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Do We Look Like Our Names? New Research Says Yes

girl-looking-in-mirror-CC-Salvaje

We’re told not to judge a book by its cover, but we make instant judgments about people’s intelligence, trustworthiness or dominance based on their facial appearance. Now, researchers have investigated the reverse possibility: can the way people judge us — based on our given name — influence how we look?

To answer this question, researchers led by Dr. Ruth Mayo and Yonat Zwebner at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem examined whether a person’s appearance can be influenced by their given name. To do this, they recruited independent observers and showed them color headshot photographs of complete strangers. Then they presented a list of names to the observers and asked them to choose the stranger’s real name based on his or her facial appearance.

In a series of studies, the observers repeatedly beat the odds of correctly identifying a person’s name based on their facial appearance alone. For example, upon looking at the face and considering four possible names – Jacob, Dan, Joseph or Nathaniel – observers correctly chose “Dan” 38% of the time, significantly above the 25% chance level of a random guess. This effect held true even when the researchers controlled for age and ethnicity, implying that something more than simple socioeconomic cues is at work.

Even computers were able to beat the odds, correctly matching names and faces much more often than not.

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“Our research demonstrates that indeed people do look like their name,” said Dr. Ruth Mayo, senior lecturer in the Department of Psychology at the university. “Furthermore, we suggest this happens because of a process of self-fulfilling prophecy, as we become what other people expect us to become.”

Supporting the notion of a self-fulfilling prophecy, the researchers found that observers beat the odds of correctly guessing a person’s name even when they were only allowed to see their hairstyle. This suggests that people may choose the hairstyle that fits a stereotype associated with their name.

The researchers confirmed that observers in a second country and culture were also able to beat the odds. However while observers were good at matching faces to names within their own culture, they were not good at doing so in a foreign culture. This supports the idea that name stereotypes are important when matching faces with names.

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The researchers also found that observers are less good at guessing the given name of people who use a nickname exclusively. This indicates that a person’s appearance is affected by their name only if they use it, and not if it simply appears on a birth certificate.

In one study, the researchers completely removed the human factor from the matching process. Using a computerized paradigm, they found that computers were able to beat the odds when asked to choose the correct name for 94,000 different faces. This further supports the idea that our faces contain relevant information related to our names.

“We are familiar with similar processes from other stereotypes like race and gender, where many times the stereotypical expectations of others affect who we become. We hypothesize that there are similar stereotypes about names, including how someone with a specific name looks, and these expectations really do affect our facial appearance,” said Dr. Mayo.

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According to the researchers, the possibility that our name can influence our look, even to a small extent, suggests the important role of social structuring in the complex interaction between the self and society. The research suggests that we are subject to social structuring from the minute we are born, not only by our gender, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status, but also by the simple choice that others make in giving us our name.

Future research could examine the precise nature of the mechanism leading to the emergence of this face-name matching effect, for example how a person’s name matches his or her face at different stages of life. Another question worth exploring is why some people have a very high face-name match while others have a low match.(Source: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

Name This Story To Your Friends: Click To Share (Photo by Salvaje, CC)

This Tortoise Accidentally Saved a Bunny’s Life – and Now They’re Best Buds

Wamba and Brink-The Ritz-Carlton, Dove Mountain

The tortoise and the hare may have been arch enemies in old folktales, but these two oddball companions have been best pals since Wamba the reptile accidentally saved the bunny’s life.

Ron Brink of the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Dove Mountain, Arizona is the proud caretaker of Wamba – a happy 50-pound African tortoise who lives in heated shelter near the hotel.

When Ron visited his tortoise enclosure the other morning, however, he found another creature residing inside: a tiny baby bunny.

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The bunny had reportedly been wandering through the surrounding wilderness when it came across Wamba’s cozy heated enclosure. Despite there being a massive reptile living inside, it decided to take refuge anyway – and Wamba showed surprising hospitality. Luck was smiling on the bunny, too, because choosing this accommodation actually ended up saving the rabbit’s life.

