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The Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen In January of 2001, Christopher McDougall asked his doctor a simple question, "How come my foot hurts?" The doctor's response to that question would change the course of his life and ultimately send him on a journey where he would find an answer -- but only, as he puts it in his own words, "after I found myself in the middle of the greatest race the world would never see." This excerpt shares more... posted on Dec 21, 4457 reads
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Modest Needs: Small Gifts, Big Impact Gary Ribble would not be able to read this story if not for people like you. Ribble, who has chronic lymphocytic leukemia in addition to severe diabetes and impaired hearing, needed new eyeglasses last spring but couldn't afford them after losing a job he'd held for more than 40 years. Then he found out about the Modest Needs Foundation. The grass-roots charity pools thousands of small donations t... posted on Dec 31, 3479 reads
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A Heartwarming Work of Edifying Genius In What Is the What, Dave Eggers chronicled the trials of one of the "lost boys of Sudan," a young man named Valentino Deng. Deng escaped the Sudan and made it to the United States, where he met Eggers, who turned his story into the award-winning book. With the funds from the book's successful run, Deng and Eggers started the Valentino Achak Deng Foundation. Deng has since returned to the Sudan to... posted on Jan 8, 2335 reads
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Design Thinking for Social Innovation Designers have traditionally focused on enhancing the look and functionality of products. Recently, they have begun using design tools to tackle more complex problems, such as finding ways to provide low-cost healthcare throughout the world. Read about how nonprofits are using "design thinking" to tackle issues such as transporting clean water to arid areas and feeding malnourished children in d... posted on Jan 31, 2235 reads
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The Melody of Birds On Wire While reading a newspaper, Jarbas Agnelli was struck by a photograph of birds on an electric wire. Their positioning on several wires made him think of a musical staff. He cut out the photograph and decided to make a song, using the bird's exact locations to determine which notes to play. "I knew it wasn't the most original idea in the universe," Agnelli says in an explanation on his website. "I w... posted on Jan 4, 7264 reads
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Rooster Valentini: Getting Kids to School The sun hangs low in a cold morning sky, blasting Russell 'Rooster' Valentini's eyes as he steers the battered red minivan he calls ''The Beast'' east into Allentown. Valentini cannot put down the visor to block the glare because 13 parking tickets will rain down on his head. So he squints as he heads to the Salvation Army Hospitality House on Seventh Street to look for students he hopes he does n... posted on Jan 26, 4358 reads
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Who Wants To Be A Billionaire? I Don't. Jeffrey Lee is not interested in the soaring price of uranium, which could make him one of the world's richest men. "This is my country. Look, it's beautiful and I fear somebody will disturb it," he says, waving his arm across a view of rocky land surrounded by Kakadu National Park, where the French energy giant Areva wants to extract 14,000 tonnes of uranium worth more than $5 billion. Mr Lee, th... posted on Jan 12, 4057 reads
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Superhero Animal Stories A retriever fights off a cougar that attacked its 11 year old owner. A pot-bellied pig blocked traffic to get attention to its heart-attack stricken owner. Planet Green recounts these and the other top uplifting stories of "superhero" animals rescuing their owners. Watch to hear some amazing stories from both traditional and non-traditional pets.... posted on Jan 28, 3902 reads
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A Missed Flight & A Connection Found On a plane bound for O'Hare International Airport, Elsie Clark felt weak, scared and utterly alone -- until she spotted a pair of shiny leather shoes across the aisle. What happened to the 79-year-old Canadian over the next 12 hours-- being embraced by a good Samaritan, escorted through O'Hare in a wheelchair and welcomed to a swanky high-rise for dinner overlooking Lake Michigan-- saved her from ... posted on Jan 4, 8251 reads
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Ogori Cafe: Order It Forward! When you walk in Japan's Ogori Cafe, you get whatever the person before you ordered and paid for; then, in return you order something for the person behind you. It doesn't matter what you order -- that's a surprise! The whole point is to get something random from a stranger, and buy something random for a stranger.... posted on Feb 8, 3137 reads
