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On Endangered List Since the 60s, Fox Squirrel Finally Jumps Off

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After being on the endangered species list for the last 48 years, the Delmarva Fox Squirrel has bounced back from extinction.

Also called eastern fox squirrels, the large critters which mainly occupy the heavily wooded areas of the Delmarva peninsula in Maryland and Virginia, were at risk due to excessive hunting and logging.

The squirrels are now so abundant that they have expanded their range across the borders of Pennsylvania and New Jersey and increased their population to an estimated 20,000.

LOOK: Falcons Soar Off Endangered Species List with Irony…From Nests in Skyscrapers

Fox squirrels are a larger subspecies of the more common tree-climbers, and can be recognized by their gray, hulking exterior.

Officials in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service say that if it hadn’t been for the protections given the fox squirrels under the Endangered Species Preservation Act in 1967, the steely forest dwellers would have died off, never to be seen again.

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Crochet Community Piles On the Yarn for Princess Wigs for Kids With Cancer

 

Hair loss can be a challenge for anyone, no matter their age– but it can be especially heartbreaking for little girls who love their locks.

That’s why Holly Christensen began knitting up a solution for these heroic tots.

Using the long, flowing hairstyles of Disney princesses–and oodles of yarn in bright colors, Holly and her nonprofit known as The Magic Yarn project are crocheting caps that double as wigs for little girls coping with disease.

MORE: Blind Artist Survives Cancer to Donate $1Mil Before 20th Birthday

The yarn is woven into styles worn by famous female characters like Ariel from The Little Mermaid, Elsa from Frozen, and Jasmine from Aladdin. The strands are attached to crocheted beanies made of the softest yarn, so as not to irritate the child’s scalp.

Based in Alaska, the knitting project received donated yarn and beanies, and a staggering $23,000 in donations through their GoFundMe page. Originally managed by Holly and her church group, the organization has expanded to include volunteers from around the world, including female inmates at the Alaskan Hiland Mountain Correctional Facility.

WATCH: Knitters Answer a Call for Nests to Save Baby Birds

It all started when 3-year-old Lily, the daughter of Holly’s friend, was diagnosed with cancer.

Christensen, being a mother of three and an oncology nurse in the past, knew that it wasn’t going to be easy for Lily to lose her beautiful curly blond hair. Jumping into action with her crochet hooks, Holly whipped up a Rapunzel wig just for Lily.

Inspired by the little girl’s ecstatic response, Holly kept right on knitting – The Magic Yarn Project is currently in production of hi-resolution how-to videos on crocheting the different wigs featured in photos on their website.

LOOK: Woman Donates Entire Toy Store to Kids in Homeless Shelters

“I began to organize what I thought would be a small project creating a few dozen wigs to send to little cancer patients,” says Holly on the Magic Yarn website. “Within hours, I was flooded with responses from around the nation—what started as a small project has snowballed into something much bigger and has many people eager to help.”

(WATCH the video above, and Share This Yarn With Your Friends…)

Story Tip by Michelle Diane

Veteran Homelessness Has Been Ended in Virginia, First State to Do It

homeless vets- dupont circle-CC-Elvert Xavier Barnes Photography

Virginia has become the first state in the U.S. to be certified as effectively ending homelessness among military veterans.

By incorporating the principles of Housing First throughout the commonwealth, and providing support services to help veterans maintain stability, 1,432 homeless veterans have been housed since October 2014.

The state’s governor, Terry McAuliffe, announced in a ceremony last week that there is more permanent housing for any other veterans who may be found to be in need, and officials are moving to address homelessness in the general public next.

“On a day when we remember those who fought and died for our nation, I am proud to proclaim that Virginia is leading the way in the fight to end veteran homelessness,” said Governor McAuliffe. “This successful effort will serve as the launching pad for our next goal of functionally ending chronic homelessness among all Virginians by the end of 2017.”

WATCH: Here’s How 11 New Orleans Veterans Got Homes in Time for Holidays

The federal homelessness designation, which was earned by cities previously but never an entire state, means that the only homeless veterans in Virginia are those who have been offered housing, but do not want it.

In August, Connecticut became the first state to end “chronic homelessness” among vets, defined as being without a home for one year coupled with a disabling condition, or having at least four episodes of homelessness in the past three years. Utah has slashed its chronic homelessness for all citizens by more than 90% of what it was.

