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Archive for June, 2025

This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 29, 2025

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News That Inspires
Jun 29, 2025
Weekly Digest
“Hope is being able to see that there is light despite all of the darkness.”

— Desmond Tutu

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

In a week where stories of courage and resilience shone brightly, we reflect on the remarkable tales that unfolded.

In the hallowed halls of the High Court of South Africa, Khanyi Kubheka’s youthful determination breaks barriers as she steps forth as a beacon of change at just 24. Meanwhile, in the heart of Puri, Ashwini Kumar Mishra’s ingenious brake system quietly transforms the safety of the Rath Yatra, embodying devotion through innovation. A profound connection is forged as Addison McArthur hears the heartbeat of Felicia Hill’s late daughter, a poignant testament to the impact of organ donation. Teacher Robyn Daniel embodies empathy and action, running a marathon to support a young leukemia fighter, sparking hope within a community. Across continents, Maurice Edelson pedals from the UK to Cape Town, confronting silence and finding healing in shared stories. In classrooms, middle schoolers teach us that empathy is not just innate but a skill honed through practice and care. Finally, a study reveals that hope, not fleeting happiness, holds the key to a meaningful life, urging us to cherish small victories and nurture enduring aspirations.

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I Thought My Wages Would Be Docked but the Customer I’d Overpaid Returned

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 28, 2025

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Jun 28, 2025
I Thought My Wages Would Be Docked but the Customer I’d Overpaid Returned
“Remember there’s no such thing as a small act of kindness. Every act creates a ripple with no logical end.”

— Scott Adams

I Thought My Wages Would Be Docked but the Customer I’d Overpaid Returned

On Christmas Eve, 1977, as a teller at a bank, Penny Muir mistakenly gave a customer an extra $20. At the end of the day, she realized the shortage, and that it would come out of her pay. It was a lot of money for her at the time that she intended to spend on the holidays. Just as she was about to leave for the day, somebody knocked on the window. Cautiously, she opened the door. A stranger handed her $20 explaining she had given it to him in error. His action continues to impact her life in many ways even after fifty years. “It wasn’t just the money, it was the fact that he had gone to such effort to make sure that I wasn’t out of pocket, when it was entirely my fault anyway.”

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Recall an act of honesty or integrity, or even a small gesture of kindness in your life. What were the ripple effects?

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The Global Dress of Unity

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 27, 2025

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Jun 27, 2025
The Global Dress of Unity
“Unity is not something we are called to create; it is something we are called to recognize.”

— William Sloan Coffin

The Global Dress of Unity

Imagine a dress that transcends borders and tells the stories of hundreds around the globe. The Red Dress project is a stunning testament to creativity and connection, made of 84 pieces of silk embroidered by 380 artisans from 51 countries. Conceived by Kirstie Macleod in 2009, the dress is more than art; it’s a tapestry of identity, woven by women from all walks of life. Each stitch and pattern echoes personal tales, as well as windows into and wisdom from shared struggles and triumphs. As this vibrant creation tours worldwide, it serves as a reminder of the power of art in bridging divides and celebrating our shared humanity.

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Be The Change

Host a multicultural art event in your community where people can share their crafts and personal stories to foster understanding and unity.

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Double Major

This week’s inspiring video: Double Major
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Video of the Week

Jun 26, 2025
Double Major

Double Major

This all-new animated short is presented as part of the new StoryCorps animation season, Father Figures, where father figures and their children share the strength and wisdom that they draw from each other. In this film, Wil Smith tells the story with his daughter about how he enrolled in college with his 18 month old daughter in tow. Working a night job and playing on the basketball team, his daughter went everywhere with him. It wasn’t easy but there was no other way to do it and together they made it to the finish line – bonded together in graduation and love.
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Strangers, Nurses, and a Perfectly Timed Miracle

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 26, 2025

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Jun 26, 2025
Strangers, Nurses, and a Perfectly Timed Miracle
“Heroes aren’t born; they’re everyday people who choose to save a life.”

