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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)

Veteran Who Stole Truck to Save 30 Vegas Shooting Victims Surprised With New Car

When a sniper opened fire on a group of spectators at a Las Vegas country music festival, Taylor Winston made national headlines for stealing a man’s truck and using it to transport over 30 wounded people to the hospital.

The 29-year-old marine veteran credits his quick-thinking during the chaos to his military training. He says that once the shooting started, he saw a nearby lot of parked cars and started checking to see if the keys were inside any of the vehicles. Before ambulances had even arrived on the scene, he had loaded a group of injured passengers into a truck and drove them to the Desert Springs Hospital Medical Center.

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He then returned to the scene of the shooting to pick up more people.

Winston was eventually able to return the keys to the truck’s owner a few days after the event – although, the owner was sure to thank Winston for his heroism, and assured him that he didn’t mind the veteran borrowing his truck in the first place.

As a means of thanking Winston for his bravery, car dealership B5 Motors from Gilbert, Arizona posted on Twitter asking if anyone could help connect them with the veteran.

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On Friday, dealership representatives met up with the veteran and gave him the keys to a 2013 Ford F-150 with customized wheels and tires. The car is worth an estimated $20,000.

Winston says that he plans on selling his current car and donating all of the proceeds to Las Vegas shooting victims.

“He was very, very thankful,” Shane Beus, the owner of B5 Motors, told CBS News. “The best word to describe him is humble.”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by B5 Motors)

Woman Dances Night Away With Airport Strangers After Missing A Flight And Getting Stranded

While some people might sulk and complain about having to spend the night in an airport, Mahshid Mazooji was determined to turn it into a positive experience.

Mahshid had missed a connecting flight last month in North Carolina’s Charlotte Douglas International Airport. Rather than sit around, angry about the inconvenience, she decided to make the most of her time.

For Mahshid, this meant organizing an impromptu dance party with airport workers and fellow passengers.

The friendly traveler shot footage of herself dancing with total strangers and organized it into a music video, set to Lionel Richie’s 1983 hit song “All Night Long (All Night).” She posted the video to YouTube, where it quickly went viral with over 2 million views.

“I didn’t want to sit in anger all night long, so instead I did what makes me happiest…DANCE!!!! Oh, and I made some really great friends along the way!” Mahshid captioned the fun video.

Even Lionel Richie himself caught wind of the video, sharing it on his official Facebook page. “HAHA! Seems like a really fun use of downtime at the airport… That moonwalk though, wow!” the singer wrote.

Check out the video below to see the Mahshid’s jazzy airport music video.

Dance Your Worries Away: Click To Share With Your Friends

Deadly Flames Threaten Wildlife Site But One Man Stays Behind With Hose To Keep Animals Safe

As wildfires blaze through the state of California, thousands of people have been forced to evacuate to safety, but the flames aren’t only threatening people. Thousands of animals are in danger as well, especially those living in zoos and wildlife preserves.

At the Safari West Park and animal preserve in Santa Rosa, California, all employees were told to evacuate immediately as fires sped toward them.

Every single person left — except the 77-year-old owner and founder of the park, Peter Lang.

Peter refused to leave the animals alone and in danger. As the wildfire closed in on all sides, Peter worked tirelessly — single-handedly — to keep the animals safe.

With no other options, he used regular garden hoses to keep the threatening flames back.

He believed he was responsible for “a thousand souls,” and thanks to his hard work and dedication, every animal was preserved and remains safe today.

Sadly, Peter and his wife lost their home and many vehicles in the fire, but they know they are not alone, with dozens of other families facing the same challenges.

Check out the video below to meet Peter and learn how he and the animals survived the terrifying fires…

SHARE This Hero Story on Facebook and Twitter…

Volunteers Transform Empty Las Vegas Lot into Healing Garden in Just Four Days

What was once an empty lot between two Las Vegas casinos is now a lush, thriving garden for city residents to heal and seek sanctuary – and it was erected in only four days.