Cities that have met the federal criteria as having solved homelessness among veterans include Las Vegas, and Syracuse and Schenectady in New York, according to the Washington Post.

New Orleans has found homes for all its former service members, while Houston has also made great gains.

More announcements are expected in the coming months because more than 850 civic leaders, along with the Virginia governor, have pledged to act, including 684 mayors and 9 governors who have joined the ‘Mayor’s Challenge to End Veteran Homelessness’, launched by First Lady Michelle Obama in June of 2014.

SHARE the great news… (Photo by Elvert Xavier Barnes Photography, CC)

Watch: Rescuer of Old Dogs Is Given Everything She Needs All At Once

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Sometimes, the people who really need it, get a big break.

Sherri Stankewitz quit her career and moved into a mere garage to be near the dogs she has dedicate her life to saving, and spend all her time and money on her animal rescue project that helps abandoned pups.

She was planning the biggest WeCare adoption event ever, and thought the camera crew was there for a documentary. What was really unfolding was a prank–one that would lead to huge surprises for the California animal lover.

An animal enforcement officer showed up and told her she had an hour to send all the dogs to new homes or he’d take them away from her. He was an actor, part of the latest  “Prank It Forward” good deeds from the YouTube entrepreneur, DEFY Media.

CHECK Out: Woman Donates Entire Toy Store to Kids in Homeless Shelters

The prankster YouTube channel also raising money for a homeless charity, by donating one dollar for every 1,000 views of their videos. This one has tallied a million views in just 24 hours. At the same time, they do good deeds for their “victims.” In the past, they’ve given a waitress a new job and car, and totally rocked the world of a housekeeper with a new home.

In this new video, a frantic Sherri had been expecting only five or ten of her dogs to be adopted that whole day, but when the actor returned, instead of bad news, he brought an amazing new animal trailer loaded with dozens of people already cleared to adopt all 30 animals from her shelter.

RELATED:  Crazy-Successful Adoption Event Empties Out Entire Animal Shelter

That was just the beginning of the huge surprises in store for the always-working Long Beach volunteer. They also brought an all-expense paid vacation to Aruba, and fully paid her operating costs for a full year at the shelter.

(WATCH the video below — Photo by“Prank It Forward”)

Artists Spark Real Reform in Teens, Rally for Alternative to Prison in Virginia

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Hundreds of incarcerated kids were given hope for a better future with an unexpected form of rehabilitation – art.

Painters, writers, DJs, and musicians worked as volunteers at the local juvenile detention center in an 8-week program that teaches the youth there is more to their lives than the labels that come with their convictions as law-breakers.

MORE: Behind Bars Barista Training a Boost For Women’s Prison Inmates

“It’s inspiring – the moment when they realize that they have the capacity to make change within their own lives,” the program director of Performing Statistics, Taekia Glass, told Good News Network. “even if it’s as simple as writing something down on paper about how they feel. It doesn’t have to be an overtly grand gesture…They can do it one-by-one just by voicing their opinion and by having advocates in the community working with them to be able to get their voices out there.”

Advocates they already have.

Over the weekend, the streets of Richmond, Virginia were flooded by local citizens bearing ‘Prisons Don’t Work’ tee-shirts to rally lawmakers to change how youth are treated in the juvenile justice system.

justice-parade-richmond-McKinleyCorbley

Hundreds of Richmond locals, paraded down Broad Street chanting ’No incarceration, we need an education!’ and ‘Stop arresting us, you should invest in us!’ The rally gathered momentum until it reached the Art 180 gallery where poetry, sculptures, and projects created by the incarcerated youth were on display.

Armed with petitions, Performing Statistics partnered with the Legal Aid Justice Center and Rise For Youth to advocate for change in the state’s juvenile justice policy.

Richmond, the state capital, has one of the highest incarceration rates of any locality in Virginia; thousands of kids are marched through a prison system that focuses on punishment, rather than treatment and rehabilitation.

MORE: Prison Program Produces Business Savvy Inmates And Huge Success Rates

With 10,000 children locked away each year, and half of them under age 14, the taxpayers end up paying thousands of dollars for years of punishment instead of community-driven rehabilitation alternatives.

The creativity sparked by the Performing Statistics workshops has not only shaken free the stigmatizing labels on incarcerated youth, but also provided evidence of their attitude improvement.