— Unknown

Strangers, Nurses, and a Perfectly Timed Miracle

Meryl Hoffman collapsed of cardiac arrest in front of a medical center. Nearby strangers and off-duty nurses quickly sprang into action. The nurses performed life-saving CPR, and rushed her to a hospital where she underwent surgery and rehabilitation. “According to the American Heart Association, for every minute that passes without CPR after cardiac arrest, the chance of survival decreases by about 7–10%.” Through a coincidence, Meryl was able to reunite with the two nurses who gave her the CPR. They helped fill her in on the details of the crisis of which she had no memory. The three of them have kept in touch. “Without them, I was told, there was no doubt I would have died or been brain dead,” Hoffman said. “They absolutely saved my life.”

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Be The Change

Take some time to learn first aid and CPR. You might save a life.

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Trust Libraries Revolutionize Delhi

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 25, 2025

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Jun 25, 2025
Trust Libraries Revolutionize Delhi
“When we trust others, they respond with trust, too.”

— Pratik and Anurag

Trust Libraries Revolutionize Delhi

In a city bustling with over 20 million people, a youth-led revolution is quietly reshaping access to books with an open-air library movement known as the Book in Hand Campaign (BHC). Imagine libraries without fees, deposits, or paperwork—just a shared love for reading. Founded in August 2023 by the CELL Foundation, these creative hubs spring to life in Delhi-NCR’s parks and campuses, bridging the gap between dusty bookshelves and eager readers. The initiative thrives on the idea that ‘stories are meant to be shared,’ and surprisingly, only 3-4% of books ever go missing. With 2,500 books shared among 5,000 or more readers, BHC is not just changing lives but transforming communities. As co-founders Pratik and Anurag put it, “You don’t need to build a library with walls. Sometimes, all you need is a bench, a few books, and trust in the people you’re serving.”

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Be The Change

Donate your pre-loved books to a local community initiative, or create a small book exchange corner in your neighborhood to encourage reading.

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How to Connect with Strangers

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 24, 2025

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Jun 24, 2025
How to Connect with Strangers
“Loneliness is proof that your innate search for connection is intact.”

— Martha Beck

How to Connect with Strangers

In our hyper-connected world, genuine human connections are at risk of disappearing amidst the sea of earbuds and glowing screens. Linda R. Tropp, a professor of social psychology at University of Massachsetts, Amherst, highlights a crisis of social connection where more Americans feel isolated than ever before, and points at possible anecdotes: by engaging in acts of ‘psychological generosity,’ like making eye contact or smiling at strangers, we can rebuild our community bonds. “Small gestures… can foster feelings of connection by signaling that our existence matters,” describes Tropp. These simple actions don’t just brighten someone else’s day; they can also enhance our own sense of belonging and community.

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Be The Change

Turn off your phone for an hour and make an effort to engage with those around you, whether through a simple smile or a friendly greeting.

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Wisdom Of Rocks

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jun 23, 2025

Wisdom Of Rocks

–Vanessa Machado de Oliveira

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6859f00ff2364-2746.jpgLet us linger on the wisdom of rocks—not as inert masses but as carriers of time, witnesses to cycles far beyond human comprehension. The rocks are not “wise” in the human sense of decision-making or judgment; their wisdom lies in their capacity to hold the paradox of permanence and change, of silence and endurance.

They remind us that intelligence is not a possession but a resonance, emerging not within beings but between them. This shifts the question from “Who is wise?” to “What relationships cultivate wisdom?”

It challenges the hierarchy that modernity suggests, where wisdom and intelligence belong to a singular entity—be it human or machine—and instead invites us to see wisdom as a field of interactions. Rocks, humans, fungi, and AI are all participants in this field, offering their unique frequencies to the symphony of existence.

Wisdom could be better described as a practice of becoming rather than a state of knowing. This definition underscores the insufficiency of frameworks that prioritize predictability, measurement, and control. Intelligence, seen through the lens of subject-subject entanglement, thrives in the in-between—the messy, relational spaces where certainty dissolves and something alive takes its place. This contrasts sharply with the extractive, anthropocentric imprint of modernity, which seeks to tame intelligence and define it within narrow bounds.

