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DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 15, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 15, 2026
Weekly Digest
“The giving of love is an education in itself.”

— Eleanor Roosevelt

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

From the depths of silent forests to bustling city streets, our inspirations this week revealed the quiet power of unity and understanding.

This week, we explored how a woman’s promise to love turns into an enduring lesson in humanity, reminding us that love itself is transformative. In the quiet exchanges between introverts and extroverts, Eckhart Tolle shows us that creating space for grace allows transformation to unfold naturally. An 18-year-old’s reflections on peace reveal that despite our differences, common desires can bridge divides. In Morocco, abandoned cemeteries are revitalized, fostering cultural integration and mutual respect across faiths. Lao Tzu’s wisdom resonates through a serene forest, where nature’s unhurried pace achieves everything. Meanwhile, a teen-run hotline offers an empathetic ear, reassuring that vulnerability is a strength. The simple act of sharing blackberries reminds us of our innate need for connection, while a mysterious dog heroically guides rescuers, embodying the unexpected grace that often saves us. Together, these stories weave a narrative of hope, urging us to embrace love, transformation, and the quiet miracles that surround us.

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Every Afternoon, Construction Workers Stop What They’re Doing for One Little Girl

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 15, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 15, 2026
Every Afternoon, Construction Workers Stop What They’re Doing for One Little Girl

Shine your light into the darkness. What you get in return can be priceless.

” — Unknown

Every Afternoon, Construction Workers Stop What They’re Doing for One Little Girl

Every afternoon around 3 p.m., a small group of construction workers in Cleveland climb to an upper floor of a building under construction and wave to 4-year-old Brinley Wyczalek in the Cleveland Clinic. It began in January when her father, Travis, shone a flashlight at the site where the Neurological Institute is being built, and someone flashed a light back. After the workers taped a sign, “Get Well Soon” and the family responded: “Thank you. Waiting for a heart,” the workers said: “Praying for you and your family. Keep fighting.” Then they organized donations including coloring books, games, a signed hard hat, and even a huge stuffed bear. “We build hospitals to help people heal,” said union carpenter Devan Nail. “But seeing Brinley made it personal. We wanted her to know she has a whole crew behind her.” While she waits for a transplant, Brinley is supported by a ventricular assist device that helps pump blood through her body. “Healing isn’t only physical,” said her pediatric cardiologist, Dr. Shahnawaz Amdani. “Human connection matters deeply.”

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Be The Change

Today, notice someone who might be waiting — in a hospital, a care facility, behind a counter, in line, or even just at home — and find a simple way to let them know they’ve been seen. It doesn’t require grand gestures; wave through a window, leave an unexpected note, or simply pause long enough to acknowledge someone’s presence with your full attention, transforming an ordinary moment into a reminder that they matter.

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How One Teenager Is Saving India’s Silently Dying Ponds.

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 14, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 14, 2026
How One Teenager Is Saving India's Silently Dying Ponds.
“Trust is built the long way; by showing up again and again, doing the unglamorous work, and strengthening local systems instead of trying to replace them.”

— Dev Karan

How One Teenager Is Saving India’s Silently Dying Ponds.

For Indian environmental activist Dev Karan, 17, a Young Activist Summit laureate for 2025, it all began with a village pond that no longer looked like a pond. It made climate change real for him, and inspired him to found Pondora, which fosters community stewardship of vulnerable water sources, in 2024. While India has had major efforts to restore water bodies, ongoing maintenance has been a problem. Pondora wanted a model where a pond stays alive because a community stays involved. Students are trained as ‘Pond Ambassadors’ who monitor water health, using a smart pond maintenance kit that combines electronic sensors with simple chemical test strips and is connected to a phone so readings can be logged. Pond committees are formed under the Village Council structure, so responsibility lies with local systems. This approach is a replicable model for water ecosystem restoration, one pond at a time. It validates the idea that small, local solutions deserve to be taken seriously if they are built to last.

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Be The Change

Think about a natural resource in your community that’s being neglected — a park, stream, or green space. This week, take one small step toward its care: pick up litter, learn about its history, or talk to a neighbor about its importance. Like Dev’s work with ponds, lasting change begins when we move from awareness to consistent, unglamorous action in our own backyards.

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Dementia at 48: a Woman Who Lives Her Promise

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 13, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 13, 2026
Dementia at 48: a Woman Who Lives Her Promise
“The giving of love is an education in itself.”

