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College Girl Gives Up Free Time to Show Special Needs Kids That They Can Dance

This dance troupe isn’t just talented – it is also very, very special.

The Chance to Dance troupe of Lexington, Kentucky is made up entirely of kids and adults with special needs.

The troupe is led by the University of Kentucky College of Education student Jenna Lyon. The youth had originally started the free dance program when she was still in high school four years ago – but despite now having to meet the demands of college, she still makes sure that she has enough time for the troupe.

RELATED VIDEO: Dance Company Includes People in Wheelchairs and Busts a Beautiful Move

And after watching this clip of the kids and their beloved teacher, it is not hard to understand why.

“Chance to Dance was founded on the platform that our student’s families would not have to pay for classes or costumes because we did not want expenses to keep anyone from participating in our program,” says Lyon. “In addition to the medical bills, child care and therapies that our families have to pay for for their children, we did not want A Chance to Dance to be added as another expense.”

“Our students have shown me that they are just like any other person and are capable of accomplishing anything regardless of their disability. Some of our students might need a little extra help or guidance, but I have watched their determination and resilience help them achieve anything they set their mind to.”

(WATCH the video below)

Bust A Move: Click To Share With Your Friends

Despite Being Trapped, Bakers Spend Days Making Bread For Other Hurricane Victims

By the time these Mexican bakers were ready to go home, the floodwaters were already too high. Instead of worrying about the fate of their city, however, they decided to put their talents to good use and bake hundreds of loaves of bread for their fellow hurricane victims.

The four bakers of El Bolillo Bakery in Houston, Texas had been working a late shift when the water levels on the street became too dangerous.

The bakery, which specializes in Mexican pastries and sweet treats, was able to stay relatively dry throughout the storm. Additionally, the facilities still had electricity.

RELATEDFrench Baker Gives His Store to Homeless Man Who Saved His Life

So, the cooks got to work making pan dulce – a kind of Mexican sweet bread – all through the day and night.

By the time they were rescued, the bakers had already used over 4,000 pounds of flour.

The cooks then spent the next couple days distributing the bread to emergency shelters around the city.

The gesture is even sweeter than the bread they were handing out.

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by El Bolillo Bakery)

Today is GNN’s 20th Anniversary! There Wasn’t Even a ‘Blog’ That Far Back…

So glad we made it!

It is now 20 years since I first clicked the button to launch the world’s first positive news web page.  You can see the old Apple Power Mac I used to create the site (above), and our three children who watched me grow the business over two decades, as I watched them grow to be 26, 24, and 22 years old.

The photo was taken by Women’s World magazine, which provided my first press coverage two months after my launch.

The homepage looked a lot different back then. Here is a snapshot of it, as I first built it using html software.

I knew the media, not known for good news coverage, actually did produce positive articles and videos, but it was scattered and hard to find. My idea was to put it all in one place — sort of like a “Good Google”, except there was no Google back then, nor Youtube, nor even a blog. I was surely a pioneer.

Today, the media networks know that “good news sells”, which is what I wanted to prove setting out—at least on social media, where Shares of awe-inspiring stories earn some of the highest numbers.

GNN.org has some big plans for the coming year, and we are excited to unveil them, as early as November, so stay tuned! If you’d like to donate to our mission for the next 20 years, please become a Member of GNN or send us some LOVE on Paypal, where you can use our email address – [email protected] to make a donation. You can also sign up for our Daily Jolt of Good News, or the Weekly Top 10 newsletter to brighten your inbox.

Thank you for your support over the years. Without YOU there would be no reason for me to do any of this. Together, we are changing the world one headline at a time—and we passed a milestone recently posting our 18,000th story!

Geri Weis-Corbley, Founder and Editor-in-Chief

Louise Hay Built a Healing Empire, After She Healed Herself (1926–2017)

Self-Help pioneer Louise Hay published her first book, Heal Your Body, in 1976 (at age 50) long before it was fashionable to discuss the connection between the mind and body. Today her publishing empire, Hay House, continues the mission of that first best-selling book, by promoting the work of notable healing practitioners as Dr. Wayne Dyer, Dr. Christiane Northrup, Doreen Virtue, and Caroline Myss.

This morning, at age 90, Ms. Hay passed peacefully in her sleep of natural causes.

“Louise was an incredible visionary and advocate. Everyone who had the privilege to meet her, either in person or through her words, felt her passion for serving others,” wrote Reid Tracy, her friend and the CEO of Hay House.

