.

“Can you believe I went from George being in trouble all the time, for catching birds, to this?’” Brennan said. “He’s paid off his karma pretty well.” (Buy the product on Amazon)

Be Sure And Share This Pawesome Story With Your Friends On Social MediaPhoto by Birdsbesafe

One Cat’s Obsession With Hunting Birds Leads to Invention That Has Saved Hundreds of Thousands (Podcast)

Cats kill a staggering number of birds in the U.S. every year—estimated to be in the BILLIONS—but Nancy Brennan’s love of both birds and cats led to a solution. Hear The Good News Guru tell her feel-good story of the week (from the December 7, 2018 Ellen K. Morning Show on KOST-103.5 radio in Los Angeles).

Subscribe to our Good News podcast on iTunes, or for Android devices on Podbean.

A Happiness Lesson From Waitressing: It’s Not About You

The Lesson: When you’re working in the service industry, it’s easy to assume that the gratuity you receive is a direct result of your performance – but what observation shows is that people will tip what they tip, and they will behave how they normally behave. Ultimately, this means that we can’t always expect to be able to evoke change in others – whether it’s in a restaurant or the rest of the world. We must accept that sometimes we have little control over the people who we encounter.

Notable Excerpt: “…although I feel like the center of the action, often I’m not. People aren’t adjusting everything they do based on me. I need to remember that in many cases, I’m not responsible for the reactions that I think I’m provoking.”

The Host: Dubbed a “Happiness Guru”, best-selling author Gretchen Rubin started her career in law and was clerking at the Supreme Court when she realized she wanted to be a writer. To date, the Manhattan-based speaker has written several biographies, self-help guides, and indexes on the happiest places and practices in the world.

Podcast: Her top-ranking, award-winning podcast, “Happier with Gretchen Rubin,” which discusses happiness and good habits.

Books: Rubin is the author of “The Happiness Project”, which spent two years on the New York Times bestsellers list. Her books, including “The Four Tendencies”, “Happier at Home”, and “Better Than Before”, have sold almost three million copies worldwide in more than thirty languages. Additionally, Rob Lowe has published an autobiography called “Stories I Only Tell My Friends” and a collection of romantic memoirs called “Love Life”.

(LISTEN to the quick psychology lesson below)

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Brain-Dead Mom Wakes Up Minutes After Being Taken Off Life Support; Four Months Later, She’s Fighting Fit

Michele De Leeuw’s family and doctors had assumed the worst after a heart attack left her with just a sliver of brain function – but to everyone’s astonishment, she has made a “miraculous” recovery since her husband decided to take her off life support.

Four months ago, the 57-year-old suffered a devastating heart attack while she was with her husband at their home in Sterling Heights, Michigan. Though she was without oxygen for fifteen minutes, she was given a chance at survival after paramedics guided Karl through performing CPR on his wife.

Unfortunately, her situation was still dire – it only takes six minutes after the heart stops pumping blood for a person’s brain to fail, and ten minutes without blood flow usually results in permanent brain damage.

Six days after Michele was taken to the hospital, doctors told Karl and her two kids that she only had 5% brain function and 25% heart function.

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He was then faced with “the hardest decision of his life”: choosing to take his wife off of life support.

Minutes after the heart-broken husband opted to unplug his wife from the ventilator, however, Michele started breathing on her own.


The doctors still maintained that she would not recover – but then, two days later, Michele woke up. Two days after that, she was talking on her own. Another two days later, she was feeding herself.

Over the course of the last four months, she has undergone open-heart surgery as well as speech and physical therapy – all of which has resulted in her full recovery.

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Upon being restored to her former self, she was sent home earlier this week just in time for her 26th wedding anniversary with Karl.

“You wouldn’t believe it if you didn’t know what she’s gone through,” Karl told NBC News. “She’s a miracle lady.”

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News With Your Friends On Social MediaPhotos by Myles De Leeuw

Norway to Become First Country That Bans Palm Oil Biofuels That Are Linked to Deforestation

In a historic vote, the majority of the Norwegian parliament agreed to ban their biofuel industry from buying palm oil and other dangerous biofuels that are linked to deforestation and harmful environmental practices.

The initiative is set to go into full effect on January 1st, 2020. Until that deadline, legislators will be putting together a comprehensive policy that will prevent the biofuel industry from purchasing or using fuels that are not ethically sourced.

Norway’s palm oil consumption reached an all-time high in 2017 as a result of the country’s race to cut fossil fuel use from their transportation sector, with reports saying that 10% of the country’s entire diesel consumption was based out of palm oil. However, the nation has been working since April 2017 to ensure that all of their cars sold after 2025 will be electric.

Since palm oil has been linked to deforestation, the prosecution of native people, dangerous sources of greenhouse gas emissions, and the destruction of wildlife habitats, Norway’s vote is being praised as a landmark “victory” for the environment.

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“The Norwegian parliament’s decision sets an important example to other countries and underlines the need for a serious reform of the world’s palm oil industry,” says Nils Hermann Ranum of conservational group Rainforest Foundation Norway, adding that “this is a victory in the fight for the rainforest and the climate.”

While the European Union has also voted to phase out harmful biofuels, their ban will not go into full effect until 2030.

Plant Some Positivity Amongst Your Friends By Sharing The Good News To Social Media – File photo by Craig Morey, CC

Read the Amusing Card That Two Cheeky Mailmen Have Been Sending to Each Other for 43 Years

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Two retired Royal Mail workers have been exchanging the same Christmas card for more than 40 years – but since the card has become so precious to them, they refuse to post it in case it gets lost.

Every December, 78-year-old Raymond Pearson and 59-year-old Steve Ford take it in turns to deliver their festive greeting and add a new message to the card.

The comments they’ve included over the years usually include jokes, clever rhymes and jibes about saving cash, such as “Over to You in ’92” and “The Saving is Mine in ’79”.

“Each year, it is a short message, and we try and think of something rhyming,” said Pearson, who is from Stourbridge, West Midlands. “This year it’s quite weird – but that’s Steve.

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“It says ‘It’s Christmas time 2019, the card is making news, may your year be full of tidings bright and devoid of any blues’.

Their bizarre tradition started in 1975 when Pearson sent the Yuletide greeting to Ford.

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“We both used to work for the Royal Mail,” said Pearson. “In 1975, I was in personnel, Steve was a cadet. We both had similar interests in motorcycles and films, so I sent him a Christmas card.”

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Instead of putting it up on the mantle, however, Ford decided to post it back to Pearson as a joke.

“The following year he sent it back to me [and] I thought ‘we are going to play silly beggars, are we?’ and sent it back to him.”

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Little did they know it at the time, but the friends had started a custom which was to continue every Christmas for the next 43 years.

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Despite how they are both retired Royal Mail stalwarts, they always insist on hand-delivering the battered card so that it won’t get lost or damaged in the post.

“Once we started, we had to carry on,” he added. “It didn’t really cross our minds we would be doing it for 43 years. We just kept on doing it.”

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Ford, who is from Kingswinford, said: “I just thought it’d be funny to keep [the card], take it to him next year and see his face, if he remembers the card – and then the swine sent it back to me.

“We’re running out of space to write inside the card and we may be on the back cover next year.”

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