The Las Vegas Healing Garden was opened to the public on Friday after a team of dedicated volunteers spent the week planting greenery and paving walkways for the finished product. The oasis now features a “Remembrance Wall” with 58 smiling photos of the Las Vegas shooting victims and a “Tree of Life”: a massive oak tree that stands in the middle of the garden.

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The garden, which was spearheaded by landscape designer Jay Pleggenkuhle of Stonerose Landscapes, was originally only intended to be a popup project for residents to find asylum – but after requesting a space from the city of Las Vegas, officials agreed that they wanted something more permanent.

Organizers managed to raise over $300,000 in donations for the construction costs. Pleggenkuhle received dozens of flower and shrubbery donations from local nurseries, all of which were planted by hundreds of volunteers during the following days.

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Since it has opened, the community has agreed that it has become an invaluable place of refuge.

“The cool thing about the park is it’s being built completely by donations and volunteer efforts,” Pleggenkuhle told DTLV. “The main point of the park wasn’t so much the end result but bringing people together for something positive.”

(WATCH the video below)

Plant Some Positivity: Click To Share The News With Your Friends – Photo by City of Las Vegas

Cubs Fans Help Elderly Man With Cancer Enjoy Playoff Game: ‘I just love this!’

Chicago Cubs fans aren’t just die-hard enthusiasts – they are also compassionate spectators as well.

Lauren Hinkston Hintzsche and her husband were at the playoff game between the Washington Nationals and the Chicago Cubs yesterday when they witnessed a heartwarming exchange between the people sitting next to them.

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Two brothers who were sitting near them on the bleachers noticed an elderly couple having trouble getting to their seats amidst the chaotic crowd. The duo immediately offered to help the couple maneuver through the seats – and that wasn’t all.

“Anyone who has sat in the bleachers knows that even on a good day, the bleachers can be tough to navigate,” Hintzsche wrote on Facebook. “During the game, they would help the older gentleman stand when the crowd stood, and the [other] guy stayed seated at times so this gentleman could see the game.”

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About a third of the way through the game, the elderly woman leaned over to Hintzsche and explained that her husband had undergone chemotherapy, and they were relieved to be having such a fun time.

“At the end of the game, these 2 awesome guys made sure the older gentleman made it up the stairs with no problems,” says Hintzsche “I gave both of those guys big hugs and thanked them for their generosity!

“With all the crap going on in the world, I felt this was a story I had to tell,” she added.

Score Big With Your Friends: Click To Share (Photos by Lauren Hinkston Hintzsche)

Misfortune Leads Man Preparing For Doomsday to His Destiny: Saving Lives in Puerto Rico

Joseph Badame has spent decades preparing to save friends and family from an inevitable doomsday – but now, he will be saving a different group of people instead.

The 74-year-old architect of Medford, New Jersey had spent the last 40 years collecting survival supplies for the bomb shelter in his basement. He and his wife Phyllis had accumulated enough non-perishable food and resources to feed and house at least 100 people in the event of a worst-case scenario.

The $1 million bomb shelter came equipped with a survival library, showers, coal furnaces, kerosene refrigerators, toilets, washers, and driers. Though doomsday never happened, the neighbors were always grateful for the resources whenever there was a power outage.

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But after Phyllis died in 2013 and the bank foreclosed on his home last month, Badame became heartbroken over how his survival project would never be put to its intended use.

During the closing sale of the property, however, Badame found a new purpose.

30-year-old Victoria Martinez-Barber was providing catering for the estate sale last month when she met the elderly architect. She explained how all of the sales from her and her husband’s food truck would help provide relief for her family in Puerto Rico.

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Over the years, Badame had collected dozens of 300-pound barrels filled with food, each of which had the capacity to feed 84 people for four months. The architect had originally expected all of the barrels to be thrown away – but instead, he offered to donate it all to Martinez-Barber’s family in Puerto Rico.

“Phyliss and I prepared all this for one group of people and it turns out it’s going to help another group of people. That’s wonderful,” Badame told NJ.com.

