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What Does India’s Jugaad Culture Reveal About Sustainable Living?

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 26, 2025

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Jul 26, 2025
What Does India’s Jugaad Culture Reveal About Sustainable Living?
“Buy less, choose well. Make it last.”

— Vivienne Westwood

What Does India’s Jugaad Culture Reveal About Sustainable Living?

In a world moving at breakneck speed, where convenience cuts craftsmanship, there exists a timeless culture of repair, reuse, and reinvention deeply woven into the fabric of India. From the cobblers in Lucknow carefully mending soles with a “hathoda” and “sui,” to Jaipur’s artisanal printing presses leaving a smaller carbon footprint, these timeless trades stand resilient against a tide of disposability. Here lies the spirit of jugaad, a testament to simple resourcefulness, where artisans silently weave sustainability into throwaway culture of the chaotic urban sprawl. Their humble trades embody a profound question for the modern world: in our rush to speed up, what valuable skills and traditions might we lose? By embracing the art of fixing, these quiet custodians remind us: “While the world moves fast, there are still places where traditional methods hold strong.” Traversing Delhi’s backstreets and Jaipur’s vibrant markets, we witness the importance of preserving these community-driven trades that mitigate waste and promote a circular economy.

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See if you can fix the next belonging you intend to throw away — mend a frayed seam, replace the broken part of an appliance, or support a local cobbler, tailor, or repairperson.

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How Hope Helps Us Build a Meaningful Life

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 25, 2025

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Jul 25, 2025
How Hope Helps Us Build a Meaningful Life
“Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.”

— Unknown

How Hope Helps Us Build a Meaningful Life

A new study, published in the journal Emotion, underscores the pivotal role hope plays in crafting a meaningful life. Researchers found that more than just a vague sense of well-being, hope is crucial in shaping our perception of life’s significance. Through surveys involving over 900 participants, the study found a strong correlation between feelings of hope and perceived meaning in life, independent of general positive emotions. Interestingly, it appears that the emotion of hope, rather than beliefs about achieving specific outcomes, strongly influences how meaningful one’s life feels. Further studies involving college students demonstrated that feelings of hope could predict future feelings of life meaning over time. Hope fosters resilience, encouraging proactive approaches to adversity by transforming optimistic sentiment into actionable purpose. Megan Edwards, the study’s lead author, suggests that finding everyday moments of positivity and recognizing the impermanence of adversity can help cultivate hope. In challenging times, hope appears to be an essential component in maintaining and crafting a sense of purpose and meaning.

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Be The Change

Start a daily gratitude journal to note down at least one thing you’re hopeful about each day, nurturing a mindset that change is always possible.

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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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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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Adoption in the Animal Kingdom

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 23, 2025

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Jul 23, 2025
Adoption in the Animal Kingdom
“This is the kind of story that reminds us of what conservation is all about: collaboration, compassion, and hope.”

— Randy Kochevar

Adoption in the Animal Kingdom

Marat, a foal, was born as a result of a “decades-long commitment to saving the endangered Przewalski’s horse, which over the last 15 years has progressed remarkably well.” However, he became critically ill, and had to be transferred to a medical center. The separation led his mother to reject him – “a behavior not uncommon among wild horses after separation.” In the Minnesota zoo, another mare, Alice, had lost her newborn and with the help of the zoo, the owners introduced the foal to Alice. “From their first meeting, Alice accepted Marat as her own, nuzzling him gently and allowing him to nurse. The two have formed a heartwarming bond.” Once declared extinct, “fewer than 2,000 Przewalski’s horses exist today, making each foal born in human care critical to the species’ survival.”

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Be The Change

Explore ways you might contribute to caring for creatures in need.

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World Champion of Doing Nothing

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 22, 2025

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Jul 22, 2025
World Champion of Doing Nothing
“The mind is like water. When it’s turbulent, it’s difficult to see. When it’s calm, everything becomes clear.”

— Prasad Mahes

World Champion of Doing Nothing

In a world constantly buzzing with activity, a unique competition challenges participants to do absolutely nothing for 90 minutes. Born from the creativity of Korean artist Woopsyang in 2014, the Space-Out competition advocates for a break from relentless productivity. Over the hour and a half, dozens of contestants work hard to do nothing; they aspire to win by being the one with the steadiest heart rate, which is measured by judges every 15 minutes. Denis Kwan Hong-Wang, a winner in Hong Kong last October, shared, “Though it was a ‘space out’ competition, I was doing the opposite: actively practicing mindfulness.” During those precious minutes, it’s about observing, not reacting, and finding peace in pure stillness. The experience suggests that, amidst our hectic lives, taking a moment to be, rather than to do, is not only a relief but a necessity. For the winner, a trophy based on Rodin’s The Thinker is a daily reminder to embrace these nourishing pauses.

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Be The Change

Set aside 10 minutes each day to sit in silence, observing your breath and thoughts without judgment.

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The Willing Gift

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jul 21, 2025

The Willing Gift

–Author Unknown

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687ee449bf538-2748.jpgThe sun was soft that morning, and the breeze carried the smell of wet earth. Birds flew low over the fields as Acharya Vinoba Bhave walked barefoot along a dusty village path.

He walked slowly—not because he was tired, but because he liked to feel the earth under his feet. Every leaf, every stone, every ripple of air mattered to him.

A group of children spotted him from a distance and ran up. One boy held a ripe mango in his hand, its golden skin glowing in the sunlight.

