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Watch 1,300-Pound Pumpkin Drop From a Crane and Smash Car in the Name of Charity

 

2,000 fans of smashing pumpkins gathered around an old Nissan Maxima earlier this week – but they weren’t fans of the band.

They were gathering at the Black Fox Farm and Distillery in Saskatoon to watch an actual 1,300-pound pumpkin drop onto a car from 115 feet in the air.

The delightfully ghoulish activity was coordinated by the Saskatoon chapter of the Honourable Order of the Blue Goose International to raise money for the Saskatoon Fire Fighters Pediatric Fund, which finances activities and resources that benefit sick children.

CHECK OUT: Dad Builds Halloween Costumes Around Wheelchairs as a Nonprofit

The massive car-smashing pumpkin was one of three gourds that were dropped from the sky. The first was hollowed out and filled with ping pong balls that worked as raffle tickets for the participants. Whichever ping pong ball landed in a small hole on the ground won the recipient a grand prize.

The second pumpkin was hollowed out and filled with candy. Once it was smashed, an army of candy hungry youngsters descended on the treats with a vigor that could scare Genghis Khan.

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Lastly, the Great Pumpkin that looks like it could have been out of the Peanuts movie was towed into the sky and dropped on the doomed Maxima – which had been donated courtesy of Saskatchewan Government Insurance.

The entire event ended up raising over $9,000 for the charity – which is not bad for such a strange Sunday afternoon stunt.

(WATCH the video below)

It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown! Click To Share With Your Friends

Dog Hailed as Hero After Refusing to Leave Goats Alone in Wildfires

As Robert Handel and his family drove away from their burning neighborhood, they were certain that their beloved dog Odin and their 8 goats would also fall prey to the wildfires.

So imagine their surprise – and relief – when they returned the next day to find Odin and the goats were safe and sound.

Handel, who lives on a farm in northern California, first smelled the smoke of the wildfires on Sunday evening. He woke up everyone on the property and ushered his 14-year-old daughter into the car so they could evacuate. But when he turned to get Odin, he saw that the dog had laid down in front of their 8 bottle-fed goats – and he was not budging.

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“Even under the best of circumstances it is nearly impossible to separate Odin from the goats after nightfall when he takes over the close watch from his sister Tessa,” writes Handel.

Though it was a heartbreaking choice to make, Handel knew that leaving immediately meant “life or death”. So, as the area was filled with the sound of collapsing metal structures and propane tanks, he made sure that the gate was open for the animals, got in the car, and started driving away from the property.

“I made a decision to leave him, and I doubt I could have made him come with us if I tried. We got out with our lives and what was in our pockets,” he says.

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“Cars behind us … were pouring flames out of the windows as they roared down the road. Later that morning when we had outrun the fires, I cried, sure that I had sentenced Odin to death, along with our precious family of bottle-raised goats.”

After circumventing several roadblocks the next morning, however, they returned to the property only to be greeted by eight goats, their Great Pyrenees guardian Odin, and several deer that had taken advantage of the brave canine’s protection.

“I could never describe the relief and joy we felt to find them safe and accounted for,” says Handel.

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Odin’s fur was singed, his whiskers had melted, he had a limp in his right leg, his paw pads were burnt, and he was visibly exhausted – but after taking some well-deserved rest, veterinary officials say that he is surprisingly unharmed. And apart from a small burn on the back of one of the goats, the herd had stayed safe as well.

Handel guesses that Odin had guided them to a rocky outcropping on higher ground in order to avoid the blaze.

The farmer has since raised enough money through his YouCaring page to rebuild the barn and restock the animal’s water supply before winter. Any funds raised over their $45,000 goal will be split between buying a trailer for the goats and animals in the future, and the Sonoma County Wildlife Rescue Center in order to care for other animals affected by the wildfires.

Click To Share The Pawesome News With Your Friends (Photo by Robert Handel)

Man Sobs When He’s Reunited With Stolen Therapy Dog Found 8 Miles Away From Crime Scene

Andrew Wright’s tear-jerking reunion with his therapy dog, Polo, is going viral. The Cleveland man was victim to a carjacking in which Polo, another puppy named Baby Girl, and Andrew’s car were stolen at a gas station.

Andrew suffers from seizures, and Polo is able to detect them. The car, which has OnStar, was recovered by police, but Baby Girl and Polo were not.

“It’s hurting. It’s hurting every minute. I can’t eat. I can’t sleep. I hear [them] crying,” Andrew told WJW, as he begged for help on the news.

Fortunately, the right person was watching. Mariah Singleton had noticed a small dog following her neighbor around. That tiny Havanese was Polo.