Additionally, since befriending Martinez-Barber and her husband, he has since been “adopted” into their family. He now resides in an RV in their backyard – and though it marks the start of an unfamiliar new era of his life, Badame says he is delighted to have found a new purpose in helping those less fortunate.

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by WPVI

A World First: It Took 4 Years to Film Sand Cat Cubs in the Wild, and They’re So Precious

While these may look like ordinary kittens, these little furballs are actually wild sand cat kittens – and this is the first time that they have ever been filmed in their natural habitat.

The kittens were spotted by scientists from the big cat conservation group Panthera in the Moroccan Sahara several weeks ago. Sand cat sightings are extremely hard to track because they leave behind little to no markings of their activity and they travel primarily at night. Their fur also provides perfect camouflage against their surroundings.

Grégory Breton, the managing director of the French branch of Panthera, says that their team has been researching sand cats in Africa since 2013 – and this most recent breakthrough was a huge milestone.

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“Finding these kittens was astonishing,” says Breton. “We spent an hour taking pictures and videos and setting up camera traps in the hopes of recording some natural behavior once we left.”

While studying the desert felines may have a rewarding scientific payoff – but the researchers say that it is far from easy.

“A typical day in the field involves waking up at 8 a.m., recording the daytime resting locations of the collared cats when we can find them, napping in the afternoon after a meal cooked and eaten in the shade of rare acacia trees or in one of our tents, and setting out again between sunset and sunrise,” says Breton.

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“There’s no electricity and no bathrooms. When sandstorms happen, we have to stow our gear away—and retreat to our tent or vehicle to protect our faces, unless we’re in the mood for a free peeling.”

Over the course of the last four years, however, Breton and his team have accumulated an impressive amount of data on the elusive sand cat which will help to ensure their conservation in the future.

“Ours has been the most extensive research on this species, and it will surely help to protect it,” says Breton.

(WATCH the video below)

Sand Cat Kittens Spotted in the Wild for First Time from Panthera Cats on Vimeo.

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Watch 13-Year-old Girl Land Record-Breaking Backflip in Her Wheelchair

13-year-old Lily Rice is making headlines worldwide after she landed a heartstopping backflip in her wheelchair.

This is thought to make her the first European woman – and possibly the youngest woman ever – to land a wheelchair backflip. She may only be the second woman to perform the stunt in the world.

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“1 weekend, 6 hours and I nailed a backflip on the resi at Rampworld Cardiff! Super stoked!” the teen wrote on Facebook. “Now I need a neck brace and back padding before I try it out on concrete!”

The first female to ever successfully pull the stunt was Katherine Beattie, a 31-year-old from La Cañada Flintridge, California.

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While Beattie had cerebral palsy, Rice is unable to efficiently move her legs because of hereditary spastic paraplegia – a degenerative disease that causes stiffness in the legs.

The teen, who is from Pembrokeshire, Wales, has only been doing wheelchair motocross for about a year. Once she raises enough money for a new motocross wheelchair, however, she hopes to compete in the WCMX World Championships in March next year.

(WATCH the video below)

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Cancer Survivor Breaks Down When She Discovers ‘Hope’ Rock Left Near Her Car By Total Stranger

Nancy Hicks was leaving a clothing store in September when a brightly painted pink rock caught her eye.

Not just a kid’s art project, a grown woman had left the rock next to her car. And the message on the rock read “Hope” — with a ribbon for breast cancer.

“It touched me in a way that I can’t even explain,” Nancy told WKBW TV in Buffalo, New York.

Nancy is a breast cancer survivor and the stranger who left it, Theresa Wrobel, whose father died of liver cancer, had no idea the driver was a breast cancer survivor.

As if it were fate, Theresa’s breast cancer rock, which she made for Breast Cancer Awareness Month, fell into the hands of a breast cancer survivor.

Even talking about it now, Nancy begins to cry. “That rock means a lot to me…”

(Images via WKBW News video)

These Cards Ask Questions That Will Make You Closer to Your Friends and Family

Imagine if there were an easier way to get to know someone better – or to make breakthroughs in authentic, heartfelt connection.

Meet Cards to the Heart.