“I used rapping as a therapeutic tool when I was in and out of prison and institutions,” says one project leader, hip hop teacher Gina Lyles. “I tell them to put their feelings on paper. You can write poetry, you can write stories, you can write words. You think people aren’t listening but folks want to hear your story. We need your words.”

Gina, who rotated through prison for 24 years starting at age fourteen, explained how her experience in the system influenced her passion for the program.

MORE: Prison Gardens Help Inmates Grow Their Own Food – And Skills

“After having a daughter at 19, I was under stress to find and keep a job, when I came from a background of not having a lot. It was a lot on me so I ended up right back in the [prison] system,” she said. “I tell people prisons don’t work because not only did I go to prison for eight years, I’m now a felon, but I’m not a violent person. I’m a loving person and I would never hurt anybody. Once you incarcerate a child, you put in their minds that they’re a bad kid, they’re a criminal, and they won’t amount to anything. That was a self-esteem killer for me.”

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All Photos by McKinley Corbley

To help make a real difference, the creative volunteers worked with the youth offenders to create a training manual emphasizing anti-violent approaches to law enforcement, which, according to the Performing Statistics website, have been used to instruct new police cadets in Richmond.

MORE: Prison Inmates Help Abused Cats Become More Adoptable

Leaders have also opened up numerous conversations with lawmakers about policy changes including reduced sentencing, closing costly juvenile detention facilities, and ending zero tolerance in Virginia school districts.

“I want people to know that our kids are amazing no matter what circumstances they’re in, no matter what crime they committed, or what the case may be,” says Taekia. “There is definitely potential in all of them to be great and it’s up to us and the community to realize that it really does take a village.”

Mom Posts Letter to Skateboarder Who Showed Big Heart Despite Pals

Skatepark kids Twitter Cambridge Times by Jeanean Thomas

A six-year-old girl got a private lesson in skateboarding, while her mother got a lesson in not judging others.

Jeanean Thomas was thrown for a loop the day she took her daughter to the skate park in Hamilton, Ontario for the first time. They were both a bit intimidated by the group of older boys smoking and cursing nearby, but Jeanean pushed Peyton to go ahead and try her board.

After a few awkward tries, and the other skateboarders zipping past her, one of them approached the girl.

CHECK OUT:  “Are you Serious?” Teens Buy 150 Burgers to Hand Out To Homeless

Expecting him to give Peyton a hard time, Jeanean controlled her urge to jump in. Within minutes, the boy was giving Peyton all the pointers she needed for a great ride.

An hour later, the little girl was showing off all kinds of new skateboard skills.

The mother never got the boy’s name, but the experience so moved her, she finally wrote an open letter to the local newspaper, to thank him.

WATCH: High School Boy Invents Solution For Paraplegic Mom To Use Baby Stroller

She wrote about misjudging the skaters at first, and how her daughter wanted to leave rather than try riding on the same course.

“I secretly wanted to go too because I didn’t want to have to put on my mom voice and exchange words with you,” Jeanean wrote in the Hamilton Spectator.

Then she talked about how the skater was patient, helping Peyton up when she fell, giving her pointers on where to set her feet, and keeping her away from dangerous parts of the course where she wasn’t ready to skate.

WATCH:  Team Won’t Let Him Face Cancer Alone: Watch What These Teens Do

“I am proud that you are part of my community, and I want to thank you for being kind to my daughter, even though your friends made fun of you for it,” Jeaneane wrote. “She left the skate park with a sense of pride and with the confidence that she can do anything–because of you.”

The Cambridge Times later learned the helpful “boy” was actually 20-year-old Ryan Carney who brushed off all the fuss made over his actions.

 

“When you put a smile on someone else’s face, it’s infectious,” Carney told the Times. “If you do something nice for someone, something nice will happen to you.”

Give Your Friends A Lesson in Inspiration, Share This Story… (Photo: Jeanean Thomas)

Woman Donates Entire Toy Store to Kids in Homeless Shelters

Toy Store CC Terence Ong

Carol Suchman has skyrocketed to the top of Santa’s “Nice” list.

The New York City woman donates toys to homeless children every Christmas, but this year her annual good deed is creating buzz all the way to the North Pole: To provide for kids in 2015, she bought an entire toy store.

Suchman was walking past a storefront in her West Village neighborhood when she noticed a “Going Out of Business” sign in the window.