“We paused the TV, and then we were looking,” Mariah recalled. “Then, when he called him by his real name, he started listening and stuff. So that’s how we knew it was probably his dog.”

Until she saw the news story, she’d thought Polo was a stray who needed a home. Mariah called the Cleveland police, who organized the bittersweet reunion.

“Thank you for having a heart. Thank God for opening your heart to call,” Andrew said. “That’s community. You guys helped us. You’re helping people — this is what we need.”

The reunion has Andrew hoping that someone will spot Baby Girl, too.

Watch the tearjerking video of Andrew and Polo by clicking the link below…

Click To Share The Pawesome Story With Your Friends

After Evacuating His Own Home, Guy Fieri Cooks Up Thousands of Meals For Wildfire Victims

Just days after evacuating his own home with his family, celebrity chef Guy Fieri wasted no time in giving back to his fellow California wildfire victims and first responders.

The Food Network star says that he and his wife were awoken in their Santa Rosa home by the smell of smoke on Monday morning.

“The smoke was really bad,” Fieri told KQED. “We had to evacuate at two in the morning, and we grabbed what we could, taking pictures off the wall as fast as we could. Jumped in the truck, loaded in the dogs, and away we went.”

Though their house was unharmed by the wildfires, Fieri became determined to help his community by doing what he does best: cooking.

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On Thursday, Fieri set up shop outside the Veterans Memorial Building in Santa Rosa with a wood-fired oven and a barbecue smoker in tow. He and his crew then started cooking coleslaw, barbecued chicken, bean salad, and other warm meals for anyone who needed one.

The star told news sources that on their first day alone, the crew managed to serve up roughly 3,700 meals to Sonoma County residents.

Fieri is also raising money in conjunction with the Salvation Army so he can continue cooking at least 5,000 meals a day for evacuees and volunteers.

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by Eric Liesse via Wikipedia Commons

Son Hides All Over Airport Dressed As Waldo To Surprise Mom He Hasn’t Seen In 3 Years

This might be the sweetest game of Where’s Waldo? you have ever seen.

After spending the last three years in Australia, 31-year-old Ali wanted to fly home to London to surprise his mother for her birthday. But he didn’t want to just show up at his parent’s front door – he wanted to do something more memorable.

With the help of his dad and his brother Steve, Ali dressed up as Waldo from Where’s Waldo? and hid in the airport terminal while Steve picked up their parents.

In the video, Ali can be seen running all around the airport in his red and white striped outfit while his parents search for their surprise.

Finally, his Mom spots a red and white hat in a cafe and is positive she’s found Waldo – but what she doesn’t expect is to see her son Ali under the hat!

Ali jumps up and gives his mom a huge hug as she asks, in complete shock: “What are you doing here?!”

Click the link below to watch the full video of Ali’s heartwarming surprise…

Stranded Family Delighted to Be Rescued By the Hogwarts Express

This Muggle family was miserable over becoming stranded in the Scottish Highlands – until they found out who would be rescuing them.

Jon and Helen Cluett, along with their four children, had taken a little weekend vacation earlier this week when they arranged to stay at a small cottage in Lochaber.

In order to get to the cottage from their car, the family decided to avoid the 3-mile walk and take a 10-minute canoe ride up the river instead.

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Upon reaching the cozy cabin, the Cluett’s tied their canoe to some rocks and spent the night. When they woke up, however, they found that the river had flooded, and their canoe was nowhere in sight.

Jon and Helen decided that walking back to the car with all of their luggage would be too arduous – even dangerous. So, the couple called the local police and asked for help.

Instead of arranging for a mountain rescue, however, law enforcement officials arranged for a nearby train to make an unscheduled stop and pick up the family.

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But this wasn’t just any ol’ train – it was the “Hogwarts Express” train from the Harry Potter films.

The Hogwarts Express, also known as The Jacobite, is used for giving railway tours across the Scottish Highlands. Since it happened to be passing through the area when Jon called the police, the train made a quick stop about 400 yards from the Cluett’s cabin.

“The train is getting closer, we’re running down, stuff bouncing everywhere, big smiles on the kids’ faces. It all started to be fun at that point,” Jon told the BBC.

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“I’m slightly sad because I’d lost my boat – but the kids, when they saw the steam train coming, all sadness left their little faces and was replaced by excitement and fun – just the real joy of having an adventure and having the train stop right next to them.”

The family was then dropped off at a stop closer to their car – and though the magical adventure had ended, the kids say it was an experience that they won’t soon forget.