In 1970 in New York City, she began attending meetings at the Church of Religious Science and then entered a ministerial program. She became a popular speaker, and soon found herself counseling clients. This work quickly blossomed into a full-time career.

RELATEDAre You Living a Meaningful Life? Here Are a Few Tips on How to Start

She had already compiled a reference guide detailing the mental causes of physical ailments, which became the basis for “the little blue book,” when she was diagnosed with cancer.

She used the positive thought patterns that she believed would reverse illness and create health, and, as an alternative to surgery and drugs, developed an intensive program of affirmations, visualization, nutritional cleansing, and psychotherapy.

Within six months, she was completely healed of cancer.

In 1980, Louise began putting her workshop methods on paper. In 1984, her second book, You Can Heal Your Life, was published. In it, Louise explained how our beliefs and ideas about ourselves are often the cause of our emotional problems and physical maladies and how, by using certain tools, we can change our thinking and our lives for the better. You Can Heal Your Life became a New York Times bestseller and spent 16 weeks on the list. More than 50 million copies of You Can Heal Your Life have been sold throughout the world.

In 1985, Louise began her famous support group, “The Hayride,” with six men diagnosed with AIDS. By 1988, the group had grown to a weekly gathering of 800 people and had moved to an auditorium in West Hollywood. Once again, Louise had started a movement of love and support long before people began to wear red ribbons on their lapels.

ALSONew Study Finds Reading Can Help With Chronic Pain

Considered to be a founder of the self-help movement, Louise was affectionately dubbed by those who knew her, “the closest thing to a living saint.”

In 1987, what began as a small venture in the living room of her home turned into Hay House, Inc.: a successful publishing company that has sold millions of books and products worldwide and now has offices in California, New York, London, Sydney, Johannesburg, and New Delhi.

“Meeting Louise changed the direction of my life,” said Mr. Tracy. “Her passion for serving others translated into everything she did. Simply by working alongside her, an analytical accountant like me transformed into someone who became aware of the power of affirmations and self-love. Being able to learn from her has been one of my life’s greatest blessings. The beauty of Louise was that you didn’t have to work alongside her to learn from her, you felt like you were there with her with every word you read or heard.”

RELATEDHow to Achieve Your Goals By Honoring Your Life

Louise was also very vocal in her belief that age was irrelevant to achieving one’s dreams. To that point, at 81, Louise released her first-ever film on her life and work, You Can Heal Your Life: The Movie.

Hay House will carry on Louise’s legacy and continue to publish products and online learning courses that align with her message of self-improvement and self-love.

Ms. Hay’s estate, as well as all future royalties, will be donated to The Hay Foundation, a nonprofit organization established by Louise that financially supports diverse organizations supplying food, shelter, counseling, hospice care, and funds to those in need. The service in honor of Louise L. Hay will be a private and intimate event. In lieu of flowers, we welcome your donations to the Hay Foundation.

SHARE the News on Your Feed… OR,   –Image by Hay House, Inc

Houston Furniture Store Invites Flood Victims and Pets to Shelter on its Mattresses and Sofas

Taking in flood victims in 2017

He’s been a Houston fixture, advertising his two furniture stores in Houston for over a third of a century. This week he advertised his own cell phone number and opened both locations to 400 victims of the Texas floods from Tropical Storm Harvey.

“We’re opening up both buildings as shelters during this horrible time,” Jim Mcingvale said in a video on the company Facebook Page. “We’ve got lots of beds, we’ve got lots of food, we got water, and you can even bring your animals.”

Then, he proceeded to give out his personal cell phone number in the LIVE video broadcast.

“If you need something, call, and we’ll try to get you whatever help we can. We’re all in this together. . . We’ll come out of this stronger and better than ever before.”

McIngvale also sent out his fleet of large delivery trucks with drivers to pick up people who were in need of a safe place to shelter.

“Yes, it’s very trying right now, but we are Texans and we will help each other as we have done for 200 years.”

Mcingvale, himself, has done this before — during floods last year and during Hurricane Katrina 12 years ago. “He built his stores on elevated concrete to make them floodproof,” reports NPR News.

Now Gallery Furniture is collecting donations of hundreds of cleaning supplies, such as Clorox, shovels, Pinesol, shop vacs, and sponges at their 6006 N. Freeway and 7227 W. Grand Parkway South locations so that affected Texans can clean up the mess left by one of the worst storms in recent American memory.

Known affectionately in the city as “Mattress Mack,” he opened and closed the inspiring video announcement with his daughter’s favorite quote: “If not for our struggles, we would not have known our strength.”