RELATED:  Australian Widow Leaves $4 Million Mansion To Help Homeless Kids

After a bit of negotiating, she was able to purchase the store’s entire inventory — thousands of toys, stuffed animals, art and school supplies — and then turned everything over to the city’s Department of Homeless Services (DHS).

“I’ve been doing this for many years and we have many generous sponsors,” Antonio Rodriquez, director of special events at DHS, told NY1 News. “But I have to say, that this is the first time anybody ever bought out an entire store and donated it.”

You can see the video at NY1 News. (Photo: Terence Ong, CC)

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Unique Actions By Tech Companies Helped Millions Be Safe in Paris

Eiffel Tower Man on Cellphone CC Hernán Piñera

If you had friends or family in Paris over the weekend, you might have been notified by Facebook that they were “safe” – and they may have been kept safe with free rides from Uber, free shelter through Airbnb and free taxi rides citywide.

Within 24 hours, Facebook helped four million people in Paris use its “Safety Check” feature to let family and friends know they were safe. Originally developed for natural disasters, this was the first time the tech company activated the feature for a terrorist attack.

The video below shows how it works.

 

After its activation by company officials, people in the danger zone receive a message from Facebook asking if they are safe. They then click one of two buttons — one saying they are safe or one saying they are not in the area — which shows up as a message to friends.

Tech In the Aftermath

Ride service, Uber, quickly switched off surge pricing – the higher fees that automatically kick in when demand rises. The company quickly realized what was happening and disabled the feature in Paris. Their app displayed a message asking users to shelter in place until a ride arrived, and many drivers reportedly offered free rides.

RELATED:  Samsung Galaxy Phone ‘Stops a Bullet’ in Paris, Saves Man’s Life

At the same time, Parisian taxis were living up to their patriotic heritage. Famous for once saving the city by driving soldiers to the front and thwarting a World War I German advance on the City of Light, cabbies drove people away from danger Friday.

They offered free rides to people near the scenes of the multiple attacks. People were able to summon them with a “Le Taxi” app, rolled out less than a month earlier.

 

Airbnb, the home-renting service, joined Twitter in the #PourteOuverte (open door) campaign to find visitors temporary housing during the crisis. The hashtag allowed Twitter users to let others know they were offering a room for people needing a place to stay.

Airbnb immediately waived all service fees for people checking in to Paris accommodations between November 13-17. Then went even farther, asking its members and hosts in an email to open their homes (pictured above).Airbnb Paris Alert released Airbnb

“If you are able, we hope you will strongly consider helping those who are in need by making your listing available at little or no cost,” the company’s message read. “Also, if you’re an Airbnb host in Paris and your Airbnb guest is experiencing travel delays as they try to leave Paris, you can allow your guest to extend their stay for free.”

Use The Same Tech To Share This Story… (Photos: Hernán Piñera, CC; Facebook; Airbnb)

One of the Poorest Nations Now Tops US as World’s Most Charitable

Giving increased across the world in 2014 and, despite economic uncertainty, the encouraging news shows people are even more willing to donate money that in previous years.

The world’s most charitable people live in Myanmar, according to the Charities Aid Foundation’s World Giving Index. The Asian country tied the United States the previous year because they gave so much to charity, volunteered their time, and so often helped strangers. Myanmar surged to the top of the latest list, released at the end of 2015, with strong gains, even as American volunteerism was up.

RELATED: Myanmar Democracy Hero Aung San Suu Kyi Just Won in Landslide

A strong culture of Buddhism pervades the Myanmar society where 92% of people who were surveyed said they donated to charity in 2014. Half of those polled reported doing volunteer work.

When the global goodness is added all together for the 145 countries surveyed, one-third of the world’s population gave money to charity last year — that’s 1.4 billion people, an 11% increase over 2013. Nearly half the people on the planet said they had helped a stranger in need.