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The Zero Rupee Note A zero-sum game is one in which the gains of one player are exactly balanced by the losses of another. In India a local NGO has invented a new sort of zero sum which, it hopes, will leave everyone better off: the zero-rupee note. The note is not legal tender. It is simply a piece of paper the colour of a 50-rupee note with a picture of Gandhi on it and a value of nothing. Its aim is to shame corr... posted on Feb 16, 5650 reads
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No Laptops Allowed At This Cafe A North Oakland cafe is trying something revolutionary. No, it's not fat-free croissants or half-price lattes. The owner is asking customers to leave their laptops at home and actually speak to each other! "When we opened this place we wanted to create a community. Instead it's just been a room full of laptops," said Sal Bednarz, who opened Actual Cafe six weeks ago in Oakland. "I don't have anyt... posted on Feb 18, 3504 reads
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10 Things Science Says Will Make You Happy What makes us happy? The emerging field of positive psychology is bursting with new findings that suggest your actions can have a significant effect on your happiness and satisfaction with life. Actions like: savor everyday moments, avoid comparisons, put money low on the list, have meaningful goals, take initiative at work, smile even when you don't feel like it, say thank you like you mean it, ... posted on Feb 13, 27127 reads
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Kidney For a Grocery Store Clerk Dan Coyne had the surprise all planned: near the end of Myra dela Vega's Friday night shift as a Jewel-Osco cashier in Evanston, IL, his children would buy groceries and hand her a card. Inside would be the unexpected news that Coyne could donate one of his kidneys to dela Vega, who is suffering from renal failure. But dela Vega, 49, who looked puzzled by the card, didn't open it. Instead, Coyne e... posted on Feb 22, 2142 reads
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5 Ways to Start a Kindness Revolution at Work We spend around 2,000 hours a year with our coworkers. Given how much time we spend with them, a little bit of kindness can really go a long way. It doesn't require any money or training, and you can start right away either individually or as a team. That's the beauty of it! Leading by example, putting an end to petty criticism, welcoming new employees with open arms and recognizing the strengt... posted on Feb 19, 8870 reads
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Happiness Wards Off Heart Disease Being happy and staying positive may help ward off heart disease, a study suggests. US researchers monitored the health of 1,700 people over 10 years, finding the most anxious and depressed were at the highest risk of the disease. Lead researcher Dr. Karina Davidson said people often wait for "two weeks of vacation to have fun" when instead we should seek enjoyment each day.... posted on Mar 21, 3936 reads
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Art from Ashes Orin spent a good chunk of 2009 sleeping on park benches. The 20-year-old admits he made it difficult on his parents. He ran away close to a half-dozen times. On the streets, though, he has become quite the poet. "I just want everyone to know I have something to say," Orin said. And every Tuesday night, Orin and other youth like him, get their chance to share their voice through 'Art from Ashes' ... posted on Feb 23, 3814 reads
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Your Brain on Income Inequality The human brain is a big believer in equality -- and a team of scientists from Caltech and Ireland's Trinity College has become the first to gather the images to prove it. Specifically, the team found that the reward centers in the human brain respond more strongly when a poor person receives a financial reward than when a rich person does. The surprising thing? This activity pattern holds true e... posted on Mar 2, 3652 reads
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Journey of a Kindness Checkbook How would you use $20 to bring more kindness in your community? A Bank employee, with a generous heart and an adventurous spirit, created a checkbook cover containing $20 and the following note: "Congratulations! You are currently the bearer of the Smile Transaction Register. This kindness checkbook began its journey with $20. Your only job is to keep it going."... posted on Mar 19, 9012 reads
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Story of the Brick When a piece of art consisting of a porcelain brick arrived on the desk of key government officials during what is now known as the "California Water Wars" nobody knew it would change the course of environmental history. Years later, one of those officials, then head of California's Resource Agency, recounted how a gift of artwork moved his heart, and rippled out to move the hearts of the people o... posted on Jun 11, 3720 reads