Click To Share This Magical Story With Your Muggle Friends (Photo by Jon Cluett)

How This “Living” Chandelier Uses Algae to Purify the Air of CO2

This green-tinted chandelier is not just a gorgeous lighting fixture – it also purifies the air around it.

The Exhale chandelier is the world’s first “living” bionic chandelier that uses algae to convert surrounding carbon dioxide emissions into clean oxygen. The microalgae, which are nourished by a special life-support system, are contained in the 70 glass “leaves” of the chandelier, which then cleanse the atmosphere of CO2 by using photosynthesis.

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The fixture can also be installed indoors or outdoors, making it able to purify any public or private space.

The chandelier was designed by Julian Melchiorri, a London-based engineer who specializes in biochemical technology. Though the fixture is simply a prototype, Melchiorri has spent years perfecting the “man-made leaf” technology – and he hopes for the design to become a regular part of home design in the future.

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“This biological process performed by the chandelier establishes and explores a new symbiotic relationship between object and people where life-giving resources are constantly exchanged, and where each other waste enables respective metabolic processes,” writes Melchiorri. “This exchange recalls how biospheric systems work, where waste ultimately doesn’t exist but is a valuable resource for other elements in that system.”

The chandelier now hangs in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, which is the world’s largest museum of decorative arts and design.

Purify With Positivity: Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Julian Melchiorri)

California Woman Escapes Wildfires On Bike Carrying Her 70-Pound Pit Bull

Natasha Wallace will go through hell and high water – or in this case, wildfires – in order to rescue her 4-year-old pit bull, Bentley.

The Santa Rosa Junior College student had just finished up studying for school across town from her house last Monday when she started driving home and saw that there was a wildfire heading straight for her house where Bentley was waiting for her.

Instead of fleeing the scene, Wallace sped home and picked up the Pittie in her car. As she tried to leave, however, traffic was moving too slowly for them to safely evacuate.

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Wallace then went back to her house and picked up her bike and a duffel bag.

“[The fire] was coming faster than I could leave in traffic, so I went back and got my bike,” Wallace told WTVR. “So I grabbed my dog and I told him, ‘Hey man, this is serious, you need to just sit in the bag.’ And he, he hopped right in.”

With the 70-pound pit bull curled up in his makeshift sidecar, Wallace then biked for several miles until a man named Paul Johnson spotted the college student and pulled his truck over on the side of the road to offer them a ride to safety.

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Since Wallace lost everything in the fire, she has since started a GoFundMe page to help her get back on her feet. Thanks to the kindness of strangers, the campaign has already raised $18,000.

“I kept thinking I could get my life back to normal alone because asking for help isn’t easy but without the proper insurance that is seemingly difficult,” says Wallace. “Finding a place to live with a bigger dog isn’t cheap but that’s the top priority next to new underwear and soccer cleats.”

Click To Share The Pawesome News With Your Friends (Photo by Natasha Wallace)

Parents Turn 8-Year-Old Son’s Wheelchair Into Amazing ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Costume

With Halloween just around the corner, Anthony Alfano’s parents decided to give their son a sweet new set of wheels for his costume – or rather, it is actually just one wheel. But it’s twice as cool.

8-year-old Anthony uses a wheelchair because of his cerebral palsy. So whenever the spooky holiday season rolls around, his parents make him an elaborate costume based around his wheelchair.

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In the past, Anthony has dressed up as a horse jockey, the Lincoln Memorial, and even Zoltar the fortune teller.

This year, the non-verbal youngster from Illinois will be dressed up as the “Wheel of Fortune”. There is even an actual spinning wheel strapped to his chair so it will move with him wherever he goes.

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“People started really responding to Anthony’s costumes and expecting it every year,” Deanna told Inside Edition. “My husband growing up was really into Halloween so it just kind of snowballed.”

“Once he’s in his costume he totally he laughs and smiles and definitely loves the attention,” she added.

(WATCH the video below)

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Watch Overjoyed 11-Year-Old Jump Into Woman’s Arms After Learning She’ll Be Adopted

Tannah Butterfield’s foster parents have been trying to adopt her and her two siblings for years. Then, a security camera captured the moment earlier this week when the 11-year-old girl was told that they were finally being adopted.

The 11-year-old from South Jordan, Utah was in class when the school’s office manager Jackie Alexander got the call from Tannah’s foster mom that she was to be adopted.

“She asked me if I would be sure to tell her sweet girl when she came to my desk for her daily visit,” writes Alexander. “She knew she would want to know right away because she had been so worried.”

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“It’s been hard to watch them fight this emotional battle. My love has grown for this family and I have learned so much from them as they have tried to remain positive despite many set backs.”

