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Internet Finds Out ‘Gilligan’s Island’ Actress Needs Help, Fans Flock to Support Her

Some celebrities have had the good fortune of being able to enjoy their retirement in comfort and style – but unfortunately, the same can not quite be said for Dawn Wells.

Wells was the beloved young actress who played Mary Ann Summers on the CBS show “Gilligan’s Island”. According to her dear friend and hairstylist, the starlet has fallen on hard times.

Dugg Kirkpatrick recently created a GoFundMe page for Wells, asking for help from her fans.

“After 2008, like many of us, Dawn suffered through the banking crash and lost everything including her life savings, in addition to a life-threatening surgery which came close to killing her,” wrote Kirkpatrick. “Dawn was a victim of an unexpected accident that required hospitalization for two months and a very long time to rest and heal.”

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So as a means of helping his friend pay her hospital bills and find her a place to live out her senior years, Kirkpatrick set the goal for $180,000.

“Should any of you out there wish to contribute a small (sum) to help a woman who gave so many people joy over the years, it would be so appreciated.”

Thousands of “Gilligan’s Island” fans contributed to the page and offered their love to the actress. The campaign has raised $191,000 in 20 days, enough money to pay off some of the actress’s debt and move her into a retirement village in California.

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Wells eventually took to Facebook to express just how “amazed” she was by the support.

“A dear, dear friend of mine with a big heart was trying to help me with some common issues we all understand and some must face,” wrote Wells. “He created that page with the love an emotion (of) someone protecting their child.

“I don’t know how this happened,” she continued. “I thought I was taking all the proper steps to ensure my golden years. Now, here I am, no family, no husband, no kids and no money. I’m grateful that God has given me so many friends and fans who care, or it would all be too …overwhelming.”

“I am grateful to any of my fans who are willing to offer support. However, please know that my outlook is positive and I look forward to seeing you all in my travels.”

If This Story Floats Your Boat, Be Sure To Share It With Your FriendsPhoto by Dugg Kirkpatrick via GoFundMe

Study Shows Patients Will Recover More Quickly When the Doctor Uses Different Words

To feel better faster, a dose of reassurance might be just what the doctor ordered.

According to a new study, when a health care provider offers a few encouraging words about their patient’s recovery time from an allergic reaction, symptoms are significantly reduced.

“For many conditions, the simple act of being reassured by a medical professional can aid in the healing process, and we needn’t always rely on medication and procedures to make us feel better,” said the study’s lead researcher, Alia Crum, an assistant professor of psychology at Stanford University’s School of Humanities and Sciences whose research explores how patient mindsets can affect health outcomes and healing.

“My hope is that findings like this one inspire additional research on the physiological mechanisms of assurance as well as promote training and compensation for physicians to more effectively leverage psychological forces in their practice,” she added.

Graduate student Kari Leibowitz, lead author on the paper, said the findings on doctor reassurance are in line with what people had known about the placebo effect. “Research on the placebo effect has long shown the importance and power of a physician’s words: When a physician gives people an inert treatment, such as a sugar pill, and tells them it will help them feel better, that pill is often effective,” she said.

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The question, Leibowitz said, is whether a doctor’s reassurance is enough.

“Our experiences talking to both patients and physicians suggest that we know that physician assurance, by itself, is powerful and can make people feel better, but there is surprisingly little empirical work to back that up,” she said.

To test the effects of a physician’s words on patient symptoms, the researchers set up a simple experiment with 76 study participants.

They began their experiment by inducing a harmless, allergic reaction in study participants. A health care provider administered a histamine skin prick, a test traditionally used as a baseline to diagnose allergies. Histamine causes reactions like swelling, rashes and itching.

Following the skin prick, participants rated how itchy they were on a scale of zero to 100 at 3, 9, 12, 15 and 18 minutes after the skin prick.

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Six minutes in, the health care provider came back in to check on the participants.

With approximately half of the participants, the provider assured them that “from this point forward your allergic reaction will start to diminish, and your rash and irritation will go away.”