WATCH: Support for Paris Floods In From Around the World

Here are the top ten charitable nations on this year’s index, along with the percentage of their people who contributed:

1. Myanmar

92% Donated money; 60% Volunteered time; 55% Helped a stranger

Gawdawpalin_Temple_Bagan_Myanmar_CC Jialiang Gao
Photo by Jialiang Gao, CC

2. United States of America

76% Helped a stranger; 63% Donated money; 44% Volunteered time

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Photo by Ronile CC

3. New Zealand

73% Donated money; 65% Helped a stranger; 45% Volunteered time

Photo by Swisscan CC
Photo by Swisscan CC

4. Canada

69% Helped a stranger; 67% Donated money; 44% Volunteered time

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Photo by Anirudh Koul CC

5. Australia

72% Donated money; 66% Helped a stranger; 40% Volunteered time

Sydney Opera House-Flickr -Hai Linh Truong , CC
Photo by Hai Linh Truong CC

6. United Kingdom

75% Donated money; 72% Volunteered time; 63% Helped a stranger

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Photo by Aurelien Guichard CC

7. Netherlands

73% Donated money; 59% Helped a stranger; 36% Volunteered time

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Photo by Nicola Albertini CC

8. Sri Lanka

60% Helped a stranger; 59% Donated money; 48% Volunteered time

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Photo by Ron Saunders47 CC

9. Ireland

67% Donated money; 59% Helped a stranger; 41% Volunteered time

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Photo by Sebastien Barre CC

10. Malaysia

62% Helped a stranger; 58% Donated money; 37% Volunteered time

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Back in 2010, Sri Lanka was the only Asian country to earn a spot in the top ten list.

This year, some of the biggest improvements were recorded in countries that were dealing with adversity. Donations were up in war-torn Ukraine and in the flood-ravaged countries of Eastern Europe.

“The world is becoming a more generous place,” CAF Chief Executive John Low said. “It is humbling to see how countries which have suffered adversity continue to score highly, with increasing numbers of people giving in some instances.”

CHECK Out: Hero Giving Vietnam’s Street Kids a Chance

CAF assembles the annual index from surveys the Gallup Organization conducts in 145 countries.

Photo (top) by Tom Tranuf, CC

After Lonely Couple Called Emergency Line, Police Stay For Tea

Cop comforts elderly man Screenshot ITV news

A police constable in England prepared for the worst after receiving an emergency call from a couple in their 90s.

But when Stu Ockwell and his partner from the Manchester Police Department showed up, they found no medical emergency–only a lonely couple who needed someone to talk to.

Fred Thomson is 95 years old and blind; his wife, Doris, who struggles alone to care for him, is also 95.

RELATED:  Hungry Veteran With Cancer Dials 911, Gets Amazing Response

Constable Ockwell decided they did need help — someone to take the pressure off Doris and keep Fred company for a while. The bobby brewed up some tea then sat and chatted with them for half an hour, while Fred happily told stories about his service in World War II.

“He’s an amazing character and had us in fits of laughter,” Ockwell told ITV News. “It made my day.”

CHECK Out: More Inspiring Stories About Police

(WATCH the video below from ITV) — Photo: ITV News, via The Telegraph

Cute Nail Designs for Turkey Day; New Macy’s Parade Lineup Revealed

Four New Macys Day Parade Balloons

Debuting high in the sky this year will be four new Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons in New York City Thursday, November 26. Watch the announcement above. (Note: Video player may take time to load)

The 89th annual parade will also feature American Idol winner Jordan Sparks and pop sensation Mariah Carey.

Turkey-tastic Nail Art

Ditch the boring monochrome nail polish job and add a little holiday pizzaz. Check out the video above for pilgrim designs, turkey doodles, polka dots, and Thanksgiving themed paint jobs.

Let Your Friends Give Thanks by Clicking To Share…

300 Stranded Israelis in Montana Fed Kosher By Local Kindness

El Al Boeing 777 CC Aero Icarus

When an El Al flight from Israel to California developed a problem, it was forced to land in Montana–where a problem of a different sort developed on the ground. Fortunately for the 279 passengers and crew, people who live in the “Big Sky Country” have hearts as big as their sky.

Because a new plane needed to be delivered, no one knew how long the hundreds of Israelis would be stranded there – sequestered in the terminal because there were no customs officials there. One thing was evident. Despite its worldly name, there was no kosher food at the Billings Logan International Airport.

CHECK OUT:  Half-Price Hummus Brings Arabs and Jews Together Over Lunch

Donna Healy, a member of Billings’ Jewish community rounded up her daughter Kat and friend Victor Sargent, then purchased crackers, cereal, hummus and other snacks to deliver to the airport.