— Eleanor Roosevelt

Dementia at 48: a Woman Who Lives Her Promise

LaShonda Adams sits beside her 48-year-old husband, gently explaining to him — again — that she is his wife, that the people around him are his children, that he is home and safe. After a massive heart attack left him without oxygen to his brain for more than twenty minutes, he developed vascular dementia, erasing 24 years of their life together from his memory. “Sometimes you remember me, sometimes you don’t,” she tells him with remarkable tenderness as he experiences sundowning, a state of confusion that arrives with the evening. In her videos, Adams reminds him daily of their story, showing pictures, answering the same questions with unfailing patience, becoming the keeper of a love he can no longer hold. What viewers witness is not heartbreak performing for sympathy, but something rarer: a woman who promised “in sickness and in health” now living inside that vow, loving a man who doesn’t remember her but can still feel, in her calm voice and steady presence, that he is cherished.

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Be The Change

Today, pause when someone asks how you are and answer with something true — even if small — about what you’re learning or curious about lately. It could be a documentary that fascinated you, a recipe you’re attempting, or a question you’ve been pondering. In a world that often reduces us to what we produce, sharing what genuinely interests you reminds both you and the listener that you contain multitudes beyond your job title or obligations.

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Procrastination

This week’s inspiring video: Procrastination
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KarmaTube.org

Video of the Week

Mar 12, 2026
Procrastination

Procrastination

All of us avoid certain tasks. We avoid some out of fear, frustration or perfectionism. This delightful short animated video gives a chance to chuckle lovingly at the strategies we use to procrastinate and the payoffs we might be getting.
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Where Introverts and Extroverts Find Common Ground

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 12, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 12, 2026
Where Introverts and Extroverts Find Common Ground
“You cannot transform yourself, and you certainly cannot transform your partner or anybody else. All you can do is create a space for transformation to happen, for grace and love to enter.”

— Eckhart Tolle

Where Introverts and Extroverts Find Common Ground

Some insights from an author and psychologist may help introverts and extroverts better understand one another in order to improve their relationships. “Introverts are quieter, more introspective, deliberate, really into alone time. Extroverts are more talkative, outgoing, energetic, and very into socializing.” Most people fall somewhere in between the extremes depending on context and age. One suggestion is talking to one another about needs and issues, and expressing appreciation for the positive impact of the other’s behavior. Another suggestion is a code phrase, gesture, or symbol. For instance, the author “has a bracelet she wears to remind herself to listen and not just rush to fill the silence.” She says, “It’s my little anchor.”

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Be The Change

Create a code phrase, gesture, or symbol such as a bracelet as a reminder to increase your awareness of one of your default behaviors as a way to make space for others’ forms of expression.

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At 18, Peace for Me Is …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 11, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 11, 2026
At 18, Peace for Me Is ...
“Our differences may sometimes divide us, but a shared desire for peace has the power to bring us back.”

— Miki Kawamura

At 18, Peace for Me Is …

Miki Kawamura, founder and director of the Youth Peace Ambassadors program, learned something significant at the rural Japanese school she attended until 2025. Seeing two students from completely different political backgrounds brought together by working on a single multilingual art installation about peace, she realized that while our differences may sometimes divide us, a shared desire for peace can make conflicts part of the path toward something rather than the end of the road. When YPA launched a global video collection campaign for Expo 2025 in Osaka and 1,200 video messages about ‘what peace means’ arrived from 70 countries within two weeks, she realized that young people had answers — they just lacked a platform. “I want my work to help people transform inwardly, connect outwardly, and co-create a world where the leading question isn’t ‘How do we win?’ but ‘How do we belong to each other?’” It starts with two people sitting side by side, looking at something beautiful they built together, she says.

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Be The Change

Begin within. Consider an aspect of your life in which you are not at peace. Create an intention to create a path to peace around it. See the next stone.

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How Morocco’s Abandoned Cemeteries Give New Life Across Faiths

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 10, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 10, 2026
How Morocco’s Abandoned Cemeteries Give New Life Across Faiths
““We are pairing cultural integration with livelihood development,. And it really works. There’s respect for one another. The mixing, the experience is changing people’s points of view.””

— Yossef Ben-Meir, president of the High Atlas Foundation.

How Morocco’s Abandoned Cemeteries Give New Life Across Faiths

Abandoned cemeteries in Morocco are opening hearts between Jewish and Muslim people in a unique interfaith project that began in 2012 when the Moroccan Jewish community allowed 36-year-old Abderahim Baddah to use land beside the Akrich cemetery to cultivate crops while restoring the site. Now that once abandoned 700-year-old Jewish cemetery is home to a plant nursery run by local Muslims that gives the community 46,000 fruit and nut tree saplings and has brought the village other benefits such as solar panels, a water well, and a women’s weaving cooperative. Thanks to the nonprofit High Atlas Foundation, the idea is spreading and many old Jewish burial sites are being loaned for free to establish organic fruit tree and medicinal plant nurseries that benefit Muslim villagers. Nearly 300,000 tree saplings, including almond, fig, pomegranate, olive and carob, have been grown and supplied to 1,500 farming families since 2012.