Bunny and Wamba-The Ritz-Carlton Dove Mountain

 

When Ron found the bunny resting with the tortoise, he found that there were several layers of matted weeds and grasses constricting its windpipe. If no one had examined the bunny, it likely would have choked to death.

Ron and Wamba will look after the little critter until it’s healthy and full-grown. Whether it will return to the wild or choose to stay with its new friends remains to be seen, but one thing is for sure: they will cross that finish line together.

Click To Share This Bunny-ful Friendship With Your Own Pals (Photo by the Ritz-Carlton, Dove Mountain)

“Kung Fu Grandma” Practices Martial Arts for 9 Decades (WATCH)

Zhang Hexian-Youtube

Zhang Hexian may be 94 years old, but she’s still just as lithe and limber as the youngsters in her village.

Fondly known as “Kung Fu Grandma” to the residents of Ninghai County in east China’s Zhejiang Province, Zhang has been practicing kung fu ever since she was 4 years old, amounting to nine decades of discipline and practice. As an esteemed resident of a village made up entirely of kung fu practitioners, Zhang undergoes a daily fitness regiment to stay tough.

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“She wakes up very early and does physical exercises every morning. She usually runs around the village for morning exercise,” Zhang’s son Feng Chuanyin told CCTV.

Though Zhang has fought off thugs and ruffians before, she is still apparently a warm and loving neighbor who is always ready to help someone in need.

(WATCH the video below)

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Pakistani Province Grows 750 Million Trees

American trees and lake - Submitted by Rajiv Ramchandra

Pakistani representatives have just announced that – thanks to a massive reforestation campaign – the country has planted 750 million trees since 2015.

The nation plans on increasing the number of planted trees to 1 billion by the end of 2018.

According to VOA, the trees are being planted along the Hindu Kush mountain range in the northwestern region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The initiative, dubbed the “Billion Tree Tsunami” has also provided 500,000 jobs to impoverished locals.

111 trees planted-India-women

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The regional government has employed a provisional protection squad to protect the seedlings from timber mafia planning on stealing and selling the lumber.

The $300 million initiative is reportedly being funded by the Pakistani government, as well as illegal funds confiscated from timber mafia members.

Plant Some Positivity: Click To Share (Photo by Rajiv Ramchandra)

95-Year-old Holocaust Survivor Has a Roommate: a 31-Year-old Granddaughter of Nazis

Ben Stern and Lea Heitfeld-Lea Heitfeld

These roommates may seem like an unlikely pair, but their friendship has provided valuable comfort and inspiration for both of them.

95-year-old Ben Stern is a Holocaust survivor residing in Berkeley, California. His housemate, 31-year-old Lea Heitfeld is a descendent of Nazis.

The young German student is currently getting her master’s degree in Jewish studies as part of the Graduate Theological Union. Her history, inspiring her to repent for her ancestor’s sins, has compelled her to help educate others on the importance of religious tolerance.

Their companionship is especially valuable for Ben, since his 70-year-old wife was recently checked into a nursing home for dementia. He and the student reportedly spend their time watching TV, eating dinner together, and chatting over crackers.

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“This act of his opening his home, I don’t know how to describe it, how forgiving or how big your heart must be to do that, and what that teaches me to be in the presence of someone who has been through that and is able to have me there and to love me,” Lea told the Washington Post. “That he was able to open the door for someone who would remind him of all his pain.”

(WATCH the video below)

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by Lea Heitfeld

Woman Invites Lonely Widower to Dinner “Date”, He Arrives With Suit and Flowers

Ellie Walker and Widower-Sainesbury Press Office

Ellie Walker was heartbroken when she heard that Edwin Holmes would be spending Christmas Day alone – so she invited him to dinner over the holiday break.

When he showed up for the “date”, he arrived wearing his best suit with flowers in hand, reducing Ellie to tears.