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Tanzanian Tribe Called Hadza The Hadza tribe in Tanzania do not engage in warfare. They've never lived densely enough to be seriously threatened by an infectious outbreak. They have no known history of famine; rather, there is evidence of people from a farming group coming to live with them during a time of crop failure. The Hadza diet remains even today more stable and varied than that of most of the world's citizens. They e... posted on Mar 11, 6379 reads
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Upside of Depression It's everywhere. As inescapable as the common cold. Every year, 7 percent of us will be diagnosed with the grey clouds of depression. But how well do we really understand it? Charles Darwin claimed that depression was a clarifying force, focusing the mind on its most essential problems. And the grey clouds hit him hard, leaving him "not able to do anything one day out of three." More recently, res... posted on Apr 13, 6429 reads
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Lifebox -- Thinking Outside the Box! Not everything we will buy will always be local. So Paul Stamets has come up with an amazing solution to the troubling international issue of shipping waste -- Lifeboxes! They're shipping containers integrating seeds in their compostable wrapping that can give birth to a whole new garden. You tear it up, plant it, and water it -- the seeds and spores do the rest. That's thinking outside the box.... posted on Mar 18, 5160 reads
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Meet Nepal's 'God of Sight' Raj Kaliya Dhanuk sits on a wooden bench, barefoot, with a tattered sari covering thin arms as rough as bark. Thick clear tears bleed from her eyes, milky saucers that stare at nothing. Dhanuk and more than 500 others - most of whom have never seen a doctor before - have traveled for days by bicycle, motorbike, bus and even on their relatives' backs to reach Dr. Sanduk Ruit's mobile eye camp. Each... posted on Mar 30, 4937 reads
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Kidney Transplant Record Dr. Robert Montgomery, chief transplant surgeon at Johns Hopkins Hospital, said that doctors at four hospitals in four states transplanted eight kidneys over three weeks in what he called the largest chain of donations in history. He believes such intricate, multi-state exchanges can drastically reduce the number of patients waiting for eligible donors. Multiple-kidney transplants occur when sever... posted on Apr 3, 1994 reads
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Free Farm Stand "I'm a simple person," says a man who goes by the name Tree. "We're going to grow food here, and then we're going to give it away to people who need it." On a 1/3 acre lot in San Francisco, known unofficially as the Free Farm, volunteers cultivate the land and its given freely to anyone who wants it. Since 2008, Tree has donated more than 6,000 pounds of food on Sunday mornings.... posted on Mar 23, 4127 reads
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Does Activism Make You Happy? New research says that it does! In a groundbreaking study, two university psychologists, Malte Klar and Tim Kasser, interviewed college students about their political engagement and level of happiness. The results show that taking action boosts morale: those who are politically involved are happier than those who aren't. Regardless of how engaging the political action, simply taking a stand for wh... posted on Apr 22, 4847 reads
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Brazil Takes the Lead No, we're not talking about soccer. Brazil, a nation known for its cutting-edge soccer skills, is also at the forefront of massive social reform. While many nations are struggling to keep up with the ambitious Millennium Development Goals put forth by the United Nations in 2000, Brazil is unperturbed. The Latin American country has already reduced poverty by a whopping 81 percent, drastically low... posted on Apr 16, 3478 reads
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Where has all the meat gone? What do Paul McCartney, the Baltimore Unified School District, and the city of San Francisco all have in common? They have all stopped eating meat on Mondays. In efforts to curb climate change, cities around the world are promoting citizens to eat less meat, since livestock is a large source of greenhouse emissions. From meatless Monday school lunches in Baltimore to "Veg Days" in San Francisco a... posted on Apr 12, 4156 reads
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Smiles, Baseball, and Longevity The wider you grin, and the deeper your laughter lines, the more likely you are to live a long life. At least that's what researchers at Wayne University in Michigan say. In a study examining pictures of 1952 major league baseball players, researchers found that those with the widest grins lived an average of 79.9 years- a full seven more years than their glum colleagues! The study also found that... posted on Apr 15, 3970 reads