Meanwhile, Rabbi Chaim Bruk heard the news while traveling to Minnesota. He called his wife, Chavie Bruk in Bozeman, Montana and asked her to help. She immediately loaded her car with kosher food and drove 150 miles to Billings with her three kids (pictured in the tweet below).

 

A banquet of bagels, stacks of cold cuts, tubs of hummus, whole boxes of fruit, and other snacks filled the Billings airport terminal.

“It was a tremendous kiddush Hashem—amazing and inspiring!” Hillel Fuld, one of the passengers told Chabad News.

CHECK OUT:  Captain Orders 50 Pizzas Delivered to Airline Passengers Stuck on Tarmac

The travelers from Tel Aviv wound up with more food than they could finish before a replacement plane arrived to take them the rest of the way to California.

“There was more than enough. Tons,” Michael Eisenberg, one of the stranded passengers told the Billings Gazette. “People in Billings can eat bagels for a month.”

Photo credit: Aero Icarus, CC

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Hilarious Cat-astrophe Ruins Christmas, Until Neighbors Save it (MUST-SEE Video!)

Mog-the cat-Sainsburys ad

When a comical, clumsy cat’s nightmare triggers a chain reaction that threatens to derail Christmas for her family, the holiday spirit brings out the best in neighbors and saves the day.

In the latest installment of its entertaining holiday ads, Sainsbury’s latest Christmas video features a beloved feline that nearly burns down the house before becoming the cat-alyst for an unforgettable holiday.

Mog, a popular British children’s book character created by Judith Kerr, is the star of the latest promotion by the British supermarket chain – but her performance also makes her a hero for childhood literacy in the UK.

CHECK Out: Whale Stuns Navy Team With Amazingly Human Chatter (LISTEN)

Kerr has even written a companion book, Mog’s Christmas Calamity, from which all the profits will be donated to Save the Children programs that eliminate illiteracy. The book is available for £3.00 online at Sainsbury’s website.

Last year, the company’s holiday ad recreated the spontaneous “Christmas Truce” between British and German troops who each laid down their guns, played soccer, and exchanged gifts during the first Christmas of World War I.

(WATCH the hilarity below)

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Marijuana Fills Dire Medical Needs of Families; Science, States Try to Catch Up

Tilray Production

Jennifer and Stephanie Ayotte-bench-submitted

Unthinkable two decades ago, parents are joining together to fight for their children’s right to use marijuana – and many legislators and researchers are standing with them.

For some teenagers, this might seem like a dream come true, but for Stephanie Ayotte, who has an extreme form of epilepsy, the hope is not to get high: it’s to get better.

These dedicated parents – Jennifer and Andy Ayotte, Beth and Patrick Collins, and Paige Figi – among many others, have worked hard to expand access to medical marijuana because it has dramatically reduced, or even eliminated, the occurrence of severe uncontrollable seizures that are not treatable with conventional drugs.

Stephanie’s daily seizures robbed her of the ability to walk freely when she was a teenager. Her parents began escorting her everywhere, one person on each side, for fear she would fall. Eventually, after several injuries, she was restricted to a wheelchair.

ALSO: Gone to Jungle For Healing, Holistic Plants & Spiritual Work: WATCH What Happens

These families have tried alternatives like special diets and, in some cases, over 18 different medications that caused a wide range of heart-wrenching side effects, like episodes of rage. Medical cannabis seemed like their last hope.

Andy Stephanie and Michael Ayotte-epilepsy-race-supmitted

“I’ve seen it work. It worked for me and for a bunch of other kids. It’s an amazing plant,” said 15-year-old Jennifer Collins on an episode of NBC’s Dateline, entitled Growing Hope.

Charlotte Figi lent her name to one blend of cannabis strain called Charlotte’s Web, after she became its first successful patient. Her epilepsy disorder caused up to 300 seizures per week – but they nearly stopped once she began ingesting the marijuana-derived ingredient called cannabidiol (CBD). News of her recovery spread from Colorado giving patients with severe epilepsy much needed hope and causing many families to move to states where medical marijuana has been legalized. Parents note that because the concentrated CBD oil is very low in tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the component that provides the “high” in marijuana.

Although 23 states in the U.S. have legalized marijuana for medical use, it is still currently classified as a Schedule 1 substance by the federal government, which means it is deemed as having no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. Additionally, severe restrictions are placed on medical cannabis studies, which has made it onerous for researchers, and delayed or thwarted trials for years. The hope is that current legislation making its way through the US Congress – H.R. 1635 and S. 1333 – would finally remove marijuana from the same classification as heroin.