86-year-old Edwin has lived alone since his wife passed away in 2006 and his children moved to Australia. Ellie, who works at a Sainesbury’s store in Leeds, England, had always considered Edwin her favorite customer. So when she heard about his loneliness, she didn’t hesitate to ask him out.

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The two have enjoyed regular lunches and coffee meet-ups since their initial dinner

“He said it was his first ‘date’ in 55 years and he was as nervous as a schoolboy,” Ellie told the Sun. “It made me cry because I could see how much it meant to him.”

“For me it’s the most important part of my job to speak with customers and see how their day is going.”

Click To Share This Sweet Story With Your Friends (Photo by Sainesbury’s Press Office)

Suffering From Spring Allergies? Probiotics May Curb Your Symptoms

As we head into allergy season, you may feel less likely to grab a tissue and sneeze if you are eating a probiotic combination that has been shown to reduce hay fever symptoms.

Probiotics, which are live bacteria and yeasts—in foods such as sauerkraut, pickles, live-cultured Greek yogurt, and miso soup—have already been proven in published studies to regulate the body’s immune response to allergies, but not all probiotics show a benefit.

University of Florida researchers have figured out which one did.

The probiotic combination of lactobacilli and bifidobacteria, sold as the Kyo-Dophilus supplement in stores, is known to aid in maintaining digestive health and parts of the immune system.

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UF researchers wanted to know if the components in this combination probiotic would help alleviate allergy symptoms. They suspected that it might work by increasing the human body’s percentage of regulatory T-cells, which in turn might increase tolerance to hay fever symptoms.

To do that, they enrolled 173 healthy adults who said they suffered seasonal allergies and randomly split them into two groups: some took the combination probiotic; others took a placebo. Each week during the eight-week experiment in the height of spring allergy season, participants responded to an online survey to convey their discomfort level.

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Scientists also analyzed DNA from participants’ stool samples to determine how their bacteria changed, because probiotics aim to deliver good bacteria to the human’s intestinal system. The DNA test also confirmed who was taking the probiotic.

Participants who took the probiotic reported improvements in quality of life, compared to those taking the placebo, the study showed. For example, participants suffered fewer allergy-related nose symptoms, which meant that they were less troubled during daily activities.

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Researchers note that this study did not include severe allergy sufferers. But the combination of probiotics showed clinical benefit for those with more mild seasonal allergies, Langkamp-Henken said.

Allergy medications today have unwanted potential side effects, including dry mouth and drowsiness, so this holistic alternative might be just what the doctor ordered.

(Source: University of Florida)

Don’t Be Allergic To Sharing the News With Your Friends! – ALSO, (Photo by Trachis, CC)

Elementary School Gives Honorable Viking Funerals For Class Goldfish

Viking Funeral-Papdale Primary School

These warrior goldfish were too good for the goldfish bowl – so their child guardians gave them a proper sendoff in style.

The kids of Papdale Primary School in Orkney, Scotland were learning about Vikings in school when their beloved class pets Bubbles and Freddy passed away.

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So in honor of their deaths, the grade 3 and 4 classes gave them Viking funerals with little cardboard boats. Apparently, the ship made out of an egg carton floated the best.

“We knew that the Vikings would only have sent the most beautiful ships to be burned for important people in their communities,” says the school. “While we will miss Freddy and Bubbles, we certainly enjoyed giving them a good send off to Valhalla.”

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Elon Musk Takes Surprisingly Good Ad Advice From 10-Year-old

 

Elon Musk isn’t just a tech genius – the Tesla CEO has made headlines for taking the time to respond to a child’s letter.

This note in particular, however, had some extraordinarily good advice; advice which Musk was wise to take.

The father of a 5th grade student named Bria sent a scanned letter written by his adorable daughter to the tech genius on Twitter. In the letter, Bria made a suggestion for the notoriously ad-less company’s marketing department.