But with the other half of participants (the control group), the provider offered no remarks about their reaction.

The researchers found that when the health care provider offered a few assuring words, the feeling of itchiness declined significantly faster than in participants who were given no explanation about their reaction or recovery.

CHECK OUTHow to Stop the Runaway Train of Anxiety in 4 Steps

The biggest difference was 3 minutes after the brief intervention, at 9 minutes in. Assured participants reported their itchiness at an average of 20.19, compared to the control group who rated their irritation at almost 29, on average. The researchers saw that the difference between the two conditions was somewhat maintained over time, but shrank as the overall reaction got less itchy.

“Going to the doctor is largely a psychological experience,” said Crum. “Often we simply want to be reassured that what we are experiencing is ‘normal’ and will go away. And yet, the response we often get is complicated diagnoses, expensive medications and added uncertainty, all of which which may not only fail to harness psychological aspects in healing but may actually generate mindsets that could make us feel worse.”

For Leibowitz, interpersonal interactions are central to what it means to practice medicine, not tangential to it.

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Her advice to health care providers is that instead of saying something like “I can’t see anything wrong with you,” physicians could say something like “I think your issue is likely to resolve on its own, and I believe you’ll feel better in a few days,” said Leibowitz.

“There is a growing recognition of the power and importance of these psychological and social forces in health care, and so I hope the system will change to reflect and value things like providing reassurance and setting positive expectations as part of good medicine,” said Leibowitz.

The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Joan Butler Ford Stanford Graduate Fellowship, and the findings were published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

(Reprinted via Stanford News Service)

Pass On The Positive Health Story To Your FriendsRepresentative photo by Selmaemiliano, CC

Homeless Man Protects Stolen Bike After Angry-worded Poster Shamed Thief into Returning It

Andrew Loys has been through a lot. In addition to surviving cancer three times, someone recently stole his bike that had been specially modified for his disability—and his wife was furious about it.

Filled with rage over the injustice, Shannon Loys made posters for the missing bike, hoping for its return. She also unleashed some of her frustration towards the bike thief by calling them a “steaming pile of garbage” and saying that she hoped they developed “an incurable case of boils in the crotch region.”

The poster was so persuasive, it worked beautifully. The bike thief was so humiliated by Shannon’s anger, they left it in possession of a kind-hearted homeless man named Kevin.

After Kevin had also caught sight of the powerful poster, he asked a stranger if he could use their phone to call the number on the poster. He then explained to Shannon that he had the bike and wanted to return it.

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He said that he would be residing behind the Fred Meyers grocery store of Fremont in Seattle, Washington. He described his physical appearance and said that he would be waiting for her.

At 11PM, Shannon jumped into her car and drove to the store. Upon her arrival, she started asking some of the homeless residents if they had seen Kevin.

Kevin finally approached Shannon with a smile on his face. He was riding his own bike that had a cart attached to the back of it – and on the cart was Andrew’s stolen bike.

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Though it was in need of some minor repairs, it was in good shape – and Shannon was thrilled.

“Kevin was so sweet. He had clearly been guarding it. He was on a mission to get it back to us,” Shannon told BBC. “I don’t know who stole my husband’s bike, but I know for sure it was Kevin who gave it back.”

Shannon was so excited by the bike’s return, she immediately went home, woke Andrew up from his sleep, and brandished the bike in her arms.

CHECK OUT: When Strangers on a Plane Hear Teacher Talk About Her Students, Everyone Opens Their Wallets

“He has had some bad luck in his life … so getting it back meant more than the bike itself,” Shannon said of her husband.

The couple later returned to Kevin’s camp with a basket of biscuits, some hot coffee, $100, and a thank you card.

“He was as nice as I remembered, really sweet,” said Shannon. “He was so worried someone would think he stole it.”

As a cherry on top to the sweet story, the couple even said that a compassionate online benefactor has offered to pay for the bike’s repairs.