In a world where intimate relationships often begin in a swipe left/right situation, and friends hesitate to discuss “heavier” topics, Cards to the Heart is an ideal game for helping others bring their walls down and open up their hearts to one another.

Created by Dom Scott, the cards were originally designed as a fun game to help him get to know his partner better.

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Each of the 54 cards has an engaging question that’s meant to spark a conversation. Rather than the standard “Tell me about the first time you did X” questions, these cards delve a bit deeper: about topics that inspire us, that scare us, that bring us joy. They also all feature an original painting by Toronto artist Natasha Kudashkina.

Scott and his partner had such a great time discussing the questions, they started printing small batches to give to friends as gifts. Then, the recipients asked how they could get copies of the deck to give to their own friends… and then, demand for them just exploded.

They’re not just for romantic relationships either—the questions are perfect for getting to know new friends. Since people are constantly growing and evolving, the cards can be used over and over again, even amongst the same people.

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Scott’s Kickstarter campaign for the cards’ production has already raised over half of its $9,500 goal. By spreading the word, he hopes to help more people enjoy meaningful, authentic connections with friends and loved ones.

By carrying these in your pocket, you can rest assured you’ll never be short of a good conversation again.

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Cards to the Heart)

Man Risks His Own Safety to Rescue Impala Stuck in Mud

A man dove into a pit of mud for one heroic reason: to rescue a female impala that had become trapped in the muck.

The impala, which had apparently fallen into the mud at the Zimbabwe National Park, had become exhausted from unsuccessfully trying to escape. Thankfully, he was spotted by the right man to help.

RELATED VIDEO: Baby Deer Refused To Leave Side of Man Who Rescued It

Before plunging into the pit, the man tied a safety rope around his waist and crawled towards the frightened animal.

Upon reaching the impala, he tied the rope around its legs and told his friends to pull the two of them to safety.

While the impala was initially too exhausted to move, they poured some bottled water into her mouth. She then leaped to her feet and ran back towards her pack.

(WATCH the video below)

Don’t Be A Naysayer: Click To Share 

Artist Creates Dolls With Skin Conditions So People Will Love Their Differences

 

There are more than enough skinny blonde Barbie dolls lining the shelves of toy stores worldwide – but what about the girls who want dolls that look more like them?

That is where Kay Black comes in.

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Black is a jewelry designer and hair stylist who also makes custom-made dolls with special physical features. More recently, she is being hailed for creating dolls with vitiligo: a condition that causes darker skin pigments to turn white.

A post shared by kays customz (@kaycustoms) on

All of Black’s creations are made out of older dolls that she finds at secondhand stores. Depending on the details of her designs, each doll can take up to several weeks to finish.

Her vitiligo toys became so popular, Black started expanding her creations to include male dolls and dolls with albinism. As a result, dozens of fans have expressed their appreciation for the stylist’s efforts to encourage diversity and representation.

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If you would like to request a custom-made doll or look at Black’s past creations, you can check out the artist’s Instagram or website.

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photos by Kay Customz)

Two Words That Changed Almost Half a Million Lives

You know those projects that make you feel as if you’re spinning your wheels and you’re going to lose whatever hair you have left?

Cheryl Rice was working on one of those projects at work. She was frustrated. She felt stalled. She was dejected.

Then a colleague gave her a card that changed everything.

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Often when we’re going through a rough time, we feel alone, and just having someone notice and understand makes all the difference between feeling invisible and feeling loved and supported. For Cheryl, that card bearing just two little words is what made her realize she wasn’t alone.

The two words?

You Matter.

Cheryl told me she teared up when she read the message. “I’ve struggled at times with my own self-worth, and when I received the card, it felt like a question I carry around with me had been answered. I matter. That expression from her to me filled me up.”

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Cheryl was so touched by the gesture that she ordered 100 of her own cards to give away, first to family and friends and then to acquaintances. Eventually, she also started leaving cards in strategic locations to brighten strangers’ days—in the credit card holders at gas pumps, in library books, on car windshields.

And then she got bolder.

(READ more at Brad Aronson’s blog)