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Instead of totally avoiding advertisements all together, Tesla could hold a competition for best fan-made commercial.

“I have noticed that you do not advertise, but many people make homemade commercials for Telsa and some of them are very good,” wrote the youth. “I think that you should run a competition on who can make a the best homemade Tesla commercial and the winners will get their commercial aired.”

“You could give the winners a year of free Supercharging [the process by which Tesla drivers charge their vehicles] or a Model 3 Easter egg or something,” added Bria.

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The girl goes on to detail how much her and her father adore Tesla cars and how they are “very smart and friendly to the environment”.

To conclude the adorable – and surprisingly articulate – note, Bria expresses her plans to one day drive her own Tesla-made vehicle… after she gets her license, of course.

“I hope that when I’m older, I can drive a Tesla. It’s so sad that they cannot be sold in Michigan. It’s such a hassle to have to drive to a different state to get a car! I plan to be a politician when I grow up, and I will make sure that the government protects the environment, and Teslas can be bought anywhere.”

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Musk eventually received the letter, and expressed his adoration for the idea: “Thank you for the lovely letter. That sounds like a great idea. We’ll do it!”

The exact start date of Bria’s suggested ad campaign is unclear, but we think it is fair to say that this 5th grader has a bright future – whether it be advertising or politics.

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9 Reasons You Should Plan a Trip to Mardi Gras Next Year, Like I Did (LOOK)

Another Mardi Gras has come and gone in the great city of New Orleans, Louisiana. Its population of 400,000 bulges with the flood of visitors pouring in from around the world, expanding to a whopping 1.4 million people all sharing a common goal: to have fun.

Whether you’re joining the festivities with your family, or college mates, or just on your own like I did this week, there’s something for everyone, even the most conservative.

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If you’ve never visited and have the opportunity to go next year, save the date, Tuesday, February 13, knowing that celebrations abound throughout the previous week. Here are some of my favorite moments and local customs you may not know about.

1. Street Poets

We’ve all thrown a dollar to a particularly good street musician, but have you ever found a street poet?

These resident writers pop up around the city with typewriter at the ready in order to create any kind of requested prose that you could think of.

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Though some the artists may work for a fee, many are donation based so you can contribute whatever you want. The writer pictured above, a New Orleans resident named Cameron Lovejoy, told me that a generous paying reveler once gave him $100. Another, he told me, gave him nothing in exchange for a poem about a slice of lime sitting on the sidewalk nearby.

Whatever the cost, a commissioned poem written especially for you on Mardi Gras is far more memorable to take home than the typical souvenir of disposable plastic beads.

2. Secret Ball Dances

Some Mardi Gras balls are more secret than others, but there are dances throughout the city that range from silly to scandalous. Some require a specially extended invitation – others can be attended just by showing up.

Balls include a host of different themes and music; circus themed, costume-required, balls playing only electronic dance music, or just speak-easy style swing and jazz events. One resident whom I was chatting with said that she once attended a ball where – if your costume wasn’t elaborate enough – you could only enter the ballroom in the nude.

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To find out what’s going on around town, simply befriend some locals and ask them if they can give you any intel. There is most likely some kind of event that aligns with your preference.

3. Crawfish Cookouts

Crawfish Boiling in Pot-McKinley Corbley

If you’re a fan of crawfish, oysters, or homemade jambalaya, then there’s plenty of reason for you to make a pilgrimage to N“awlins.

Dotted across almost every neighborhood in the city are barbecues, cookouts, roasts, and boils – but most plentiful are the ginormous pots stewing with gallons of seafood. The largest pot of food we encountered was over four feet tall! Many of the chefs responsible for this uniquely local cuisine are usually happy to spare a few bowls.

4. The Costumes

Masked Mardi Gras Reveler-McKinley Corbley

Everyone knows about the tradition of dressing up in elaborate garb for Mardi Gras, but I can’t truly drive home how astounding it is.