Pass On The Positive News And Share The Story With Your FriendsPhotos by Shannon Loys

“Let us read and let us dance, two amusements that will never do any harm to the world.” – Voltaire

Quote of the Day: “Let us read and let us dance, two amusements that will never do any harm to the world.” – Voltaire

Photo: by Moody Fotografi, CC license

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Two Drag Queens Moved Into a Nursing Home, and Brought Joy With Them (Podcast)

Drag queens and old people may not be a conventional pairing, but Tacky and Paris have proven the two go together like fun and fabulous. Hear The Good News Guru tell the happy story (from the August 31, 2018 Ellen K. Morning Show on KOST-103.5 radio in Los Angeles).

WATCH the Video, and Read More at Good News Network

Remembering the Actor, Comedic Host, and Pinup Heartthrob Burt Reynolds (1936–2018)

Tributes are pouring in today for Burt Reynolds, who died at age 82 with his family by his side this morning. He’d been dealing with heart problems for nearly a decade.

Arnold Schwarzenegger tweeted, “Burt Reynolds was one of my heroes. He was a trailblazer. He showed the way to transition from being an athlete to being the highest paid actor, and he always inspired me. He also had a great sense of humor.”

Ben Mankiewicz, host of Turner Classic Movies, tweeted, “For those my age, #BurtReynolds was for a time the biggest movie star in the world. When the picture was good, he was great – charming, self-depreciating, tough, and sexy. I think if he’d believed in his own talent more, he’d be considered among the screen’s finest actors.”

The Hollywood star and romancer might never have become an actor had he not been injured as a star football player while a student at Florida State University. An English teacher later convinced him to try out for a play based on his reading of Shakespeare in class. Reynolds got the lead and won the 1956 Florida State Drama Award for his performance.

Burt_Reynolds_Gunsmoke_1962
Gunsmoke, 1962

Over his long career, the actor, director, and producer starred in, and won awards for, many television series and feature films, such as Gunsmoke, Deliverance, The Longest Yard, Smokey and the Bandit, and The Cannonball Run.

Reynolds was once turned down for a film in 1957 because he looked too much like Marlon Brando. He later grew his trademark thick mustache to solve that problem. Reynolds’ 1972 breakout performance in Deliverance made him a star, and his role in Smokey and the Bandit made him wealthy. Lucky for Harrison Ford, Reynolds turned down the role of Han Solo in Star Wars.

Burt Reynolds-publicity photo

He said in his 1974 memoir that he never would have had the same career without Johnny Carson, the host the “Tonight Show”, who frequently invited him as a guest or stand-in host. “From my first appearance in the late sixties, we were captivated by each other.”

Reynolds underwent a quintuple heart bypass in February 2010. Yet, still in 2017, he acted in four film projects… Check out his latest memoir, But Enough About Me.

WATCH an interview conducted in his ‘man cave’ at home broadcast in February on TODAY…

SHARE the tribute today…

This Starbucks is the First to Be Operated Entirely By Older Citizens

Starbucks has just opened up the first ever café that is staffed entirely by people between the ages of 55 and 66.

The branch, which opened in Mexico City, is now run by 7 older employees, all of whom are guaranteed insurance for major medical insurance and at least 2 days off per week.

The positions have been adapted for the older workers, too – work shifts will run no longer than 6 and a half hours, and the store shelves have been lowered so that they are more physically accessible.

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The staff members are currently being trained by younger baristas – and the seniors have been quick to praise their youthful counterparts for their courtesy and respect.

The hiring initiative was facilitated between Starbucks and the National Institute for the Elderly as a means of providing more work opportunities for seniors.

According to WPXI, Starbucks hopes to hire at least 120 more senior adults by the end of 2018.

(WATCH the video below)

Thanks A Latte For Sharing The Good News With Your FriendsPhoto by WPXI

Banker Picks Up College Tuition for School’s Entire Graduating Class… Again

A successful businessman has offered to pay for an entire graduating high school class… again.

With 35 branches of his bank operating across Wisconsin and Minnesota, Dennis Frandsen is a self-made financial success – and he wants to share that success the youth of his community.

Frandsen will be paying for at least 2 years of technical college for all 34 prospective high school graduates who have finished at Luck Public Schools in Wisconsin.