(WATCH the video below –Photos via Facebook)

SHARE This Hero Story to Honor Texans in Trouble… OR,

Couple Gets Married on Mt. Everest and, Despite Difficulties, the Photos are Breathtaking

James Sisson and Ashley Schmieder have become the first couple to ever get married at the base camp of Mount Everest in a tuxedo and wedding dress – and though they say that it was a long and arduous journey, the photos are proof that the event was worth it.

The couple had planned on doing something dangerous and daring for their wedding, but they had not thought about the world’s highest mountain until it was suggested by Charleton Churchill: a self-proclaimed adventure wedding photographer.

WATCH4-Year-old Can’t Contain Emotions When He Hears Stepmom Give Special Message During Wedding

Schmieder contacted the photographer one year in advance and started hashing out plans for the trip. The duo hired a crew that would escort them up the mountain, and to prepare, they went to the gym obsessively to get in shape for the hike.

Then, in March, the troupe flew from Seattle to Dubai, then to Kathmandu in Nepal. With their lightweight wedding outfits and gear strapped to their backs, they began the weeklong hike up the mountain.

“We were like family. Ashley is a tough girl who crushed it on the mountain trail and maintained a great pace. James is a great man who took care of Ashley, always looking after her needs,” says Churchill. “Plus he’s a comedian who made us laugh often. It can be difficult after a few days on a long mountain trek with all the pressure and lack of resources to maintain a smile, but we did well.”

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It was not all fun and games, however – there were some serious challenges along the way. Churchill came down with food poisoning, which prevented him from sleeping well. Sisson had come down with the “Khumbu cough” halfway through the journey,.

“Saying this was an epic and amazing trip is true, but I would be remiss if I didn’t share (that) it came with some suffering, doubt, fear, anxiety, and physical pain,” wrote Churchill. “Often times when striving for something great, there’s usually a cost. There’s no glory without suffering.”

But after eight days of difficult hiking, they finally donned their wedding outfits and said ‘I do’.

Though they both were wearing wool long johns under their fancy getups, they still had to endure -5 to 5 degree Fahrenheit (-20º C) weather at 17,600 feet.

According to their Sherpa guides, the mountain had dumped more snow on them during their journey alone than the rest of the winter combined.

It was still all worth it.

“It was beautiful, short, and we captured a few photos before packing and getting ready to leave,” says Churchill. “I had many image ideas to massage with them, but because of the circumstances, we only had so much time to capture them in the freezing cold. However, even with the small amount of time we had to capture James and Ashley and their wedding, I think we nailed it.”

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“Since they were eloping far away from home, we had no minister, but they exchanged vows, exchanged rings, and shared from the heart how much they were going to pursue and love each other. It was truly a moment of awesomeness, knowing where we were at that time, and how hard we worked to get there, this moment was finally happening. They were getting married surrounded by an orchestra of mountains … Truly unreal.”

To view more of Churchill’s breathtaking wedding photos, you can check out his travel blog on the journey here.

Click To Share The Inspiring Story With Your FriendsPhotos by Charleton Churchill Photography

Student Drives into Hurricane Path to Rescue Animals at Risk

These two pups were stranded in the path of Hurricane Harvey with very few rescue prospects – until Connor showed up.

This was no ordinary rescue, either – Connor made the 4-hour drive south from Austin, Texas to where the dogs were in Corpus Christi. Not only that, but he was also driving towards the hurricane that everyone was running away from.

According to the Dodo, the 22-year-old college student was preparing to head back to school when his mother, who volunteers with Lucky Lab Rescue and Adoption, saw a social media post from a foster home in Corpus Christi.

CHECK OUT: Volunteers Go ‘Rogue’, Ignore Police Lines to Rescue Pets Stranded in Fire Zone

The post said that the two dogs, named Thelma and Hercules, desperately needed to be evacuated from the area. Connor then decided that he was the man for the job.

“I said why not? And jumped in my truck,” Connor told The Dodo. “I didn’t really think — I just figured someone needed to help them.”

The student, who requested that his last name is withheld, had never conducted an automotive animal rescue before – but after a long day of driving, Connor was able to transport both Thelma and Hercules to safety at their new foster homes.

Connor is not the only hero who has stepped up for Hurricane Harvey – here are five other inspiring examples of businesses and individuals lending a hand for the storm.

Click To Share The Pawesome Story With Your Friends (Photo by Connor)

‘Thanks for saving my life’: Man Marries Woman Who Prevented His Suicide 10 Years Ago

Blake Walsh isn’t just Kevin’s wife – she is also the woman who saved his life.