There is basically no way you can overdress. Even in the days leading up to Fat Tuesday, everyone in the streets is dressed to the nines in boas, feathers, headdresses, masks, stockings, and wigs. Then, during the day of the actual festival, party-goers break out the heavy duty get-ups.

It is absolutely worth going to Mardi Gras specifically for the costumes.

5. The Musicians

Saxophonist-McKinley Corbley

Some of the most talented jazz and blues musicians in the country are hiding out in New Orleans and they definitely know how to have fun.

Almost every club in the French Quarter is complete with a live band playing for tips. Dancing is always welcome – and always encouraged.

6. The Scenery

Do you love to take travel photos? Or, do you just enjoy taking quality selfies? Either way, the colored landscape of Mardi Gras is a goldmine for any aspiring photographer.

Apart from the general architecture of New Orleans being gorgeously ornate and eye-catching, a lot of the houses and trees are positively drenched in beads.

It definitely creates a surreal – but extraordinarily beautiful – backdrop for the festivities.

7. Parade Floats

Who doesn’t enjoy a good parade?

There’s a dozen different parades happening around the city during Mardi Gras weekend and a lot of the locals will discuss for days which one is the best.

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Each float is elaborately decorated and themed–and all the passengers riding aboard are more than happy to toss some beads your way.

Just be sure to watch the skies for anything heavier than the necklaces – you might get whacked in the head by a glow sword if you’re not paying attention.

8. The Arts Market

Girl in the Arts Market-McKinley Corbley

If you mosey up Frenchmen Street, be sure to stop by the arts market.

The artists are all locally based and their wares are truly otherworldly.

I repeat my earlier point; any of the paintings, sculptures, clothing, or designs that come from the arts market will make for way better souvenirs than some disposable plastic beads that you’re never going to wear again.

9. The Burlesque Shows

This one may be too saucy for the whole family, but if you’ve never been to a burlesque show, they’re absolutely something worth checking off the bucket list.

There are hundreds of burlesque shows throughout the city for any niche interest; the dancer pictured above did a dazzling Quentin Tarantino-themed dance before finishing the show with a Sarah Connor costume from Terminator.

If you’re made uncomfortable by such raciness, skip this one. If not, then take a peak. There’s just as much goofiness involved as there is hedonism.

Start Planning Your Own Trip To Mardi Gras: Click To Share (Photos by McKinley Corbley)

Zimbabwe Finally Bans the Beating of Children

smiling-african-children-cc-rod-waddington

The East African country of Zimbabwe has just ruled that the beating of children is constitutional and will now be punishable by law.

Though corporal punishment at home and in school has been banned by the High Court, it still needs to be approved by the constitutional court as well.

The pivotal decision comes as a result of parental outrage over evidence that their children were being beaten in school for minor academic offenses.

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After finding vicious bruises inflicted on her daughter’s body by a school teacher, Linah Pfungwa teamed up with a children’s rights organization in order to take the corporal punishment law to court.

Justice David Mangota eventually ruled that parents and teachers would have to find other means of disciplining children that didn’t involve physical violence, according to the BBC.

The ruling is an especially exciting follow-up to Zimbabwe outlawing child marriage over one year ago.

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

Watch a Refugee Father Finally Reunite With Family After 4 Years

Dyan Hugging Son-Vimeo

It had been almost half of a decade since Dyan had seen his wife and two sons. Then a few months ago, he was finally reunited with his family.

Dyan’s pregnant wife had stepped off of a plane in Fort Worth, Texas as a Sudanese refugee four years ago. While they were getting settled in America, her and her two sons were taken under the wing of a Christian ministry called The Village Church.

The organization took care of the family and helped Dyan maneuver the immigration system while he stayed in a Sudanese refugee camp – that is, until he was finally able to rejoin his wife.

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As Dyan walks out of customs, it is not just the first time he is seeing his wife in several years; it’s the first time he gets to see his 3-year-old son whom she gave birth to while he was overseas.