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Unemployed Man Gives Away $10 a Day For many of us, giving away money is last thing we'd do after losing our job. For Reed Sandridge, it's a "journey of altruistic giving". After getting laid off last year as a director of a nonprofit group in Washington D.C, the 36-year-old decided to start an experiment in giving. Every day, Sandridge walks up to a stranger and gives away $10. So far, he's handed out close to $1,200! He also inte... posted on Apr 17, 5473 reads
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Birthday with a Homeless Friend Lower gaze. Quicken pace. Become absorbed in sight of sidewalk. In the hustle and bustle of city life, this is a common response to the sight of the homeless on the street. One day, a city-dweller breaks out of this routine when she stops to buy a magazine. She discovers that her vendor is a refugee from a war-torn country whose 25th birthday has just passed. Caught with compassion, she finds hers... posted on Apr 24, 2900 reads
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A Poem Is Nancy Weber shares: "As the director of a creative writing organization, I have heard a lot of amazing, wildly creative poems and stories written by young writers in our workshops. However, I was absolutely stunned by this beautiful poem by Sadie McCann, a five year=old girl from our workshop at the Brooklyn Public Library, Bay Ridge branch. If she hadn't written it right in front of me, I would n... posted on Apr 26, 8912 reads
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Learn in your Dreams Napping after learning something new could help you commit it to memory- as long as you dream, scientist say. They found that people who dream about a new task perform it better on waking than those who don't sleep or dream. Volunteers who napped after learning the layout of a 3D computer maze found their way through the real-life maze quicker than those who didn't. "Every day we are gathering and... posted on Apr 30, 3791 reads
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20 Ways to Travel Imagine a hostel in which revelers tip-toe silently through the dorms, cups of tea appear beside your bed while you're in the shower, and your bill has already been paid when you go to check out! A figment of my imagination? Not necessarily. Inspired by Danny Wallace's book "Random Acts of Kindness: 365 Ways to Make the World a Nicer Place," Natasha Young offers 20 tips to change the world as you ... posted on May 5, 5945 reads
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The Mother's Cure It's a situation every mother has been through: Your child is stressed out or upset, but she's at school or summer camp--too far away to give her a hug. That doesn't mean she can't be comforted, though. According to a new study, talking on the phone with Mom is nearly as good as getting a hug for helping stressed kids calm down. At least for young girls, talking on the phone with their mothers red... posted on May 16, 2044 reads
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Deciding to Have Purpose From the age of 6, Susan Lieu was a powerhouse, answering the phone and removing customers' nail polish at her family's Bay Area nail salon. When she was 12, her world came crashing down when her mother, who had survived a harrowing escape from Vietnam years earlier, died unexpectedly of surgical complications. The experience took much from Lieu, but gave her something that sustains her to this da... posted on May 28, 3791 reads
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The 12-year-old Headmistress As an infant, Bharti Kumari was abandoned at a railway station in Bihar, one of India's poorest states. Now, at 12 years-old, she is the head teacher at a school in Kusmbhara, her adopted village. Under the shade of a mango tree every morning and evening, she teaches Hindi, English, and math to 50 village children who would otherwise receive no education. In between, she attends a state school in ... posted on Jun 9, 10222 reads
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Just Like Gravity When hotel housekeeper Jeanne Mydil stumbled upon $6,000 left behind in a room she was cleaning, she immediately brought it to her supervisor. Little did she know, her honest act of kindness would explode exponentially! It turns out that the money had been fundraised by a missionary group on their way to assist in Haiti earthquake relief. After word spread of Mydil's good deed, the phones at Miami... posted on Jun 15, 3258 reads
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Save Energy by Breathing Every minute we breathe, the rise and fall of our lungs produces almost 1 watt of energy. Now, new technology can absorb our energy to generate electricity! Small devices fitted with piezoelectric (PE) crystals, are being installed under sidewalks, roads, sports stadiums and railways to recycle the energy produced by our daily actions! In the world of energy-harvesting, all vibrations are good vib... posted on Jun 19, 8082 reads