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This is the second time that Frandsen will be picking up the tuition tab for the town – and it will reportedly not be his last.

“I thought it was the right thing to do,” Frandsen told Boyd Huppert of KARE 11 last year when they covered his story. “I was able to do it and why shouldn’t I.”

Superintendent Cory Hinkel told the students about Frandsen’s gesture on the first day of school, and “the look on the kids’ faces was priceless,” he told KARE 11. “I really think this is going to make a huge impact on a lot of our kids’ lives.”

(WATCH the video below)

Pay The Kindness Forward By Sharing The Good News With Your FriendsPhoto by KARE 11

“When the dark is at rest, the light begins to move.” – The Secret of the Golden Flower

Quote of the Day: “When the dark is at rest, the light begins to move.” – The Secret of the Golden Flower

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?

Watch Stevie Wonder Perform Heartfelt Farewell Tribute at Aretha Franklin’s Funeral

Dozens of celebrities and mourners gathered to say a final farewell to Aretha Franklin earlier this week during an elegant funeral that was suited only for the Queen of Soul.

In attendance were Ariana Grande, Smokey Robinson, Tyler Perry, Jennifer Hudson, former US president Bill Clinton, Jesse Jackson, Faith Hill, and funk musician Stevie Wonder, who performed an emotional tribute to close out the Detroit funeral.

Wonder performed heartfelt renditions of “As” and “The Lord’s Prayer” as a part of his eulogy to the soul singer.

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“What needs to happen today, not only in this nation but throughout the world, is that we need to make love great again,” Wonder said during his eulogy. “Because black lives do matter. Because all lives do matter … That is what Aretha said throughout her life. Though the pain, she gave us the joy, and said, ‘Let’s make love great again.’”

Thousands of people crowded outside of the city’s Greater Grace Temple so they could pay their respects to the singer.

Franklin arrived in the hearse that also transported her father and civil rights activist Rosa Parks to their final resting places, according to The Guardian.

(WATCH the video below)

Be Sure And Share The Stirring Performance With Your Friends – Photo by WYXZ

After 77-Game Losing Streak, Watch High School Team’s Reaction to Finally Winning

It’s been a long time since this high school has had a taste of victory – but after almost a decade of losses, their team finally pulled through.

The Diamond Hill-Jarvis Eagles high school football team of Fort Worth, Texas won their first game in 8 years earlier this week.

In the first game of the season, the players won 40 to 12 against Conrad High School, marking the end of their 77-game losing streak.

When the students returned to class on Friday morning, the school held a spontaneous parade through the hallways so that the players could high five their peers and revel in their success – all while songs from the Rocky III soundtrack were playing over the speakers.

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“I am glad this did end because all of those coaches and players had worked so hard; I know this weighed very heavily on them,” high school principal James Garcia told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

“But it really wasn’t until the game all over, when it hit me: We had not won here in eight years. That’s when I started to feel for all of those players, all of those coaches, all of the people who had been here before and had never won. That this win wasn’t just for our coaches and our players right now, but for the community and all of the kids who had played here before.”

(WATCH the video below)

Score Big With Your Friends And Share The Cinderella Story To Social MediaPhoto by CBSDFW

Scientists Have Developed a ‘Breakthrough’ That May Defeat Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

Researchers have just found a “new breakthrough” to keep bacteria from resisting treatments.

Scientists at The University of Western Australia, in collaboration with researchers in Canada, have developed a new compound that can combat antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

B-lactam antibiotics, better known as penicillins, are widely used to treat everything from skin infections and throat infections to diseases in humans such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, foodborne diseases, and gonorrhea. However, the rise of drug-resistant bacteria in the past decade is threatening their effectiveness.

Lead author and chemical biologist Associate Professor Keith Stubbs, from UWA’s School of Molecular Sciences said one method bacteria use to resist antibiotics is to produce an enzyme, called AmpC b-lactamase, to destroy the antibiotic.