“In 12 years at this job, this is by far my best moment ever!! To tell a little girl that she gets her family forever takes the cake.”

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“I felt like a million, jillion things just exploded in my heart,” said Tannah. “I felt so happy. This is the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”

Tannah’s foster mom, Jennifer Fisher, hopes that after many years of struggling through the adoption process, the paperwork will be finalized within the month.

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Jackie Alexander)

‘Superpope’ Francis T-shirts to Help the Poor and Needy

A unique tee shirt raises money for charity while portraying Pope Francis as a super hero.

(WATCH the video below…)

Hospice Patient Cheered by ‘Sexy’ Shout Out From Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson

Beloved Hollywood hunk Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson doesn’t just look good – he can also make time to send love and support to his fans.

Johnson received an email from a woman earlier this week asking the former WWE star to say some nice things about her 76-year-old grandmother Judy Rosenberg.

Judy, who is a mother of 5 and grandmother of 17, is currently in hospice care for her stage four pancreatic cancer.

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But she is not alone in the hospital bed – she brought her life-sized cardboard cutout of the Rock to keep her company.

Since Rosenberg is (obviously) a huge fan of Johnson, her daughter wrote an email to the actor asking if he could call her “sexy” and blow her some air kisses.

Johnson then got on Instagram and made a video shoutout for the sweet senior.

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“Stay strong Judy, you sexy tiger,” says the Moana star. “We’re all sending you and your family love and light during this time and I’m an extremely grateful man this email reached my eyes. * this kind of stuff will always be the best part of fame.”

(WATCH the video below)

Can Your Friends Smell What The Rock Is Cooking? Click To Share

People Are Not Their Politics: As I Visited Russia, I Found We Have More in Common Than We Think

Current events have thrust two of the world’s superpowers into a period of mistrust, political animosity, and paranoia, with every new revelation leading to more suspicion.

The situation is not unlike how it was when my American grandmother visited the Soviet Union 35 years ago. A series of letters she sent to my mother in 1982 detailed her feelings of uneasiness as she gently trod the cobblestone streets of the Kremlin, surrounded by a high military presence and hardened citizens who were “pushing and shoving people in a hurry to buy whatever was available in order for them to survive”.

So you can understand my misgivings as I traveled alone to spend one month in Russia.

I had met a 25-year-old Russian man named Timofey in Rome last year when I was backpacking Europe, and we had gotten along famously talking about our favorite box office flicks. Tensions were already simmering between Russia and the United States during the Donald Trump presidential campaign, so I was surprised that he was so compelled to befriend an American such as myself. I remember him, at the time, poignantly responding to my questions: “People are not their politicians.”

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One year later when I was looking for a destination to spend my vacation days, Timofey said he would be more than happy to host me in Russia.

I feel like a relatively seasoned traveler, but I was still nervous. Hollywood had consistently painted Russians as the scary, Arctic-dwelling villains of James Bond movies – and I was coming from a country that had exhibited more than enough hostility to provoke reciprocated aggression. A few days before my flight left for Moscow, the White House ordered Russia to close down its consulate in San Francisco, along with its two annexes in New York City, and Washington.

So, let me start by saying that Russians were some of the kindest people I had ever met in my life. I’ve experienced Southern and European hospitality, but the very folks that had scared me most turned out to be the most compassionate. Sure, there were some key differences that come with every culture, but despite what the media might have you believe, we have more in common than you think.

Compare our cultures, for instance. In St. Petersburg, a three-piece punk band had accumulated a crowd of spectators outside of the subway station by pounding out an impeccable cover of a Nirvana song (in English). I was invited by some young Russian travelers to join them in a riveting game of Jenga, and another couple caused me to snort beer out of my nose from laughter when they made fun of old people on Facebook. A married couple in their 30s invited my friend and me to dinner where we discussed our favorite Netflix series, including the most recent season finale of Game of Thrones. During our second night in Moscow, we were ushered downstairs into a basement dance party underneath our hostel where we were given free whiskey and kisses on the cheek.

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When I told a Russian acquaintance that I had started reading Dostoyevsky before my trip, she insisted on giving me a book of his short stories; it was an old copy with a publish date from 1990. I finished it in a week and cried over the ending. We then repaid her by painting a picture of her and her husband’s wedding day. She now emails me roughly once a week with affectionate questions about how I’m doing and whether I am ever going to come back to the Mother Land.

Regarding politics, many younger Russians spoke about current events with the same air of disillusionment and sadness as the youth in my own city. Others would ask for my opinion on American politics – not so they could ridicule or oppose my viewpoints, but because they had never had the chance to ask a real Yankee.

