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Archive for December, 2025

Couple Invites Man in for Christmas; He Stayed 45 Years

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 31, 2025

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Dec 31, 2025
Couple Invites Man in for Christmas; He Stayed 45 Years
“Because disability isn’t a deficit within a person, it’s a deficit in a culture that doesn’t accept or enable a person for who they are.”

— Rachel Callander

Couple Invites Man in for Christmas; He Stayed 45 Years

“Ronnie Lockwood had autism and was left homeless after being ejected from a care centre at the age of 15.” On 23 December 1975, at age 30, Ronnie knocked on the door of the home of Rob Parsons and his wife Dianne. Rob recognized Ronnie from around town and they invited him in. They decided to let him stay for Christmas where “… he had these presents and he cried because he’d never known that sort of feeling of love, you know,” said Dianne. Later, when they asked him to consider moving on, Ronnie asked, “have I done a bad thing?” They let him stay – for 45 years. Ronnie became beloved in Cardiff, volunteering at a food bank, helping out wherever he could, especially at a community center to which he left £40,000 when he passed away in 2020. “People say to us, how did it happen – 45 years – but the honest truth is, in some ways, it happened a day at a time.” “Ronnie brought a richness into our lives.”

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Open your eyes and heart to discover and appreciate the richness offered from someone who has a disability.

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The Grandma Stand of New York

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 30, 2025

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Dec 30, 2025
The Grandma Stand of New York
“Listening is a magnetic and strange thing, a creative force… When we are listened to, it creates us, makes us unfold and expand.”

— Karl Augustus Menninger

The Grandma Stand of New York

Mike Matthews valued his Grandma Eileen and her wisdom so much that he connected her with a coworker who had asked for advice. Calls with Grandma Eileen became a regular occurrence. Mike wanted others to have the grandma experience, so he set up a lemonade stand with the technology to connect her to anyone in New York City who was walking by. “For six years, Eileen called in and spoke with thousands of complete strangers, until she passed away in 2018 at the age of 102.” A few years later, Mike had another idea. “I purchased a new lemonade stand, painted it Grandma Eileen’s favorite color — purple — and invited a kind grandma from my building to participate.” Since then, Grandma Stands have popped up all over the country and internationally with grannies from all walks of life who listen and care. Mike said, “They’ve lived through world wars, don’t care about social media, and have mastered the art of listening and asking questions. They just care about you and who you really are.”

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Have a conversation with your grandma, someone else’s grandma, or other kind elder. Open your heart to listen, and see what unfolds and expands.

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Just Note Gone

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Dec 29, 2025

Just Note Gone

–Shinzen Young

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69531bb17ebb7-2771.jpgWhich technique would I pick as the quickest path to enlightenment? That is a question that I’m often asked. It’s a difficult choice, but I think it would be the technique that I call ‘just note gone.’

We’ve all had the experience of the dog’s barking, the dog’s barking, and the dog stops barking. A plane passes over, you hear it, you hear it, it gets fainter, fainter, but then at some point, it goes from being faint to it’s not there anymore. […] Sooner or later, sensory experiences come to an end.

That would seem to be a trivial observation, but it turns out that it’s highly non-trivial. If you start to notice the instant when things vanish, that is pointing you towards something. The place where things go when they come to an end is the place from which they arise when they begin. Each time you notice a vanishing, you are briefly having your attention directed towards what might be called the deepest level of consciousness. […]

The first taste of richness—of gone—might be that it gives you relief when you’re in discomfort. Then, the next taste might be that you notice that there’s a kind of tranquility that propagates from each moment of vanishing. However, as your appreciation of gone grows, a couple things become evident that logically do not make any sense at all, but are part of the picture and indeed an important part of the picture.

You start to develop a sense of fulfillment associated with that gone-ing. Now, there’s a word in Sanskrit that means both cessation, to come to an end, and fulfillment in the sense that you have quenched your thirst. No other language in the world has the concepts linked that way—a single word in the language that links the notion of passing with the notion of having everything you want or contentment or fulfillment. That word in Sanskrit is nirvana. […]

There’s another thing that can come from the gone, and that’s that it leads to a sense of love, which doesn’t make any sense at all because it’s so impersonal and vacuous. Why should the best of the human arise due to contact with something that is utterly non-human? It doesn’t make any sense, but that’s the way it works.

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What do you make of the notion that the moment things vanish can direct your attention toward the deepest level of consciousness? Can you share a personal story of a time when your awareness of the end of a sensory experience brought you an unexpected sense of tranquility or fulfillment? What helps you cultivate an awareness of the ‘gone-ing’ moments in your daily life?

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This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 28, 2025

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Dec 28, 2025
Weekly Digest
“The earth does not belong to us: we belong to the earth.”

— Chief Seattle

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

As we look back on the week, we find unexpected moments where kindness and hope have taken center stage, transforming lives and communities.

In a quiet corner of Naples, Florida, a staff meeting at First Watch restaurant blossomed into a testament to collective compassion as the team chose to forgo their Christmas celebration to help a beloved cook adopt a baby. Meanwhile, in India’s heartlands, the Wildlife Trust of India’s ‘Right of Passage’ project carves out corridors for majestic elephants, crafting a narrative of coexistence between nature and humanity. In the Cape Flats, a spark of collective kindness illuminated the lives of 501 children through gifts given with love, transcending mere charity. Salvino Oliveira’s journey from a Rio favela to City Hall serves as a testament to the power of education and the necessity for equitable opportunity. In Assam, the ‘Stork Sisters’ initiative transformed the greater adjutant stork into a symbol of communal resilience, empowering women and fostering ecological harmony. The art of ‘deep hanging out’ encourages embracing stillness, suggesting that real innovation springs from dwelling in the unknown. Finally, in New Zealand’s Zealandia sanctuary, a pair of endangered takahē birds welcomed a chick into the world, a miracle of life defying its supposed limits, reminding us of nature’s unpredictable grace.