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“Many bacteria produce AmpC b-lactamase only when b-lactam antibiotics are present, and this is controlled by a sensory ‘on switch’ molecule found inside the bacteria,” Associate Professor Stubbs said.

“Previous ways to overcome AmpC b-lactamase was to provide patients with an inhibitor of the AmpCenzyme as well as prescribing them the b-lactam antibiotic, but this approach is quickly becoming much less effective, with bacteria developing stronger and stronger resistance in recent years.”

The UWA-led research team has developed a compound that can stop the ‘switching on’ of the AmpC enzyme.

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“If the ‘switch’ is not activated, AmpC b-lactamase can’t be made and then the antibiotic can work to treat the bacterial infection successfully,” Associate Professor Stubbs said.

The researchers tested the compound on a bacterial strain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which affects patients suffering with Cystic Fibrosis, and found the new compound makes the bacteria much more susceptible to the effects of b-lactam antibiotics.

Louisa Ho from the UWA School of Molecular Sciences said because the new method could be applied to many b-lactams, older ones no longer on the market were potentially back in the game.

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“More work is needed but this sets the foundation for a new chemical approach to stop b-lactam resistance,” she said.

The study was supported by funding from the Australian Research Council, the Canada Research Chairs Program, Cystic Fibrosis Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

It has been published in the Society of Chemistry journal Chemical Communications.

Reprinted from the University of Western Australia

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity And Share The Good News

Hero Siblings Lift Overturned SUV From Roadside Ditch to Save Couple and Baby

These siblings could be a crime-fighting duo judging by their actions earlier this week.

Aaron Allen and Jolisa Jones, both of whom work at Ashley Furniture in Tampa, Florida, were driving a delivery truck down the highway when they saw a car side-swipe the SUV that was driving in front of them.

The SUV tumbled off the road and was turned upside down into a nearby creek – and without hesitation, the siblings leapt into action.

As they approached the damaged vehicle, they saw that there was water seeping into the passenger area where a couple and their 11-day-old baby were belted in.

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Allen failed to break the window open with his fist, so he and Jones hauled the car right-side up before he wrapped his tee shirt around his fist, punched the windshield out, and helped the family to safety.

According to Fox 13, the couple was unharmed, although the baby was taken to the hospital as a precaution.

Meanwhile, Allen says that he was simply doing what he hopes anyone else would do.

“If I was in that situation, I would want someone to come to my rescue, honestly,” he told the news outlet. “I would want someone to help me.”

(WATCH the video below)

Be Sure And Share The Heroic Story With Your FriendsPhoto by Jolisa Jones

“It’s our attitude in life that determines life’s attitude toward us.” – Earl Nightingale

Quote of the Day: “It’s our attitude in life that determines life’s attitude toward us.” – Earl Nightingale

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?

Suicide Rate Among UK Men at Lowest in 30 Years

Abdulla Faiz, CC license

This hopeful new research out of the UK shows a positive trend amongst one of their most emotionally vulnerable demographics.

A report from the Office for National Statistics shows that male suicides have fallen to the lowest rate it has been since 1981.

The 2017 stats show that 15.5 men per 100,000 committed suicide, which is a praise-worthy decline from its point of 20 men per 100,000 in the 80s.

The female suicide rate has remained stable at 4.9 per 100,000 for the last 10 years.

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“We believe that the focus in recent years on suicide prevention to tackle the higher rates in men has contributed to this,” Ruth Sutherland, head of mental health charity Samaritans, told BBC.

“Added to this, reducing stigma around men’s mental health and encouraging men to open up and seek help when they are struggling has been beneficial.

“We must all continue to target expertise and resources at preventing men from taking their own lives and to reduce suicide across the board,” she added.

Save Your Friends From Negativity And Share The Good NewsRepresentative photo by Abdulla Faiz, CC

Policeman Moved by Plea for Parenthood Adopts Baby of Drug-Addicted Homeless Woman

This compassionate police officer is setting a new standard for how law enforcement can protect and serve.

Officer Jesse Whitten and his wife have adopted the newborn daughter of a homeless woman struggling with drug addiction.

