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Archive for July 24, 2025

Changing the World, One Word at a Time

This week’s inspiring video: Changing the World, One Word at a Time
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Video of the Week

Jul 24, 2025
Changing the World, One Word at a Time

Changing the World, One Word at a Time

Listen to Belissa Escobedo, Rhiannon McGavin, and Zariya Allen, members of the Get Lit organization, who are determined to change the world, one word at a time. In this performance of "Somewhere in America," they open for singer John Legend at the Hollywood Bowl. The poem calls to attention the kind of information passed along unintentionally in classrooms, and addresses some hard truths and dark topics based on personal experiences. "I think poetry is the best way to express emotions…" McGavin says, "It’s an amazing way to help people, especially teens."
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Broken Things to Bold Ideas: Edinburgh’s Festival of Repair

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 24, 2025

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News That Inspires
Jul 24, 2025
Broken Things to Bold Ideas: Edinburgh’s Festival of Repair
“The wound is the place where the Light enters you.”

— Rumi

Broken Things to Bold Ideas: Edinburgh’s Festival of Repair

In the heart of Edinburgh, Scotland, the International Book Festival returns with a theme as old as time yet as urgent as the morning news: “Repair.” This year, the festival becomes a crucible for “mending what’s broken-in society, the environment and ourselves,” as Festival CEO Jenny Niven eloquently explains. With 641 writers from 35 countries, the event is a tapestry of voices weaving tales of reconciliation, environmental reverence, and personal healing. From the Japanese art of kintsugi that breathes beauty into brokenness to geopolitical dialogues that confront global dissonance, the festival asks us to confront discomfort and embrace conversation as a salve. The theme of Repair whispers the truth that fixing the fractures of our world begins in the imagination, asking each participant to return ready to stitch their own communities with newfound threads of empathy and understanding.

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Be The Change

Engage in a local “repair café” or start a small gathering with friends or neighbors where you share skills to fix broken items.

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