At one point during the video, Dyan becomes so overwhelmed by the reunion, he falls to his knees in gratitude.

“Xenophobia is nowhere in the heart of God. He is all about the nations!” says the film’s creator Robert Fuqua. “For me, this video is a testament to what can happen when God’s people respond in simple, yet sacrificial obedience to God’s call on the Church … to engage and embrace people of all tongues and tribes.”

(WATCH the video below)

Dyan comes home from Robert Fuqua on Vimeo.

 

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NBA Player to Donate $1,000 For Every Point He Scores at Next Game

Jrue Holiday-Wikipedia Commons

The New Orleans Pelicans point-back Jrue Holiday has pledged to donate $1,000 to New Orleans tornado relief for every point and assist that he makes during his next game.

The Pelicans, who will be facing off against the San Antonio Spurs, are set to play at the Smoothie King Center on Friday. Holiday’s donations will be going towards The Greater New Orleans Foundation Tornado Relief Fund.

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The money will benefit families and individuals affected by the tornadoes that rampaged through the city in early February.

“It’s a shame that in the matter of minutes these storms produced such violent tornadoes that literally upended the lives of so many residents of New Orleans,” Holiday told NBA. “This financial pledge is a unique way I thought of that can have a positive impact on some of the peoples’ lives and help them get back on their feet and assist them in getting their lives back in order.”

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New Study Finds Reading Can Help With Chronic Pain

Reading-University of Liverpool

Hold onto your hats, book club fans: researchers have found that shared reading can be a useful therapy for chronic pain sufferers.

The study compared Shared Reading (SR) – a literature-based intervention developed by the national charity The Reader – to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) as an intervention for chronic pain sufferers.

Chronic pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage persisting for more than six months.

Usually pain is picked up by specialized cells in your body, and impulses are sent through the nervous system to the brain. What happens in people with chronic pain, however, is that other nerves are recruited into this ‘pain’ pathway which start to fire off messages to the brain when there is no physical stimulus or damage. But the body can ‘unjoin’ again. Drugs and CBT are both ways to convince the brain to send new messages back to the body.

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CBT is a talking therapy that can help you manage your problems by changing the way you think and behave. It’s most commonly used to treat anxiety and depression, but can be useful for other mental and physical health problems. But CBT’s benefits, while useful are shown by recent research to be both limited and short-term.

Shared Reading is used in a range of environments that have similarities with chronic pain, in that the conditions involved can often be chronic and unsolvable, as in the case of dementia, prisons, and severe mental illness.

The model is based on small groups coming together weekly to read literature – short stories, novels, and poetry – together aloud. The reading material ranges across genres and period, and is chosen for its intrinsic interest, not pre-selected with a particular ‘condition’ in mind.

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Regular pauses are taken to encourage participants to reflect on what is being read, on the thoughts or memories the book or poem has stirred, or on how the reading matter relates to their own lives.

Group members participate voluntarily, usually in relation to what is happening in the text itself, and what may be happening within themselves as individuals (personal feelings and thoughts, memories and experiences), responding to the shared presence of the text within social group discussion.

CBT allowed participants to exchange personal histories of living with chronic pain in ways which validated their experience. However, in CBT, participants focused exclusively on their pain with ‘no thematic deviation’.

In SR, by contrast, the literature was a trigger to recall and expression of diverse life experiences – of work, childhood, family members, relationships — related to the entire life-span, not merely the time-period affected by pain, or the time-period pre-pain as contrasted with life in the present. This in itself has a potentially therapeutic effect in helping to recover a whole person, not just an ill one.

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As part of the study participants with severe chronic pain symptoms were recruited by a pain clinic. A 5-week CBT group and a 22-week SR group for chronic pain patients ran in parallel, with CBT group-members joining the SR group after the completion of CBT.

The study found that CBT showed participants ‘managing’ emotions by means of systematic techniques, where SR turned the passive experience of suffering emotion into articulate contemplation of painful concerns. The combination of the two created a strategic therapy treatment for chronic pain.