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Their friendliness felt familiar. When one hostel receptionist discovered I was American, her face shifted from curiosity to delight, and she asked if I could help her practice English. Another hostel worker expressed her surprise and wished me good luck on our travels. Fellow soccer fans would simply high five me whenever their home team scored. Cashiers would patiently wait for me to stutter out the few keywords necessary to explain whatever I was trying to do.

What caught me off guard the most was when Timofey and I were chatting about Russian movie characters. The conversation went something like: “Yeah, we love American movies, but why are Russians always the bad guys? Why are we always the drug runners and villains and criminals? Why can’t we ever be portrayed as good guys?”

Many of us have already heard this same complaint from Middle Eastern actors who are tired of getting pigeonholed as cab drivers and convenience store clerks – but the Russian stereotype caught me off guard.

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Upon my suggestion, Timofey and I sat down to watch Guy Ritchie’s latest remake of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. For those of you who haven’t seen the movie, it is a delightful action flick about a charismatic American spy named Napoleon Solo being forced to team up with surly Russian agent Ilya Kuryakin in order to stop the Nazis from launching a nuclear warhead. By the end of the film, Timofey was smiling. Through his thick Siberian accent, he said: “This is how it should be – America and Russia, representatives of the world’s great nations, working together.”

After experiencing a month chocked full of friendly faces and history and art, I started telling my Russian cohorts that I worked for a relatively small news company and I had been planning on writing an article about the positive parts of their country. I was expecting some kind of skepticism, but they all really just seemed relieved that someone, somewhere on the internet, would be writing about their country without excessive negativity.

While some may want to paint Russians as enemies intent on destroying our culture and way of life, I experienced the opposite; Russian citizens aren’t the boogiemen that the media makes them out to be. Russians binge Netflix shows; they are annoyed by drivers who don’t use their turn signals; and most of them are just as tired of conflict as everyone else.

Russia is a rich, vibrant, complex nation of history and pride. Despite enduring some of the most tremendous hardships over the course of the last century, their humanity is displayed in some of the most glorious monuments and artistic treasures in the world.

This hit home with me as I read a paragraph that my grandma wrote detailing the glory of St. Petersburg seven years before the fall of the Berlin Wall. I never met my grandmother, but I’ve always felt the impact that she had on my brothers and I – even though she died of breast cancer before we were born.

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She wrote: “Perhaps the most spectacular site was St. Isaac’s Cathedral, which can’t be described in mere words. We took no pictures because they wouldn’t do it justice. We were sitting in the sun opposite the cathedral when an old peasant woman wearing a heavy black wool coat and a balaclava on her head came along, stopped, looked with obvious reverence at the Church, made a quick sign of the cross and moved on.”

Despite self-consciously maneuvering Moscow and St. Petersburg under Soviet rule, she continued to write about the unparalleled beauty of Russia – and how, even though times were hard, their people could still be humble and welcoming of weary travelers. It’s comforting to know that even though it is 35 years later and political times have changed, the kindness of the people has stayed the same.

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How Philosophy Can Solve Your Midlife Crisis

MIT professor Kieran Setiya’s book “Midlife” aims to smooth out the rocky road of middle age.

Written by Peter Dizikes
MIT News Office

A few years ago, a man experienced a midlife crisis. He was professionally successful and had a rewarding family life, but still had a “hollow” feeling. Could he grind away at the same job indefinitely? Would he have to abandon his older hopes and dreams? And wasn’t it disheartening to think his life might be halfway over?

Fortunately, this person didn’t quit his job, blow his life’s savings on sports cars, or sabotage his personal relationships. Instead, he went to his office and pondered matters.

“I was doing the things I had always wanted,” explains MIT philosophy professor Kieran Setiya, the fellow suffering through the midlife malaise. “I wasn’t wrong to think that teaching and writing and thinking about philosophy was worth doing, but nevertheless, something was amiss. The thing that gripped me first was a sense of hollowness in pursuit of projects. You can be aiming to get things done and have an absence of satisfaction.”

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Then again, existential doubt in midlife can have other sources. “There are many midlife crises,” Setiya acknowledges. “There’s a sense of constraint and limitation and regret. Death is closer.”

Now Setiya has woven these strands into a new book, “Midlife: A Philosophical Guide,” published by Princeton University Press. In it, he examines the problems of middle-aged happiness, reaches some unusual conclusions — he thinks we should embrace our regrets — and explores how philosophy can help people find peace of mind.

Indeed, “Midlife” has a clear prescription for living well. Setiya believes “atelic” activities — things we enjoy for their own sake — make us fulfilled. Too often, he states, we are consumed with “telic” activities: goal-driven projects that leave us unsatisfied in the present. (The terms derive from “telos,” the Greek word for “goal.”)