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Can AI Teach Us Meditation?

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 26, 2025

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Dec 26, 2025
Can AI Teach Us Meditation?
“The ultimate goal of meditation is to become fully present in our lives—to awaken to the wonder and marvel of the ordinary that we often take for granted.”

— Shinzen Young

Can AI Teach Us Meditation?

Imagine AI guiding you through meditation like a wise book that talks back! At 80, Shinzen Young, a meditation innovator, is blending AI, neuroscience, and contemplative practices to create an unprecedented teaching experiences. Picture a world where everyone, no matter their language or location, can access advanced meditation techniques. Shinzen calls this a tool to bring out ‘the better angels of our being.’ It’s not replacing human teachers but enhancing accessibility with superhuman capabilities. Embrace equanimity—a balanced approach to life’s pleasures and pains—as the true cornerstone of this journey, aiming to reduce suffering through science-aligned means. Explore how technology might become a subtle breath guiding humanity toward wellbeing.

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Spend time meditating each day, and explore AI meditation apps to enhance your practice and connect with others globally. Join a conversation with Shinzen Young this weekend.

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Feeding Thousands In Singapore

This week’s inspiring video: Feeding Thousands In Singapore
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Video of the Week

Dec 25, 2025
Feeding Thousands In Singapore

Feeding Thousands In Singapore

In this corner of South East Asia, a diverse group of people from different backgrounds in nationalities and professions work together to put food on the table for those who are in need. This 100% volunteer-run organization not only cooks up 3000 appetizing meals daily but also arranges tuition payments for school children and bereavement services regardless of race or creed.
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Up All Night in New York, Selling Christmas Trees

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 24, 2025

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Dec 24, 2025
Up All Night in New York, Selling Christmas Trees
“The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.”

— Mahatma Gandhi

Up All Night in New York, Selling Christmas Trees

Meet Kyle Dalton and Charlie May, two souls who trade comfort for an urban forest life in New York City. Every year, they leave their familiar lives behind, living in a tiny trailer in Brooklyn to sell Christmas trees, and their tale is one of camaraderie and resilience. Kyle swaps his sales rep gig in Canada for a month of selling trees, while Charlie juggles his life as a ski instructor and river guide to return to this unique seasonal hustling. They add warmth to the city’s cold nights, powered by a love for the holiday spirit, even blocking out city lights with black garbage bags for sleep. They remind us that unexpected community connection doesn’t require a fancy package, just an open heart and a willingness to step out of comfort zones.

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Support your local seasonal workers by purchasing products from them, or simply offer them a warm drink and a chat.

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One University’s Pay-it-Forward Student Loans

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 23, 2025

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Dec 23, 2025
One University's Pay-it-Forward Student Loans
“The greatest use of life is to spend it for something that will outlast it.”

— William James

One University’s Pay-it-Forward Student Loans

What if student loans weren’t just a burden, but a way to pay-it-forward? At the University of Hawai’i Manoa, a revolutionary “renewable learning fund” helps students finance their education without the burden of interest-heavy loans. This $2.5 million revolving loan fund by Social Finance supports low-income engineering students by offering zero-interest loans. Borrowers who earn above $50,000 when they enter the workforce repay their loan, while others can defer payments. Local businesses also chip in, turning this fund into a win-win for students and employers. As one student puts it, “The money is going back to someone just like you.” President and chief operating officer at Social Finance, Kirstin Hill, describes, “There’s something that feels very different in saying, ‘I’m repaying a loan and it’s not going off to some abstract place but it’s going to create this opportunity for someone else.’” This innovative model is also set to inspire similar models across other US states.

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Support or volunteer for organizations that promote affordable education in your community.

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Who Is The One That Counts?

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Dec 22, 2025

Who Is The One That Counts?

–Theodore Roosevelt

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69494c7c2d21d-2761.jpgIt is not the critic who counts; not the (one) who points out how the strong (person) stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.

The credit belongs to the (one) who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly;

who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming;

but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions;

who spends (themselves) in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement,

and who at the worst, if (they fail), at least (fail) while daring greatly, so that (their) place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.

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When Second Chances Feed Communities

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Dec 22, 2025

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Dec 22, 2025
When Second Chances Feed Communities
“There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it.”

— Edith Wharton

When Second Chances Feed Communities

In a touching StoryCorps interview, Scott Thompson and Cyndi Kirkhart share how their paths intertwined at Facing Hunger Food Bank. Scott, fresh out of prison, found his calling through Cyndi’s belief in him. “Someone’s kindness made a difference,” shares Cyndi, a sentiment that resonates through Scott’s story as he expresses gratitude for the chance that altered his life’s course. Cyndi’s fierce presence and Scott’s renewed purpose created a powerful duo whose work contibutes to feeding over 150,000 people in their region. From Scott’s childhood memories of his grandfather delivering food boxes, to his present role, this story is a testament to how acts of kindness ripple through generations.

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Volunteer at a local food bank, community shelter, or simply prepare a homecooked meal and offer it to strangers.

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