Kevin and Blake first met at summer camp when they were 13 years old. Even when they were younger, Kevin says that he though she was the prettiest girl he had ever seen.

Though they in contact over instant messaging and phone calls in the following years, they eventually lost touch. After all, Kevin lived in Indianapolis and Blake lived in Michigan. But then, one year after they stopped talking, divine intervention led Blake to call Kevin out of the blue when they were 17 years old.

CHECK OUT: 20 Years Later, Man Fulfills Promise to Marry His Preschool Sweetheart

Due to a string of events, Kevin says he was “seconds away” from taking his own life. He had already written out his suicide note and was about to do the deed when his phone vibrated in his pocket. It was Blake.

As they spoke, Kevin told her that he had been planning on committing suicide. Shocked and mortified, Blake talked him down and made him promise that he would call her the next day.

The two became even closer friends until they fell in love and started dating. Then, 10 years after that fateful phone call, Kevin proposed to her in 2015.

During his proposal, Kevin reportedly told Blake: “I love you. Also, thanks for saving my life.”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The Sweet Story With Your Friends (Photo by Kevin and Blake Walsh)

For the First Time Ever, Wild Bears Given Second Chance at Life

In the state of California, any bear that harms a human is considered a public safety threat that must be euthanized in order to minimize harm. This black bear family, however, is the first in history that has been given a second chance at life instead.

The mother of three cubs landed in trouble when she broke into the home of an Oakland resident in search of food. The homeowner, who had been in her kitchen, started banging pots and pans in hopes that it would ward off the black bear – unfortunately, it only served to agitate it.

The mama black bear then swiped at the woman’s arm and fled the scene with her cubs.

RELATEDCops Give Scathing Review of Bear’s Piano Skills on Surveillance Footage

This is not the first time that the bear had been causing trouble, either – there had been eight other incidents in the area of a mother bear and three cubs causing significant damage to homes, vehicles, and property.

While the woman did not suffer a fatal injury and has been recovering in the hospital, the collective events spelled certain termination for the sow.

Wildlife specialists say that ordinarily, they would wait until the cubs were fully weaned before rehabilitating them and releasing them back into the wild. But in light of the three cubs not exhibiting possible rehabilitation tendencies, the Oakland Zoo volunteered to take the family bears into captivity, rather than allow harm.

WATCHBear Literally Can’t Stop Jumping For Joy After Being Rescued

The zoo emphasizes that while taking wild adult mammals into captivity is far from a favorable outcome, they say it is better than the alternative. Ideally, the mother would be teaching her cubs “to exhibit natural, healthy behaviors in their native habitat, free of human-related attractants, wildlife feeding issues and eventual habituation.”

Sadly, due to the mother’s scavenging habits, the cubs did not exhibit natural feeding or hunting habits, instead depending on human presence.

Now, the zoo hopes that the bears will help educate California natives on wildlife behavior and relations.

CHECK OUT: Baby Octopus is Quick to Thank Human Rescuer Before it Swims Back to Sea

“Oakland Zoo is very grateful to be in a position to provide a home for these bears,” said Dr. Joel Parrott, President and CEO of Oakland Zoo. “They are an important example of the human-wildlife conflict and highlight how we need to care for wildlife throughout California.”

“We are so happy to be able to help these four bears,” said Colleen Kinzley, Director of Animal Care, Conservation and Research at Oakland Zoo. “As too often is the case when wild animals come into conflict with humans, it’s the animals that lose. Oakland Zoo’s purpose is to help people understand the challenges and the responsibilities of living with wildlife.”

California Department of Fish and Wildlife has also used the bears as a chance to urge state residents not to feed bears under any circumstances, as this can cause them to lose their foraging habits and make them more aggressive.

(WATCH the bears enjoying their cool new home below)

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Kenya Attacks Plastic Bag Problem With Toughest Ban in the World

After 10 years of debate and delay, Kenya has finally approved the world’s strictest plastic bag ban.

Th ban punishes the import, manufacturing, or selling of single-use plastic bags with either 4 years in jail or a $38,000 fine.

While authorities are currently enforcing the legislation amongst retailers and manufacturers, citizens will be given more time to adjust. If a shopper is seen carrying a plastic bag, they will be given a warning and have their bags taken away.

CHECK OUT: San Francisco Officially Declares Itself a No-Styrofoam Zone

Many stores are already beginning to offer fabric bags for ¢10 apiece.

Since Kenya is one of the biggest exporters of plastic bags – reportedly consuming over 24 million bags per years – the legislation was rejected several times before it was approved last week.