“Vinoba ji!” he called, smiling. “I brought this for you! It’s from our mango tree!”

Vinoba looked at the boy with kind eyes and then at the fruit. “It looks sweet,” he said. Then, softly, he asked, “Tell me, did it fall from the tree on its own?”

The boy paused and scratched his head. “No, I… I shook the branch a little.”

There was no scolding in Vinoba’s face. Just a quiet smile.

“Ah,” he said, returning the mango. “Then I cannot accept it.”

The boy looked confused. “But… it’s just a mango! Everyone shakes the trees to get them.”

Vinoba knelt beside him. “Yes, it’s a small thing. But even small things matter when we are trying to live gently.”

He picked up a dry leaf from the ground and held it out. “See this leaf? It has fallen on its own. Nature gave it to me. But when we shake a tree, we are asking it to give before it is ready. That, too, is a kind of force.”

The children listened, wide-eyed.

“I try to eat only what nature offers willingly,” Vinoba said. “When a fruit falls on its own, it means the time has come. Until then, I must wait.”

The boy looked down at the mango in his hand. It still smelled sweet. But now, it felt different.

Vinoba placed a hand gently on the boy’s shoulder. “Don’t worry. Next time, if a mango falls by itself, I’ll eat it with great joy.”

And with that, he walked on—barefoot, silent, light as the morning breeze.

Even the smallest acts—like plucking a fruit—can be filled with care, respect, and non-violence. Vinoba Bhave teaches us to live in such a way that we never take more than what is freely given, and always listen to the quiet timing of nature.

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What do you make of the notion that living gently involves waiting for nature to offer its gifts willingly, as Vinoba Bhave demonstrated with the fallen mango? Can you share a personal story that reflects a moment when you chose patience over immediate gratification, perhaps waiting for the ripe opportunity to present itself naturally? What helps you cultivate the habit of listening to the quiet timing of nature in your daily life, ensuring that your actions align with a sense of respect and non-violence?

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How 20 Women Revived a Dying Forest

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 21, 2025

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Jul 21, 2025
How 20 Women Revived a Dying Forest
“Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.”

— Lao Tzu

How 20 Women Revived a Dying Forest

In the heart of Kerala, India’s western mountains, twenty remarkable women are rewriting the story of ecological resilience at the Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary. Without any formal training, these women have nurtured over 2,000 native plant species, reviving a dying forest and attracting a symphony of wildlife back into their care. “Nature can come back. But only if we stop the processes of destruction,” remarks Suprabha Seshan, an educator at the sanctuary. This isn’t just conservation; it’s a deeply personal journey of transformation and hope. Today, under the leadership of Laly Joseph, who started as a young recruit nearly forty years ago, the team’s quiet dedication has turned the sanctuary into a “Noah’s Ark for plants,” offering a blueprint for patient, loving restoration in a world desperate for quick fixes.

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Set up a small garden in your community or home, using native plants to support local biodiversity and create a sanctuary for both flora and fauna.

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This Week’s Featured News …

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 20, 2025

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Jul 20, 2025
Weekly Digest
“The earth has music for those who listen.”

— Shakespeare

This Week’s DailyGood Digest

This week, a series of uplifting stories emerged, each one weaving a tale of transformation and unity from the most surprising places.

In the heart of Paris, the soulful melodies of the Thanda Choir have transcended borders, captivating audiences worldwide and garnering millions of online admirers. In a high-stakes blend of nature and technology, the California red-legged frog finds a glimmering lifeline as AI strains its digital ears, bridging a 260-mile gap in their historic range. Anton Haig’s journey from golf prodigy to a man of resilience is a testament to the complexity of redemption, as he rebuilt himself from the ground up, proving victory off the course is the truest win. In Goodyear, Arizona, a police officer and a mechanic teamed up to help a homeless mom, their small acts of kindness bridging the chasms of hardship. In Ethiopia, paleoanthropologists are rewriting history with their discoveries, as local scholars reclaim the narrative of humanity’s origins. The Sonic Heritage project invites us to reconsider the poetry of sound, offering an auditory passage into realms often subsumed by tourism’s clamor. Bhawna Dehariya’s ascent to Everest, with a toddler on her hip, challenges narratives about women’s roles, proving that ambition and care are intertwined paths. Each story this week is a reminder of the transformative power of human spirit and the unexpected beauty found in perseverance.

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Unlikely Amazon Allies: Ocelot and Opossum

DailyGood: News That Inspires – Jul 19, 2025

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Jul 19, 2025
Unlikely Amazon Allies: Ocelot and Opossum
“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.”

— Albert Einstein

Unlikely Amazon Allies: Ocelot and Opossum

In the lush depths of the Peruvian Amazon, a surprising friendship between an ocelot and an opossum has astonished scientists. Ocelots are commonly known to prey on opossums, but multiple video recordings, spanning four years and different regions of the Peruvian Amazon, found these two creatures defy normal prey-predator roles by strolling together like old pals. It’s a captivating partnership, pushing our understanding of interspecies relationships and drawing parallels to the famous camaraderie between North American coyotes and badgers. This unexpected duo hints at nature’s complex tapestry, illustrating that unlikely alliances are not only possible but perhaps beneficial. Dr. Isabel Damas-Moreira, a senior researcher, notes, “This discovery was accidental. It reminds us how important it is to observe closely – because nature is often more complex than we think.”

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Take a moment to observe the world around you, recognizing the unexpected connections and relationships in your environment.

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