“What really matters is that some important things in your life, things you regard as sources of meaning, are atelic,” Setiya says. “Reading, or walking, or thinking about philosophy, or parenting, or spending time with your friends or family are activities that don’t have an endpoint built in. There isn’t a sense that in doing it you’re exhausting it, as if you could complete the project of hanging out with your friends.”

Trust the process

As Setiya chronicles in the new book, the concept of the midlife crisis did not really develop until the 1960s, and it has largely been the province of psychologists, not philosophers. Still, writings about the middle stage of life extend back to ancient times, and two famous 19th-century philosophers figure prominently in Setiya’s book: John Stuart Mill and Arthur Schopenhauer.

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Both Mill and Schopenhauer questioned the project-driven life, with Schopenhauer arriving at the bleak conclusion that a life of finite goals would leave us perpetually reliving the past or focused on the future, but never satisfied in the present.

“I think Schopenhauer missed or didn’t see the value of atelic activities — the process, not the project,” Setiya says.

But as Setiya notes, designing your life purely around atelic activities isn’t realistic either. Most of us cannot indulge in endless hobbies: “When the demands of life are pressing, too urgent to be ignored, it would be a mistake to devote all day to contemplation, reading Wordsworth, or playing golf,” Setiya writes in the book.

Moreover, the distinction between atelic and telic activities is not total. A goal-oriented project can still be intrinsically fun — think of a teacher who helps students learn certain things but aims for everyone to enjoy the classroom. That experience is both atelic and telic.

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“Most of the things you’ll be doing at any given time will be describable in both ways,” Setiya agrees.

“You don’t necessarily need to shift what you’re doing, but just try to find the atelic in it, and find the value in that. I’m not going to stop writing philosophy articles, but the point is to be doing philosophy, not just to get the article done.”

Why you should embrace regret

More provocatively, Setiya contends in the book that the perceived narrowing of life’s possibilities, often a big part of the midlife crisis, should be regarded as a good thing, not a source of regret.

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True, most of us will never become movie stars or famous athletes or try all the careers we once found intriguing. We will never visit all the places we want to see or befriend everyone we wanted to know better. However, Setiya suggests, this is just “a recognition of the richness of valuable things in the world.” Feeling regret in this sense is better than feeling nothing.

Or, as Setiya elaborates: “It’s tempting to complain about how even when things go well, there are all kinds of things you’ll never do. But there is a certain consolation in thinking why that is. It’s because the world offers up many different things worth doing and worth wanting. And it’s true you can’t do all of them. But to live a life where you don’t miss out, you’d have to be utterly blinkered, and narrow your focus so much there’s only one thing you care about. And that really isn’t a preferable life.”

In this vein, Setiya cites Plato’s observation in the “Philebus,” that to live with no unsatisfied wishes, “You would thus not live a human life, but the life of a mollusk or of one of those creatures in shells that live in the sea.”

U can make the U-turn

Not every chapter of “Midlife” offers clear consolations. After weighing various philosophical arguments that we should not fear death, Setiya concludes that our concerns about it are, in logical terms, well-founded. On the bright side, he also emphasizes recent psychological research indicating that the midlife crisis is not an irreversible change, but a temporary phase.

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Happiness often follows a U-curve in which middle age is uniquely stressful, with a heavy dose of responsibilities. That’s all the more reason to seek out atelic activities when the midlife blues hit: meditation, music, running, or almost anything that brings inner peace. But self-reported happiness does increase later in life.

Oddly, as Setiya observes, many of the most consequential choices we make occur in our 20s and early 30s: careers, partners, families, and more. The midlife crisis is a delayed reaction, hitting when we feel more weighted down by those choices. So the challenge is not necessarily to change everything, he says, but to ask, “How do I appreciate properly what I now am doing?”
In this sense, Setiya believes, “Midlife” is about middle age, but middle age just represents a more acute stage of existential insecurity that is always present.

“The book is about midlife in the sense of how to cope with being in the middle of this constantly ongoing process of life, that involves a past that you have to deal with, a future that’s getting shorter, and projects that get completed and replaced,” Setiya says. “I hope it will be of use to a wider range of people than just 40- or 50-somethings.”

Reprinted with permission of MIT News

Click To Share The News With Your Friends Photo by Kieran Setiya

Teen Prodigies Create App That Could End School Lunch Hunger

Alyssa Kapasi had never thought about how school children living next door to her might be going hungry every day – and that is why she is helping to create an app that will ensure every child in America can have access to a full meal.