Whitten, who works for the Santa Rosa Police Department in California, would often stop in to check on the woman throughout the year. After a time, the two formed a kind of friendship.

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Then one year ago, Whitten ran into the woman while he was out with his wife Ashley. When Ashley noticed that the woman was pregnant, the two struck up a conversation about motherhood.

Six months later, the married couple was shocked to receive a call from the woman saying that she personally wanted them to adopt her newborn child.

The woman hoped that – under the love and care of the Whittens – her daughter could have a chance at a normal life.

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The Whittens accepted the woman’s request, and now, six more months later, they have officially adopted Harlow Masie Whitten as their fourth child.

Though the baby has overcome many challenges after being exposed to drugs while she was in the womb, she has become a beloved part of the Whitten family.

“We were talking and –– I was saying to her — ‘You made this choice for her and that we are so grateful,’” Ashley told CBS San Francisco. “And she said — ‘You’re her mother now.’”

(WATCH the interview below)

Be Sure And Share The Sweet Story With Your FriendsPhoto by the Santa Rosa Police Department

We May Soon Be Able to Melt Down Plastic Waste into Fuel for Hydrogen Cars

Discarded plastic could be used to fuel cars in the future thanks to a ground-breaking process developed by scientists from Swansea University.

They have been able to transform unwanted plastic into hydrogen which in turn could be used to run cars.

Dr. Moritz Kuehnel of the University’s chemistry department explains how light-absorbing material are added to the plastic, before it is placed in an alkaline solution and then exposed to sunlight, which creates hydrogen.

He said this process could be cheaper than recycling because any kind of plastic can be used and it does not need to be cleaned first.

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“There’s a lot of plastic used every year – billions of tonnes – and only a fraction of it is being recycled. We are trying to find a use for what is not being recycled,” he told BBC.

Most plastic bottles are made from PET [polyethylene terephthalate] which can be recycled but often end up being burned or thrown into landfill.

Kuehnel said: “But even if you do recycle it, it needs to be very pure – so only PET, nothing else mixed in with it… and it has to be clean, no grease, no oil.

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“Potentially, you need to wash it which is very expensive, and even if you do all of that, the plastic you get isn’t always as nice as virgin material,” he added. “The beauty of this process is that it’s not very picky. It can degrade all sorts of waste.

“Even if there is food or a bit of grease from a margarine tub, it doesn’t stop the reaction, it makes it better.

“The process produces hydrogen gas. You can see bubbles coming off the surface. You can use it, for example, to fuel a hydrogen car.”

However, he warned that rolling out the project on an industrial level may still be years away.

LOOKHe Has Created a Single-Use Bottle That Fully Decomposes in 3 Weeks, and All Profits to Charity

Kuehnel added that the work, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and an Austrian petrochemical company, had also shown how the remains of the plastic could be recycled to make new plastic.

Just one part of PET is used to produce the hydrogen and carbon dioxide – the other part stays intact and remains in the solution.

He said: “We get the hydrogen fuel and we get a chemical we can use to make new plastic.

“We don’t make a full new plastic, we use just half of the material to make new plastic and the rest can be recycled – a clean, clear water bottle out of plastic.”

Reprinted from Swansea University

Clean Up Negativity By Sharing The Good News With Your Friends

Young Syrian Refugee Rescues Toddler Teetering On the Edge of a Rooftop

An 18-year-old Syran refugee is being hailed as a hero after he saved a toddler who was teetering on the edge of a rooftop.

Khalid Tabateb and his father were driving through Hamilton in Ontario, Canada earlier this month when his heart froze at the sight of a little boy in a diaper wandering precariously along the second-story ledge of a building.

The toddler had woken up from a nap and climbed through the window out onto the small rooftop. Neighbors and pedestrians had gathered underneath the ledge to catch the child in case he fell.

Khalid was determined to help, and he yelled at his father to stop the car.

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“My dad parked the car and said ‘If you can help him go help him,’” Khalid told CBC through his older sister, who acted as an interpreter. “I was scared. I didn’t want this little guy to go and die. I didn’t want to just watch.”