The country is now one of forty other countries that have taken action against single-use plastic bags, such as China, Rwanda, and China. The Bangladesh government was the first to do so in 2002.

Plastic bags can take up to 1,000 years to biodegrade, and their increased presence in oceans and water sources is dangerous to wildlife and the environment. Kenyan cows have become more likely to accidentally consume plastic bags, thus increasing their chances of suffocation or injury.

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Senior Airman Franklin R. Ramos)

5 Amazing Ways People are Aiding Hurricane Harvey Evacuees

Since Hurricane Harvey hit the Gulf Coast this weekend, thousands of Texans have evacuated the afflicted area.

Businesses and individuals alike have been ready to help out – from rescuing trapped families and Houston residents, to going out of their way to provide clean water and resources to storm shelters.

Whatever the case, here are 5 ways that the world is helping Houston in their time of need.

5. TV Reporter Helps Rescue Truck Driver From Rising Floods

Brandi Smith of KHOU news is being hailed for her part in rescuing a stranded truck driver who had become trapped in the vehicle by rising flood waters.

When Smith first spotted the driver from a highway overpass, she voiced her concern over the man’s safety. She was unsure of what to do until she saw an oncoming car with a rescue boat in tow.

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She then chased after the vehicle until she finally flagged it down and pointed out the stranded truck driver. The rescuers were able to float alongside the truck until they could pull the driver to safety.

4. Southwest Airlines Rescues Hundreds of Evacuees For Free

Southwest Airlines transported 500 flood victims from the Houston Hobby Airport to Dallas on Sunday.

Hundreds of passengers had become stranded after the Federal Aviation Association (FAA) had closed the airport to non-emergency air traffic on Sunday morning.

RELATEDSouthwest Employee Becomes Girl’s Buddy During In-Flight Panic Attacks

After Southwest requested clearance from the FAA to fly, however, they were able to load up five Boeing 575s with hurricane evacuees – (Photo by BriYYZ, CC)

3. Anheuser-Busch Stops Canning Beer to Package Water For Storm Victims Instead

Beer company Anheuser-Busch has temporarily stopped brewing beer so they can send canned water to emergency storm shelters.

The company has already shipped over 50,000 cans of drinking water from their brewery in Cartersville, Georgia to Red Cross centers and evacuation points in Louisiana.

“Throughout the year, we periodically pause beer production at our Cartersville, Georgia brewery to produce emergency canned drinking water so we are ready to help out communities across the country in times of crisis. Putting our production and logistics strengths to work by providing safe, clean drinking water is the best way we can help in these situations,” brewmaster Sarah Schilling said in a statement, according to FOX 5 News.

2. Social Media Helps Rescue Nursing Home Residents After Photo Goes Viral

18 seniors were rescued from an assisted living facility in Dickinson, Texas after a photo of themselves sitting in waist-deep water went viral on Twitter.

The photo was originally sent to Timothy McIntosh by his mother-in-law Trudy Lampson. Lampson, who is the owner of the La Vita Bella nursing home in the photo, said that despite the rising floodwaters, they were still awaiting rescue.

Nursing home representatives had already been told not to evacuate since the facility had never been flooded. The photos, however, obviously proved otherwise.

McIntosh then published the photo on Twitter where it was reposted over 2,000 times.

Hours after the photo was published, the Galveston County Office of Emergency Management uses boats and helicopters to escort the residents to safety – many of whom were confined to wheelchairs or required oxygen tanks.

1. Airbnb Allows Users to House Evacuees Free of Charge

Airbnb has changed their rules of service so that Texas users can offer up their place of residence to Hurricane Harvey evacuees for free.

This is not the first time that the company has offered free service – Airbnb also waived its service fees in 2015 for Hurricane Matthew evacuees; individuals affected by the Barcelona attacks; and refugees fleeing the Syrian civil war.

Click To Share The News With Your Friends

Mexico Saves Millions of Monarch Butterflies by Stopping Logging in its Tracks

In 2013, conservationists voiced their concern over disappearing monarch butterfly populations in Mexico. Several years later, however, the government has ensured that the insects are flourishing, thanks to their crack down on illegal logging.

According to the Mexican office of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the country’s newest environmental police force has curbed the logging of forests in which they were deployed by 94%. Only 1.5 acres of the core butterfly conservation zone were lost due to illegal logging.

The police initiative, which currently employs over 1,000 officers, was created by Conanp, the Natural Protected Areas Commission, and the environmental police, according to Mexico News Daily.