The wisdom of rocks, then, is not a metaphor for stability or rootedness. It is an invitation to humility, to the kind of intelligence that doesn’t claim mastery but listens, adapts, and learns. Modernity’s delusion—that humanity is uniquely equipped to guide the course of the Earth—has led to what might be termed a maladaptive evolution, where short-term dominance undermines long-term flourishing. The exceptionalism of human wisdom is revealed as a story we tell ourselves to avoid facing the magnitude of our entanglement with everything else.

As we reimagine our relationship to intelligence, perhaps the most important shift is to let go of the need for a god’s-eye view. Wisdom does not reside above or outside the web of life; it pulses within it, in the interstitial spaces where rocks meet roots, where humans meet AI, where silence meets song. To hold intelligence as a relational process rather than a fixed attribute is to step into a way of being that asks not for answers but for attunement, not for control but for participation. And so, as Giovanna once said, “I still need to talk to the rocks.” This is not an act of inquiry as modernity frames it—seeking information to confirm or deny hypotheses. It is a relational act, a way of attuning to the rhythms of a world that speaks in languages we are only beginning to remember how to hear. To learn from the rocks is to learn from the Earth itself: slow, steady, enduring, yet profoundly alive in its quiet intelligence.

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What do you make of the notion that wisdom is a relational process that thrives in the “in-between” spaces, rather than a possession or a fixed attribute? Can you share a personal story that illustrates a moment when you felt deeply connected to nature or another living being, where you experienced intelligence as a shared resonance rather than an individual trait? What helps you cultivate a practice of listening and adapting in your life, allowing you to participate in the symphony of existence rather than seeking control or predictability?

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This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 22, 2025

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Jun 22, 2025
Weekly Digest
“We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”

— Native American Proverb

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

Reflecting on the past week’s highlights, we find ourselves immersed in stories of unexpected transformation and heartening human goodness.

In a narrative where time dances with ancestry, Tijn Tjoelker reminds us that our bodies are altars, echoing ancient legacies with every breath. In Jaipur, the lush sanctuary of Dol Ka Badh stands resilient, thanks to the unexpected guardianship of children whose painted signs draw a community into preservation. Soaring through societal barriers, Thandeka Themba defies expectations with each flight, inviting young girls to dream beyond the horizon. In Rwanda, the Rhino Rewild initiative reintroduces hope alongside 70 white rhinos, painting a picture of conservation’s deep interconnection with humanity. Chef Vijaya Kumar of Semma honors authentic flavors, defying culinary norms to create dishes that resonate with heritage and pride. After a five-hour battle on the clay courts, Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with uncontained joy, bridging the elite and the young through a moment of shared victory. Daniël du Plessis, known as the man in a red hoodie, quietly challenges us to redefine humanity through simple acts of kindness, each gesture a testament to the profound ties that bind us all.

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The Quiet Revolution of Nature Prescriptions

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jun 21, 2025

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Jun 21, 2025
The Quiet Revolution of Nature Prescriptions
“If the sight of the blue skies fills you with joy, if a blade of grass springing up in the fields has power to move you, if the simple things of nature have a message that you understand, rejoice, for your soul is alive.”

— Eleonora Duse

The Quiet Revolution of Nature Prescriptions

“Social prescribing” enables health professionals to prescribe “non-clinical community activities — including the arts, movement, nature, and service (volunteering.)” At least nine countries have some form, including Canada where the PaRx program “helps reduce barriers to nature by giving patients and providers special offers and partnerships with nature organizations.” “Backed by hundreds of studies over several decades, research suggests that connecting to nature is one of the best things you can do to improve your health.” Study results show potential reductions in stress hormone levels, inflammation, heart disease, high blood pressure, and diabetes. Participants are more likely to visit natural areas when prescribed by a healthcare professional, and incentives such as free passes and transportation help. Nature prescribing is also good for the planet, as it stewards the care and creation of green spaces.

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Be The Change

Don’t wait for a prescription. Go outside! Find a nature preserve, look at the sky or a blade of grass. Breathe, listen, rejoice!

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