Without hesitation, the young migrant ran up to the house and started pounding on the doors in hopes that the parents were home – they were not.

Khalid then broke through the screen of a first-floor window, climbed into the house, ran to the toddler’s room and pulled the boy back inside.

MOREMinutes After Saying ‘I Do’, Hero Groom Jumps Into the Ocean to Save Drowning Teen

The 18-year-old has been praised for his actions – although this is not the first time that he has saved a life. When he and his father were living in war-torn Syria, they both brought a young boy to safety after he was caught in gunfire.

“He loves to help people,” Khalid’s sister told CBC. “He’s so brave. The whole family — we’re so proud of him.”

Though the family initially moved to Jordan to escape the war, they eventually fled to Canada in 2014, and community members say that the family has settled in wonderfully.

(WATCH the quick clip below below)

Save Your Friends From Negativity And Share This Sweet StoryPhoto by CBC

“Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Quote of the Day: “Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others.” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo: by Kaptain Kobold, CC license

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Two Drag Queens Moved Into a Nursing Home and Brought Joy With Them – Watch

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

The residents of an Australian old folk’s home are feeling much younger—now that two drag queens have moved in!

The “Motel Sisters” moved into the nursing facility for a whole month to provide some fabulous fun and color to the residents—a prescription that ended up having a whopping positive effect on the seniors’ health, as well.

Liam Benson and Naomi Oliver – also known as Tacky and Paris – became the full-time party attendants to the residents at the Abel Tasman Village in Sydney, thanks to an arts nonprofit program.

During their stay, the performing drag queens taught Zumba classes, taught Zumba classes, hosted tea parties, spa days, aromatherapy sessions— and, most heartwarming, they orchestrated elaborate room makeovers for those who were confined to beds.

One day they orchestrated a treasure hunt during which the seniors got to help the Motel Sisters find their possessions, after an imagined crazy night out.

RELATEDThis Doctor Broke The Law To Engineer a Better Nursing Home, And the Death Rate Plummeted

According to the clinical care manager of the home, the performers had an incredible impact on the residents’ health: There was less agitation and wandering among those with dementia. Additionally, many fewer calls were logged to the geriatrician that might normally increase someone’s medication.

Though such an idea of diversity and inclusion was approached with caution, knowing some residents might shake their heads, the experiment produced no detractors.

“There was some caution taken right from the beginning because we were sensitive to people’s needs and also people’s perception,” Tacky told ABC Radio Sydney. “We understand that popping a couple of drag queens into your everyday environment for some people can be a little bit discombobulating.”

But after spending a few days in the facility, they were welcomed with open arms.

“They’ve added a breath of life to the place,” one of the nursing home residents told ABC. Another said: “They’ve been so kind to me, I can never pay them back for their kindness.”

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It has been so beautiful to see The Motel Sisters in Care project develop and unfold. We've been delighted to have @harolddavidstudio documenting the days and activities of such a special residency. ⠀ This project seems to have resonated with many... there's been visits from @sydneymorningherald and @abcinsydney , and Paris and Tacky were featured on @theprojecttv last Friday! ⠀ After 4 weeks the @motelsisters are wrapping up their residency with some collaging with the residents. It's been amazing and we look forward to sharing more special moments from the past month with you ✨⠀ .⠀ .⠀ .⠀ #AbelTasmanAgedCare @motelsisters @n40m1o @liam_benson @harolddavidstudio @vicpic7 ⠀ @auscouncilarts ⠀ #MotelSisters #MotelSistersinCare #AgedCare #art #engagement #community

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The residency, which was facilitated by the arts nonprofit Information + Cultural Exchange, is not the first example of unusual therapies having a positive impact on dementia patients and seniors.

A string of night clubs in London started hosting “rave parties” as a means of fighting loneliness in older people. Years ago, one New York-based doctor broke the law to engineer a better nursing home by bringing in dozens of animals and plants that were in need of care, and the death rate plummeted. Finally, this Seattle preschool opened up inside of a nursing home and all heaven broke loose – for both young and old.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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