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One of the most important protected zones in the program is the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve: a region comprised of roughly 140,000 acres (56,000 hectares) of butterfly habitat in Michoacán, Mexico. The region has been named a UNESCO world heritage site in light of the breathtaking amounts of monarchs that flood the area every winter.

Due to the success of the protection program, members of the environmental police have been deployed to 60 different forests and protected areas in total.

(WATCH the video below)

Fly This Story To Your Friends: Click To Share (Photo by Audrey, CC)

Woman Decides to Keep Tiny Pet That She Found in Her Salad

Becky Garfinkel may have lost her appetite because of this store bought salad mix – but she did gain a tiny new friend.

The Corona, California resident says that she was munching on a salad that she had recently bought from a Target store when she saw something hiding amongst the leaves: a frog that was no bigger than a quarter.

37-year-old Garfinkel says that she immediately screamed and ran to the bathroom so she could throw up the salad that she had already eaten. As she was recovering, however, she heard her husband say that the frog was still alive.

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Garfinkel’s husband then rinsed the salad dressing off of the amphibian and resuscitated it by rubbing its tiny tummy. Upon inspecting the little salad dweller, Garfinkel and her husband actually decided that it was pretty cute.

After sending complaints to Target and salad greens company Taylor Farms, the vegetarian couple decided to keep the frog and name it Lucky – an appropriate name, considering the circumstances.

Lucky now spends his days in a fancy terrarium in Garfinkel’s office, complete with greenery, moss, and plenty of crickets.

Taylor Farms representatives also say that they are investigating the incident so that no more unsuspecting veggie lovers are given the same sickening surprise.

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share This Unfroggettable Story With Your Friends (Photo by Becky Garfinkel)

Youth Risks His Life to Crawl After Suicidal Woman and Talk Her Down

A situation that could have ended in tragedy took an inspiring turn last weekend when a Good Samaritan risked his own life to comfort a suicidal woman and talk her down from the edge.

The woman was first spotted on Saturday afternoon crawling across a section of beams in the Broadway and Lafayette subway station. The beams, which were roughly 20 feet above the subway floor, made for a dangerous drop.

38-year-old pedestrian Michal Klein saw the woman and – though she was not sure whether the climber was suicidal or not – became concerned for her safety.

CHECK OUT: Previously-Suicidal Man Runs Marathon With Guy Who Talked Him Down From Bridge

Klein then saw a young man start crawling across the beams to where the woman was sitting. When the youth finally reached the woman, he sat next to her, put his arm around her shoulder, and started talking to her quietly.

Touched by the heartwarming display of kindness, Klein snapped a photo of the two strangers perched on the beams.

The young man stayed with the woman until emergency personnel arrived and cleared the area. Eventually, the man and woman came down from the beams and the woman was taken to the hospitalby ambulance.

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“I hope she gets [the] help that she needs,” wrote Klein. “And bravo to the young man for risking his own safety to help.”

“He actually cared enough, whoever he was, to help her. A lot of people seemed to be like ‘Oh, it’s New York’, and kept walking,” Klein told CBS New York. “I don’t know what I would’ve done. I don’t think I would’ve climbed over to do that.”

Click To Share The Inspiring News With Your Friends (Photo by Michal Klein)

Watch Woman Gift Drenched Reporter a 6-pack of Beer as Thank You For Hurricane Coverage

This unidentified woman is redefining the meaning of the phrase “southern hospitality”.

Fox News reporter Casey Stegall was in Galveston, Texas last week reporting on the progress of Hurricane Harvey when a woman runs into the camera shot and hands him a 6-pack of Galveston Island Brewing’s Tiki Wheat beer. She then gave him a quick hug before running away once more.

“Well, thank you!” a surprised Stegall responded. “That will be nice for after we are done covering this.”

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While not many people have had to provide news coverage in the middle of a hurricane, it is probably safe to say that cracking open a cold one after a stormy shift must be a very fulfilling reward.

The Galveston Island brewery has also confirmed that the woman does not work for their company, but they are delighted by the media coverage that they have received since the photobomb.

As a thank you for her publicity, the company later gave the woman a shoutout on Instagram by saying: “Send this lady to the brewery so we can shower her with beer! #epic #drinklocal”

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“You never know who you’ll meet or what will happen, when reporting the news. Thanks for the gift (what she gave me, not the tornado alert.)” Stegall wrote on Twitter.

In another tweet, he wrote: “Now that’s what I call a GOOD photo bomb! She was very sweet and even gave me a hug… moment of levity, reporting on serious matters.”