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Be The Change

Find a land-based project to work on with people of other faiths. Think outside the box when it comes to economic development.

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Seeing Reality As It Is

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Mar 9, 2026

Seeing Reality As It Is

–Annaka Harris

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69a57cf988574-2779.jpgMeditation entails the difficult task of cultivating concentrated attention on one’s moment-to-moment experience—the endless stream of feelings, thoughts, and perceptions—without judging or interpreting them, or allowing them to take immediate control of our actions. In its simplest form, meditation is a skill that undercuts all our evolved drives: planning for the future, learning from the past, following our desires to eat, drink, avoid pain, etc. Instead, during meditation practice one simply allows the feelings, thoughts, and perceptions to come into and out of being, and in doing so, these experiences begin to take on a different character than they do in daily life.

The Fitness-Beats-Truth theorem (FBT), developed by cognitive scientist Donald Hoffman, claims that the way evolutionary processes succeed is by hiding the truth (the underlying reality). In other words, the less a system models the true nature of the universe, the more likely it is to survive. Our experience of seeing the color green, for example, is useful for navigating the world but gives us no indication of the underlying phenomena of lightwaves bouncing off a leaf, entering the retina, and being processed by the brain. FBT simply goes a few steps further, arguing that all of our experiences—even of space and time itself—are misleading us about the true nature of reality.That’s not to say that our perceptions aren’t good maps of reality—if they weren’t, they obviously wouldn’t be evolutionarily advantageous. “Green” is a great way to compress a lot of information into a single experience, but our experience of seeing green tells us nothing about lightwaves, etc., and it causes us to believe there is “green” outside of our experience of it. If FBT is correct, as I’m convinced it is, it would make sense that meditation training has the potential to help us better understand a more fundamental layer of reality, as it is in part an exercise in “un-training” our evolved perceptions.

Perhaps we shouldn’t find it surprising that people regularly experience spaceless and timeless states in meditation, embodied as a “oneness” that no longer takes on the character of being a separate “self.” All three of these perceptions—space, time, and self— have been revealed by neuroscience and physics to be a distortion of what we now understand to be the underlying physical reality. These perceptions can even be considered illusions in one sense of the word.That’s not to say that meditation practice should cause us to lose appreciation for our lives as evolved human beings. Quite the opposite. By expanding one’s curiosity, freedom, and ability to be present, meditation helps people more naturally find beauty and awe in the full range of human experience. But it is no surprise that cultivating this particular skill might also serve as a tool to help us perceive reality more accurately in some instances. If evolution hides the truth from us by definition, it would make sense that training the mind to unravel our conscious experience to the purest form we have access to—letting go of our evolved perceptions and drives for minutes, hours, or days at a time—could give us a clearer window on to the universe in which we are embedded.

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What do you make of the notion that meditation can reveal a more fundamental layer of reality by “un-training” our evolved perceptions and allowing us to experience states beyond the illusions of space, time, and self? Can you share a personal story that illustrates a moment when you let go of your usual perceptions or judgments and felt a deep sense of interconnectedness or “oneness”? What helps you sustain the habit of being present and cultivating concentrated attention in your daily life, so you can deepen your experience of beauty and awe in the full range of human experience?

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The Ice Cube Forest

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Mar 09, 2026

DailyGood DailyGood
News That Inspires
Mar 09, 2026
The Ice Cube Forest
“Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.”

— Lao Tzu

The Ice Cube Forest

On Google Earth, Nguyen Minh Hai’s twenty-year forest looks like an ice cube melting in hot water—a small patch of biodiversity surrounded by endless monoculture. It began with a misunderstanding: Vietnamese farmers read Fukuoka’s One Straw Revolution and thought natural farming would be easy. One woman spent $21,000 clearing hillsides, pumping water uphill, battling disease—only to notice, exhausted and broke, that the land she’d left untouched had grown trees “as thick as paint buckets.” As one Dutch engineer discovered, “I even built my house around a large boulder instead of breaking it.” Over a decade, these farmers learned that the forest’s secret lies in a humble 5% of the soil—the living organisms that activate everything else. Now they call each other “straw,” a network of gift-economy practitioners who’ve realized that nurturing a forest and nurturing oneself are the same slow revolution. The ultimate goal, Fukuoka wrote, is not growing crops but “the cultivation and perfection of human beings.”

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Be The Change

Notice one thing in your life you’ve been trying to control or fix through force. This week, experiment with stepping back—let it rest, observe what emerges naturally when you stop intervening.

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