RELATED: Wristbands Offer Nausea Relief From Motion Sickness and Chemo

Another bill, introduced by conservative Republican U.S. Congressman Scott Perry, the Charlotte’s Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014, is being evaluated as an amendment to the current Controlled Substances Act. It would legalize the marijuana-based oil if it contained less than 0.3 percent THC.

Manufacturers that are dedicated to the safe production and distribution of marijuana for medical uses include companies like the Realm of Caring Foundation, which makes Charlotte’s Web in Colorado, and Tilray in Canada.

Tilray Production

Tilray is a licensed producer for the Canadian healthcare system, under the Marijuana for Medical Purposes Regulations that ensure for those with an authorized medical need access to quality-controlled marijuana grown under secure and sanitary conditions. The Government of Canada has not endorsed the recreational use of marijuana, but the courts have required reasonable access to a legal source when a patient is authorized by a doctor to use it.

“We’ve seen remarkable relief through the use of CBD, not only for patients but for parents and caregivers,” Tilray’s Vice President of Patient Advocacy, Philippe Lucas, told Good News Network. “As a father to a six-year-old girl, I know that if you see your child suffering, there is nothing you wouldn’t try within a reasonable margin of safety.”

RELATED: 14 Years After Decriminalizing Heroin, Here’s What Portugal Looks Like

This ‘last-resort’ option has helped Stephanie, now 23 years old, and Charlotte go from several severe seizures daily to 10-25 seizures per month, or none at all, respectively. Jennifer Collins has even experienced 100 days free of seizures.

“This is why clinical data is critical for patients such as Stephanie, and all others who suffer from various ailments and who have found relief by using medical marijuana,” Mrs. Ayotte said in an E-mail. “Until then, doctors will continue to be reluctant to prescribe medical marijuana. The result is very limited options for those who could benefit greatly.”

Stephanie Ayotte-lake-submitted

According to ClinicalTrial.gov, there are currently 32 ongoing studies being conducted in the U.S. that reference medical cannabis. Among them are Phase 3 clinical trials of Epidiolex, containing CBD as its active ingredient, for treatment-resistant forms of childhood epilepsy (Dravet and Lennox-Gastaut syndromes). While the trials are expected to complete patient recruitment this year and not report results until early 2016, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) went ahead and granted orphan drug designation for Epidiolex. This means that it is available to independent U.S. pediatric epilepsy specialists to treat high need cases of childhood seizures that have no other treatment options.

CHECK Out: Colorado Doctor Discovered Natural Way To Treat Common Vertigo

“I have been in this business for 20 years, first as a patient and now as a researcher. It is an incredible privilege to be part of someone’s healing process.” Lucas said. “To me, organizations in this space are not competitors – we are collaborators. The more research the better because we hear every day that medical cannabis is improving patients’ lives.”

Surprisingly, the FDA has previously given the go-ahead to THC-based drugs: Marinol and Cesamet. Approved back in 1985, these were the first cannabinoids marketed in the U.S. The pills help cancer patients with nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy, and AIDS patients to regain weight caused by loss of appetite.

ALSO: Monthly Shots For Recovering Addicts Bring New Hope and Cuts Cravings

In 2010, Sativex, a half THC, half CBD whole-plant cannabis-based pharmaceutical, was approved in the UK, followed by Canada and other parts of Europe, as a mouth spray to reduce pain associated with multiple sclerosis and cancer.

While there is more work and research to be done, incremental steps by states and national governments reflect that now, more than ever, the conventional medical community is open to a very unconventional treatment for alternative healing. The hope is that one more child will have one less seizure – and people’s health soon will matter more than a half-century of status quo regulations.

Homeless Dad Helped in Denver Was Spotted Giving Back–Feeding Hungry

James Moss Homeless screenshot GoBeKind

After a fundraising campaign raised nearly $55,000 for a New Yorker who had just arrived in Denver and become homeless with his toddler, the pair was out feeding the hungry.

A month ago James Moss met a man on the street who recorded an interview with the newly homeless father that caused a chain reaction of generosity. Moss’s optimistic attitude in the face of hard times inspired the outpouring of donations on a GoFundMe page that was set up later by a stranger in Kansas.