(WATCH the video below)

Cheers! Click To Share With Your Friends

Orange is the New Green For Thriving Costa Rican Forests, Thanks to Orange Peels

In the mid-1990s, 1,000 truckloads of orange peels and orange pulp were purposefully unloaded onto a barren pasture in a Costa Rican national park. Today, that area is covered in lush, vine-laden forest.

A team led by Princeton University researchers surveyed the land 16 years after the orange peels were deposited. They found a 176% increase in the wood volume of the trees, with a greater variety of species, within the 7-acre site studied (3 hectares).

The story, which involves a contentious lawsuit, showcases the unique power of agricultural waste to not only regenerate a forest but also to sequester a significant amount of carbon—all at no cost.

“This is one of the only instances I’ve ever heard of where you can have cost-negative carbon sequestration,” said Timothy Treuer, co-lead author of the study and a graduate student in Princeton’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. “It’s not just a win-win between the company and the local park — it’s a win for everyone.”

WATCHHow This Couple Nursed a Rainforest Back to Life

The original idea was sparked by husband-wife team Daniel Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs, both ecologists at the University of Pennsylvania, who worked as researchers and technical advisers for many years at Área de Conservación Guanacaste (ACG, Guanacaste Conservation Area) in Costa Rica. The couple has focused the latter half of their careers on ensuring a future for endangered tropical forest ecosystems.

In 1997, Janzen and Hallwachs presented an attractive deal to Del Oro, an orange juice manufacturer that had just begun production along the northern border of Área de Conservación Guanacaste. If Del Oro would donate part of its forested land to the Área de Conservación Guanacaste, the company could deposit its orange peel waste for biodegradation, at no cost, on degraded land within the park.

But a year after the contract was signed — during which time 12,000 metric tons of orange peels were unloaded onto the barren land — TicoFruit, a rival company, sued, arguing the company had “defiled a national park.” The rival company won the case in front of Costa Rica’s Supreme Court, and the orange-peel-covered land was largely overlooked for the next 15 years.

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In the summer of 2013, Treuer was discussing potential research avenues with Janzen when they discussed the site in Costa Rica. Janzen said that, while taxonomists (biologists who classify organisms) had visited the area, no one had really done a thorough evaluation. So, while on another research trip to Costa Rica, Treuer decided to stop by the site to see what had changed over the past decade.

“It was so completely overgrown with trees and vines that I couldn’t even see the 7-foot-long sign with bright yellow lettering marking the site that was only a few feet from the road,” Treuer said. “I knew we needed to come up with some really robust metrics to quantify exactly what was happening and to back up this eye-test, which was showing up at this place and realizing visually how stunning the difference was between fertilized and unfertilized areas.”

Treuer studied the area with Jonathan Choi, who, at the time, was a senior studying ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton. Choi turned the project into his senior thesis.

“The site was more impressive in person than I could’ve imagined,” Choi said. “While I would walk over exposed rock and dead grass in the nearby fields, I’d have to climb through undergrowth and cut paths through walls of vines in the orange peel site itself.”

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The research team evaluated two sets of soil samples to determine whether the orange peels enriched the soil’s nutrients. The first set of samples was collected and analyzed in 2000 by co-author Laura Shanks of Beloit College, and the second set was collected in 2014 by Choi. Shanks’ data were never published, so her analysis was combined with Choi’s for the purposes of this study. The samples were analyzed using different but comparable methods.

To quantify changes in vegetation structure, the researchers established several transects within the orange waste treatment area. These transects were 100-meter-long parallel lines throughout the forest, where all trees within 3 meters were measured and tagged. This was done to see how much growth was brought on by the orange peels. For a comparison, the researchers constructed a similar set of routes on the pasture on the other side of the road, which hadn’t been covered in orange peels. They measured tree diameter and identified all species within both areas.

What they found were dramatic differences between the areas covered in orange peels and those that were not. The area fertilized by orange waste had richer soil, more tree biomass, greater tree-species richness and greater forest canopy closure.

“Plenty of environmental problems are produced by companies, which, to be fair, are simply producing the things people need or want,” said study co-author David Wilcove, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and public affairs and the Princeton Environmental Institute. “But an awful lot of those problems can be alleviated if the private sector and the environmental community work together. I’m confident we’ll find many more opportunities to use the ‘leftovers’ from industrial food production to bring back tropical forests. That’s recycling at its best.”

(Source: Princeton University)

Click To Share This Inspiring News With Your FriendsPhoto by Daniel Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs

AIDS is No Longer the Leading Cause of Death in Africa

Thanks to the tireless efforts devoted to education and treatment of the disease, a new report says that HIV/AIDS is no longer the leading cause of death in Africa.