“Our study indicated that shared reading could potentially be an alternative to CBT in bringing into conscious awareness areas of emotional pain otherwise passively suffered by chronic pain patients,” said Dr. Josie Billington of the Centre for Research into Reading.

“The encouragement of greater confrontation and tolerance of emotional difficulty that Sharing Reading provides makes it valuable as a longer-term follow-up or adjunct to CBT’s concentration on short-term management of emotion.”

(Source: University of Liverpool)

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Generous Chef Gets Paid Back For Kindness After His Restaurant Burns Down

Bruno Serato-Youtube

Bruno Serato has dedicated his career to serving gourmet Italian food to the rich so he could feed the poor: kids from the local Boys and Girls Club.

Bruno ran his restaurant, The White House of Anaheim, California, solely for the purpose of serving up Italian meals to the children every day. He was so devoted to the kids, he had to refinance his house so he could continue to afford feeding the youth.

This continued until his beloved restaurant burned down from an electrical fire earlier this month.

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Heartbroken, Bruno had no idea how he was going to pick himself back up after the disaster. But then the community that he so tirelessly worked for answered his prayers.

Thousands of loving messages and well wishes flooded Bruno’s social media inboxes. Competing restaurants offered up their kitchens so he could continue feeding his favorite children. Fundraisers were set up to help rebuild the restaurant.

All as a thank you for Bruno’s generosity over the years.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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New York City to Build 90 New Homeless Shelters in Five Years

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announces a comprehensive borough-based plan to reduce the footprint of New York City’s homeless shelter system and drive down the population relying on shelters at the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies on Tuesday, February 28th, 2017. Edwin J. Torres/Mayoral Photo Office.

There have been many success stories across the US when it comes to getting homeless veterans off the street in places like Houston, Boston, Philadelphia, Virginia and Connecticut, but homelessness in the general population is rising in America’s largest cities.

Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York, has just unveiled a five-year plan that realistically will reduce the number of people in shelters by 2,500 by the end of the 2021, but more importantly begin to turn the tide on rising homelessness.

The plan announced Tuesday will replace the use of hotels and “cluster” shelters scattered across the city with 20 new shelters this year and 20 more in 2018 that will house people in their own neighborhoods or boroughs, nearer to the support system available from churches and family members, and nearer to jobs and schools.

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The initiative also calls for opening shelters in existing buildings over the next five years. In total, 90 new shelters will be established across the five boroughs. The city would also renovate and expand 30 existing shelters, according to a report released by the mayor’s office.

With more than 60,000 people in NYC shelters currently, progress will be “slow and incremental” says the Mayor.

“I hope and I believe it will be steady,” de Blasio told an audience of nonprofit service providers, and faith and community leaders. “If we sustain incremental progress, it will be the first time that’s happened in three-and-half decades, and that can open the door to something better up ahead.”

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The City has achieved some success over the last year: the HOME-STAT initiative, which has attempted to do something that was not done previously – literally go out and meet each individual who is living permanently on the streets, get to know them deeply, understand everything that can be understood about them and their situation. The program has dispatched 387 outreach workers—mobilized citywide 24 hours per day, seven days a week—to bring homeless individuals into shelters, including 690 individuals last year.

“Every community in this city has homeless people. We need a shelter system that reflects where people come from and allows people to be sheltered in their own neighborhoods or borough,” said de Blasio.

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The city is also shifting more affordable housing units to folks at lower incomes – to seniors, to veterans, with a commitment to 15,000 new supportive apartments, of which 550 will be available this year.

Recent efforts to prevent homelessness has included rental assistance that has reached 161,000 households over three years.

“We provided rental assistance to help 51,000 New Yorkers avoid coming into shelters or move out of shelters,” said Department of Social Services Commissioner Steven Banks.