Instead of parents buying going through an arduous online process to pay for their children’s school lunch meals, the Food For Thought app developed by the 17-year-old high school student lets parents buy meals for their kids, as well as meals for another anonymous hungry student.

Kapasi believes that the app’s simple pay-it-forward model will make parents and individuals more likely to donate a couple bucks towards other hungry kids in their community.

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“Currently, the most common way for parents to pay for their child’s lunch is to use an online platform in which they load money to their child’s multipurpose school ID or a lunch debit card,” Kapasi told Good News Network. “The child can then use the card like a debit card in their cafeteria.”

“Basing our concept off of the current systems, on my platform, which will not have a membership fee, parents can add money for their child to use and when they are confirming their payment they will be asked if they would like to anonymously pay for a $2-3 meal for another child in their community,” she added.

In order to ensure that families don’t abuse the payment system, there will be certain applications and requirements in place for applying as a Food For Thought recipient. Both donors and recipient families, however, will always be kept anonymous.

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Additionally, you don’t have to be a parent to make a donation – anyone can download the app for charitable use.

Kapasi first got the idea for the app when she was volunteering for a nonprofit that paired tutors with children who could not afford them. Originally, she says that she was bewildered as to why the volunteers kept bringing in food for the kids.

“At the first meeting, I noticed that the organization was providing sandwiches for all of the children,” says Kapasi. “I was initially confused because I assumed that these kids had just eaten lunch and in an hour or two were going to be getting dinner.”

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The volunteers went on to explain that many of the children didn’t have families who could afford school lunches – and furthermore, could not afford to feed them at home, either.

“When you think of hungry children, you automatically think of people in third world countries. The concept that there are children in my community that are not getting enough to eat horrified me and lead to me researching childhood hunger in the United States.”

Kapasi, who is a senior at Brearley School in New York City, then joined forces with four other classmates – Emma Yang, Fiona Xu, Ivy Mao, and Gabrielle Rich – to form Team Fig: a group dedicated to solving hunger in their communities.

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Yang was actually featured on Good News Network last year for creating the first app ever targeted specifically towards seniors with Alzheimer’s disease. The 12-year-old originally designed her Timeless app as a means of helping her grandmother keep track of dates, people, obligations, and memories – and it turned out to be wildly successful.

Now, however, Team Fig is focused on developing the Food For Thought app for the 2018-2019 school year. The girls have already secured funding for the prototype via their GoFundMe campaign and a $2,000 grant from the Allstate Foundation Good Starts
Young Rally. In addition to applying for nonprofit status, they hope to begin beta testing within the next few months.

“While governments, laws, and budgets may change, we believe that community ties are long-lasting,” Kapasi told Good News Network. “Food for Thought reflects this in that it will make it easy and accessible for people to donate to help limit and possibly stop school lunch inequality and its byproduct food shaming.”

Feed Your Friends Some Good News: Click To Share (Photo by Team Fig)

7-yo With Rare Form of Cancer Receives 1,000 Halloween Cards From Around the World

Brock Hardwick may be struggling with a rare form of cancer, but over 1,000 people are helping to keep his spirits up.

Back in February, the 7-year-old from Portland, Maine was diagnosed with glioblastoma – a high-grade cancer of the spine and brain. The youngster currently spends his days fighting the disease at the Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital.

So as a means of cheering up her son, Brock’s mother, Brittney Horton, came up with a special celebration: Brocktoberfest.

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Because Brock loves Halloween, his family is celebrating the spooky holiday every day of the month. Additionally, they started asking people on social media to send Brock Halloween cards.

While the Hardwick family was only expecting to receive maybe a couple dozen cards, their postal box has become flooded with cards, packages, sweets, toys, and well wishes from people all over the world.

Since Horton first put the word out on social media, Brock has received over 1,000 pieces of mail.

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“It’s definitely very exciting and he’s happy,” Horton told ABC News. “It’s made him smile a whole lot more.”

Brock plans on being either Captain America or the Hulk for Halloween. If you want to keep up with his goings-on, you can follow his Team Brock Facebook page.

Click To Share The Sweet News With Your Friends

Woman Wins Right to Use Family Sick Leave to Care For Dog

An Italian woman has just won a revolutionary court case after stating that she wanted to be given two days of family sick pay while she cared for her dog after surgery.

It is reportedly the first time that an Italian court has ever made a ruling on the subject.

The woman, who is an academic at Rome’s La Sapienza University, was assisted by lawyers from Italy’s Anti-Vivisection League (LAV).