The research published by the fact checking organization Africa Check, which is based on numbers from the World Health Organization (WHO), shows a 24% decrease over five years in the number of deaths from AIDS/HIV.

The data reflects a continuous downward trend in AIDS/HIV mortality, with 760,000 people dying from the virus and its complications in 2015, compared to 1 million in 2010 and 1.5 million in 2005.

According to the latest WHO figures, the number of countries utilizing HIV self-testing has increased sharply in recent years. In addition to the 40 countries adopting HIV self-testing into their national policies, 48 more countries are developing similar policies—more than double the original number reported in 2015.

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The leading cause of death in Africa confirmed by the WHO numbers was lower respiratory tract infections.

Another success for health workers fighting disease in Africa was the huge reported drop in malaria-related deaths over the course of the 15 years, with a 60% decrease—a number equal to about 6 million people saved from the disease.

And an extremely effective malaria vaccine is expected to save millions more lives in Ghana, Kenya, and Malawi.

Click To Share The Good News With Your Friends (Photo by UK Dept for Intl Development, CC)

Kitten Has Team of Piglets to Watch Over Him During His Seizures (WATCH)

Sriracha the kitten and Batman the pig may have been an unlikely pairing – but the adorable duo has created an unexpected impact on the feline’s health.

The two met at Rancho Relaxo, an animal sanctuary based out of Woodstown, New Jersey. When the pawesome pals first got together, they were virtually inseparable.

The friendship was especially helpful for Sriracha. The young cat suffers from cerebellar hypoplasia, a condition in which the cerebellum is not fully developed at birth, which results in the animal experiencing seizures and shaky motor control.

Though it’s an unfortunate condition, Batman had always been there to keep an eye on his buddy.

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When Batman recently passed away from congenital issues, his place was more than filled by the orphan piglet’s sibling: Dragonlord.

“As [Dragonlord] warmed up to me over the last 24 hours, I realized that he is his own little person,” says Caitlin Cimini, the Rancho Relax founder. “And although he is blood-related to Batman, he is completely different. Dragonlord took to Sriracha even better than Batman did.”

While Batman’s passing is sad, his sibling will continue to look after his ailing pal no matter what problems his health issues cause.

(WATCH the video below)

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Jackie Chan’s Adorable New Video Encourages Animals to Protect Themselves With Kung Fu

Jackie Chan has been in dozens of movies where he fought for humans around the world – but now he has stepped into a role as advocate for pangolins.

The commercial, which just debuted in Beijing, features the legendary martial arts master teaching young pangolins how to do kung fu.

At first, it seems that despite Chan’s teaching, all they are capable of doing is curling up in defense. But then, when they are confronted by a poacher, they utilize their newly-taught skills to put the hunter where he belongs: in the trash.

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The public service announcement, entitled “Kung Fu Pangolin,” was made in partnership with WildAid and The Nature Conservancy to encourage the conservation of this Asian animal, the only known mammal with protective scales covering their skin.

The video commercial, shown below, supports a ban against the commercial pangolin trade that was issued in 2016 by the United Nations.

“The priority for pangolin conservation is reducing consumer demand and improving enforcement,” said WildAid CEO Peter Knights. “Jackie reaches a vast audience across Asia and there are clear signs these campaigns have had an impact and attitudes are changing. Shark fin imports to China went down 81% in three years. Ivory seizures there were down 80% last year, and ivory and rhino horn prices have fallen by more than 50%.”

(WATCH the video below)

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Palestinian Bus Driver Finds $10,000 and Returns it to Jewish Owner

Despite the apparent cultural or religious differences, this Palestinian bus driver did not hesitate to return $10,000 in cash to the Jewish man who had lost it.

The 35-year-old driver, Ramadan Jamjoum, was piloting the 422 line from Jerusalem to the Orthodox city of Bnei Brak when the incident occurred.

Jamjoum told police officers that he saw a Jewish man drop a roll of American cash as he was exiting the bus on Wednesday night.

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“I tried to tell him but he didn’t hear me as he was on the phone, but afterwards I informed the company and submitted the money,” Jamjoum told AFP. He also reportedly said that the cash “did not tempt him” as “it is my duty morally and religiously, and to my God and my work, to return the money.”

A representative of the Afikim bus company then took the money to the police station. Law enforcement officers posted a note about the money in the lost and found section of the local newspaper.

The owner of the money was able to call the police station, provide sufficient details about the wad of cash, and pick up the bundle earlier today.

Click To Share The News With Your Friends (Photo by Michiel2005, CC)