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9 Ways to be Happy in the Next 30 Minutes There are mornings when we rush out of bed in a vague fog. Days that seem to spiral progressively down the drain. But sometimes, all we need to do is stop. Take a breath. And re-discover ourselves in the moment. "Being happier doesn't have to be a long-term ambition," Gretchen Rubin states. "You can start right now." She suggests that little things, like taking a walk outside, doing a good deed, r... posted on Jun 30, 38255 reads
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The Brain of a Sociopath "You see that? I'm 100 percent. I have the pattern, the risky pattern. In a sense, I'm a born killer." An ironic statement, coming from a neuroscientist who studies the brains of killers. After discovering his own lineage to be wrought with murderers, Jim Fallon peered into his own brain and found that, genetically speaking, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. He found an empty area in his o... posted on Jul 2, 6414 reads
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The Compliment Guys "I like your jeans." "I like your brown shoes." "Have a nice day!" Don't you love it when someone says something nice about you? Doesn't that brighten your day? Imagine how wonderful your day would be if someone said something nice about you, just because. Brett Westcott and Cameron Brown, also known as The Compliment Guys at Purdue University, are doing exactly that. "When people come up after th... posted on Jul 5, 3523 reads
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Generosity Water What happens to a young man who has been a successful business person since the 8th grade, who by his senior year was earning six figures then loses it all when the real estate market goes under? Well, if you're Jordan Wagner, you bring clean drinking water to people in need. "I had lost everything I had made. This humbling experience helped me realize that I had been living a pretty selfish lifes... posted on Jul 4, 1963 reads
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A Village of Our Future Tucked away in the small village of Kamikatsu, Japan is a phenomenon that is saving the future of our planet. This township of just over 2,000 residents separates household waste into 34 categories, recycling everything under the kitchen sink: food, phones and even sake bottles! Most likely the first to achieve Japan's mission of a zero waste environment by the year 2020, Kamikatsu emulates hope ... posted on Jul 8, 4679 reads
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Leap of Faith Susan Schaller's story, comparable to "the Miracle Worker, is still not widely known. Perhaps it's so amazing, it's hard to grasp. How can one understand what it means not to have a language at all? For a man already 27 years old, to be in such a situation was considered completely hopeless. Fortunately, Schaller didn't know the situation was considered hopeless. Instead, she followed her instinct... posted on Jul 13, 6883 reads
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A Yogi Stumps Science In hopes to find insights on how soldiers, astronauts, or victims of natural disasters might survive without food or drink, military doctors studied an 83-year-old holy man who says he has spent seven decades without food or water. Prahlad Jani spent 15 days in a hospital in the western India state of Gujarat under constant surveillance from a team of 30 medics equipped with cameras and closed cir... posted on Jul 25, 3765 reads
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11-Year-Old Feeds Thousands It all began in third grade, when Katie Stagliano didn't know what to do with her 40-pound cabbage. She ended up taking it to a local soup kitchen, where her first encounter with homelessness inspired her current journey. Now, in sixth grade, Katie's six gardens have produced over 4,000 pounds of vegetables to feed the needy. "It makes you feel so good to see someone that young with that amount of... posted on Aug 22, 4165 reads
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The Miracle of Mistakes Do you remember the first time you rode a bicycle? Can you relieve the exhilaration of riding free, the sense of triumph as you broke free to the crutches of support? Now step back. How many times did you fall off the bike before that first ride? Today, fear of making mistakes is deeply ingrained in our psyche. At home, mistakes lead to admonishments. At work, mistakes have serious repercussions. ... posted on Jul 27, 7359 reads
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The Blazeman: An Ironman Completing in an ironman triathlon is no small feat - a 2.4 mile swim followed by a 112 mile bike ride followed by a marathon (26.2 mile run)! Jon Blaise recently completed all of this while having a debilitating disease called ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis), which attacks the motor neurons, or nerve cells, in the brain and spinal cord. "I think when I'm sitting in a wheelchair, down the road... posted on Aug 4, 3123 reads
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