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Lawyers cited the country’s legislation which states that anyone who abandons a pet to “grave suffering” can be punished by a $11,800 (€10,000) and one year in prison. The woman argued that she should be allotted her sick pay for taking care of her 12-year-old English Setter.

Courts then agreed that the school could list the absence as being caused by “serious or family personal reasons” because animals count as family members.

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“It is a significant step forward that recognized that animals that are not kept for financial gain or their working ability are effectively members of the family,” Gianluca Felicetti, president of LAV, said. “Now, those in the same situation will be able to cite this important precedent.”

Click To Share The Pawesome News With Your Friends (Photo by Christopher.Woo, CC)

Texas Inmates Pool Funds to Donate $53,000 For Hurricane Harvey Relief

Some people might just write off these 6,600 inmates as criminals – but they are still trying to help their hurting home state of Texas.

Convicts from several jails and rehabilitation centers across Texas collectively donated $53,000 of their commissary funds to the American Red Cross for Hurricane Harvey relief.

Commissary funds are small allowances that are given to prisoners for them to buy hygiene products and toiletries in jail.

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Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark told Dallas News that the average prisoner donated roughly $8 of their commissary funds to hurricane relief. Other inmates donated hundreds of dollars.

Regardless of the amount, however, choosing to donate a portion of their meager allowances was no small gesture for the inmates – and yet they still wanted to do it anyway.

“They were requesting to donate money,” Clark told Dallas News. “It’s just something they chose to do.”

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by LeylanR, CC

Gucci to Go Fur-Free and Auction the Remaining Products to Benefit Animal Rights

Italian fashion company Gucci has just announced this week that they will no longer be using animal fur in their products, effective starting with its spring-summer 2018 collection.

Furthermore, all their remaining fur products – including mink, coyote, raccoon dog, fox, rabbit, and karakul – will be sold at a charity auction to benefit the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and LAV, the Italian animal protection organization.

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Marco Bizzarri, Gucci’s President and CEO, said: “Being socially responsible is one of Gucci’s core values, and we will continue to strive to do better for the environment and animals. With the help of HSUS and LAV, Gucci is excited to take this next step and hopes it will help inspire innovation and raise awareness, changing the luxury fashion industry for the better.”

The announcement is part of Gucci’s new partnership with the Fur Free Alliance – a group of 40 organizations and designers that have sworn off fur products, including Armani, Hugo Boss, Yoox Net-a-Porter, and Stella McCartney.

PJ Smith, the senior manager of fashion policy for HSUS, said: “With this announcement, Gucci will help to change the way the luxury fashion industry considers animals.”

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“There is a growing segment of new, ethically-minded consumers who care about innovation and social responsibility and want nothing to do with outdated and inherently cruel products, like fur. Gucci understands this and will likely reap the benefits as a result.”

This is just one of the animal rights victory that the Fur Free Alliance has recently celebrated, too – the organization succeeded in helping to persuade the President of the Czech Republic, Miloš Zeman, to sign an amendment on an animal protection law that will bring an end to fur farming. The legislation is due to go into effect on the first day of the second calendar month following its publication.

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Simone Pavesi, the manager of animal-free fashion for LAV, said: “Respect for animals is becoming more entrenched in people’s values and the great names of fashion are gradually implementing social responsibility policies to reflect that. As fashion becomes more and more ethical, supply chains that revolve around animals will be a thing of the past.”

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Landre Photography, CC)

Abandoned Dog With 6-Pound Tumor Gets Second Chance at Life

Clyde the dog has spent half of this live dragging around a massive tumor on his chest – but now, thanks to a dedicated team of employees, he has gotten a second chance at life.

The shepherd-husky mix was only recently dropped off at the Gallatin County Animal Shelter in Sparta, Kentucky earlier this week. Because his tumor had grown to weigh 6.2 pounds, the owner told veterinary staff to have Clyde euthanized.

Instead, shelter workers posted a photo of Clyde on Facebook with a plea for help. Luckily, workers with the Homeless Animals Rescue Team (HART) saw his picture and volunteered to help.

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The pooch was then taken to the County Animal Hospital in Mason where – after just two hours of surgery – his tumor was successfully removed.

HART, which is a 100% volunteer-run nonprofit that saves animals from euthanization and pairs them with foster homes, is currently asking for donations to help finance Clyde’s recovery.

Volunteers also say that – despite having to live with the growth for the last six months – Clyde is a happy pup with a heart of gold. Once veterinarians give him a biopsy and make sure the tumor isn’t a sign of cancer, he will be put up for adoption so he can find a loving forever home.

Click To Share The Pawesome News With Your Friends (Photo by Gallatin County Animal Shelter)