In a media release, The Mayor’s Office says the plan will:

  • Continue to implement an aggressive prevention-first strategy that keeps more people in their homes by making housing more affordable, stopping illegal evictions, and connecting New Yorkers who are struggling to resources that will help them stabilize their lives;
  • Continue to actualize the 46 reforms identified throughout the 90-day review of homeless services, making long-needed operational and other reforms to better serve New Yorkers on the verge of homelessness and homeless New Yorkers in shelter;
  • Completely eliminate the use of cluster apartment units by the end of 2021 and commercial hotel facilities by the end of 2023;
  • Reduce the overall current number of shelter sites (which include hotels and cluster sites) by 45 percent;
  • Keep homeless New Yorkers closer to their communities and supports that they need;
  • The City will eliminate the use of 360 cluster sites and commercial hotel facilities and replace them with approximately 90 new shelter facilities and 30 expanded existing sites;
  • The City estimates opening about 20 new shelters annually over the next five years, which will require a combination of building new locations and renovating existing buildings.

At the same time, prevention and rehousing initiatives will reduce the current number of homeless New Yorkers in shelters by 2,500 people over five years – the first projected systemic reduction of New York City’s homeless shelter population in a decade.

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“Saved by the snooze”: Man Turns Off Alarm Just Before Tree Spears His Roof

Tree in Bathroom Full-Facebook

Raymond was having trouble falling asleep on Tuesday night while thunderstorms were wracking the city. His lack of sleep may have ended up saving his life, however, when a tree speared through the roof of his bathroom.

The Austin, Indiana man’s alarm went off at 5:30AM, waking him up for work. But due to his restlessness during the night, he uncharacteristically decided to hit the snooze button. A few minutes later, he heard a crash coming from somewhere in his darkened house.

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Raymond entered his bathroom to find that a limb from a 40-foot-tall pin oak tree had fallen through the roof of his ceiling in the exact spot where he typically brushes his teeth in the morning. He says that if he hadn’t stayed in bed, he would almost have definitely been struck by the bough.

“I actually stood up to start getting ready for work but decided to let the snooze go off one more time,” says Raymond. “Laid back down and this happened just minutes afterwards.”

“Good Lord was looking out for me for sure,” Raymond added.

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Cop Befriends Loner Veteran With Dementia, Raises Money, Applies as Guardian

Sergeant Jon Sterling befriends vet-family photo

Sergeant Jon Sterling says he bonded with a Korean War veteran named Norm because they’re both a little “eccentric.”

The two became fast friends after Norm called the police station where Sterling worked to report suspicious activity.

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Now that Norm has been diagnosed with early on-set dementia, Sterling is doing what he can to help, like making sure he is getting veterans benefits. He’s applied for guardianship of his friend and has raised almost ten thousand dollars on a GoFundMe page to help care for his health and living needs.

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Mom Draws Birthmark On Doll’s Face To Match Her Daughter (LOOK)

Birthmark girl and doll -YouTube

One girl’s mother had a great idea to encourage her daughter to feel like she is not alone.

Jessica Bird used lipstick to recreate a Port Wine Stain on the face of her daughter’s doll so the two would look alike.

Her little girl, Nevaeh, 5, was born with a birthmark on her face and when she received the doll as a gift, couldn’t help but notice its unmarked completion.

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It took Jessica just twenty minutes to create a similar stain with the lipstick, and after removing the excess make-up, the two became inseparable.

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Abandoned Baby Otter Being Nursed Back To Health

Baby Otter Being Fed -RSPCA video

A baby otter found alone by the side of a river in the United Kingdom is being watched around the clock by rescuers.

The Stapeley Grange Wildlife Center thinks the six-week-old pup, named Daffi, was separated from her mother during a storm.

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Daffi was taken to the vet where animal experts say she was lethargic and dragging her back legs.

They’ll work to rehabilitate the otter with the aim of reintroducing her back to the wild within twelve months.

(WATCH the video below)

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