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Yesterday, with some time away from his new barber job, he was out handing out fruit, sandwiches, cookies and water to anyone who needed it in the city’s Civic Center Park.

“I’m just trying to make a difference,” he told KUSA-TV. “I want to let people know that there’s still people who care.”

(WATCH the video below from KUSA)

The Splendor of Dragonflies Close-Up (Photo of the Day)

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I hope these photographs of dragonflies will prompt you to take notice of them while out hiking or walking, and add a bit more pleasure to your experience outdoors.

I became utterly captivated by the Blue Dasher dragonfly (Pachydiplax longipennis) while involved in a three-year research project at Point Pelee National Park in southern Ontario.

As I love photography, I like how this species of dragonfly has the decency to pose in front of beautiful backgrounds in the wetlands. This type of dragonfly also has a characteristic flight pattern that couldn’t be more ideal. It would take flight in a short loop and most often would return to the exact same location–where I could remain poised to snap pictures.

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I was particularly taken with the coloration of the male of the species.

You will notice the unusual hand stand pose in the below image, which is referred to as obelisk. This maneuver aids in thermo-regulation.

WATCH: Baby Sea Lion Looking For Cuddles Hops on Kayak

Ontario has 172 species of dragonflies offering a stunning array of variation if you take the time to observe them.

Of all the insects, they display the most remarkable flight capabilities. Watch for them next time you are outdoors for a walk.

dragonfly-verticle-submitted-Janet Nelson

Samsung Galaxy Phone ‘Stops a Bullet’ in Paris, Saves Man’s Life

Samsung-phone-took-bullet-ReutersVideo-permission

If he hadn’t been talking on the phone at the time when a bomb exploded nearby, he might have been another casualty in Paris.

The Samsung Galaxy S6 edge took most of the hit from shrapnel flying towards his head.

The man named Sylvester showed a camera crew the damage in this video from Reuters.

In other heartening news from Paris, citizens are lining up around the block to donate blood while peace vigils across the world are bathed in light and singing for those mourning in France. (Watch the videos below…)

Officer Sends Flowers To Crying Woman She Pulled Over For Speeding

When a Massachusetts police officer pulled over a driver for speeding, she found the woman crying.

She had just found out her mother was being moved into hospice care.

After issuing the driver a warning, Somerville Officer Ashley Catatao couldn’t stop thinking about her.

So she ordered a delivery of flowers and sent along a note that read, “I’m very sorry about your mother. I hope you find comfort in knowing she lived a long life and will continue to live on in your heart and in your memories.”

For her kindness, the officer was honored by the mayor and police chief with a Beyond The Call Of Duty award.

(WATCH the video below from CBS Boston) –Image: WBZ video

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Homestead Act for Russian Far East – Putin Supports Free Land Handout

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The Russian president has approved the idea of offering large land plots for free to anyone who resettles to the Russian Far East to start a farm or other business.

Similar to the American “Homestead Act” that encouraged immigrants to settle in the western states of the US in the 19th century, Russian officials hope the land grant would motivate people to migrate to the Far East.

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According to RT News, the plan would offer the free allocation of 1 hectare (2.5 acres) plots of land to every resident of the Far East and to anyone who is willing to move to the region for the purpose of starting a private business “in farming, forestry, game hunting or some other enterprise.”

Given the vast territory of the Russian Far East, its population of 6.3 million people translates to slightly less than one person per square kilometer, making the territories one of the most sparsely populated areas in the world. Further, the population has been rapidly declining–by 14% in the last fifteen years.

ALSO: The First Canadian City to Eliminate Homelessness –Here’s How They Did It

(READ the full story from RT News) –Image by TUBS, CC

Mother-Daughter Duo Publish Children’s Kindness Book

 

What do a mouse and random acts of kindness have in common? This mother–daughter duo knows it’s all about the good deeds.

Natalie has been spreading kindness in the world for years, writing anonymous notes of gratitude and encouragement to people around her community. Sophie, age 7, naturally decided to follow in her mom’s footsteps.

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After a few years learning the tricks of how to treat others, Sophie has written a children’s book about a mouse that also does random acts of kindness in secret.

The Secret Adventures of Anonymouse was released on November 4th, for the Kindle. The family hopes to inspire others–with the help of a special mouse.

(WATCH the video above *NOTE: May take a few seconds to load)