The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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A Message In A Bottle Sparked A 25-Year Friendship — And They Finally Met
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A Message In A Bottle Sparked A 25-Year Friendship — And They Finally Met

How paying people to protect a rainforest is rewriting colonial history on a tiny African island
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How paying people to protect a rainforest is rewriting colonial history on a tiny African island

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For centuries, the tiny West African island of Príncipe was a place where nature was exploited and people were brought in chains to work it. Today, the descendants of those laborers are being paid to protect it. The Faya Foundation, funded by South African tech billionaire Mark Shuttleworth, launched what may be one of the most consequential conservation experiments on the planet: a quarterly dividend paid directly to islanders who agree to follow an environmental protection code. Nearly 3,000 people, more than 60 percent of Príncipe’s adult population, have signed up, and the first payment of €816 (approximately $890) has already been delivered. For agricultural worker Kimilson Lima, 43, it’s already changing daily life. “With this money we can have a proper floor in the house,” he said. “And an inside toilet.” An island shaped by extraction The island earned its nickname, the “African Galapagos,” for good reason. Separated from the African mainland by more than 160 miles of ocean, Príncipe developed rainforests unlike anywhere else on Earth, where giant land snails and crabs were once among the top predators. New species are still being discovered there today, including a previously unknown owl found during a recent scientific expedition. That biodiversity has always been fragile. After Portuguese colonizers built a cacao plantation economy and independence came in 1975, the industry collapsed. Communities descended from Angolan and Cabo Verdean laborers were left to subsist on what they could grow or forage, which increasingly meant pushing deeper into the forest and cutting trees. Conservation and survival were in direct competition. Turning stewardship into income Shuttleworth, who first visited Príncipe in 2010, saw a different path. “The normal path to development for Príncipe would be to cut down forest and grow ‘fair trade’ peppercorns,” he said. “But we want to reward them as stewards of their precious environment.” His total commitment to the project stands at around £87 million (approximately $110 million). The Faya project is designed to make that stewardship concrete and consequential. Dividends are reduced if unauthorized tree-felling is discovered. The foundation is also funding school improvements, reorganizing the island’s dormant cacao trade, and offering financial literacy support, a practical recognition that many residents have never held a bank account. “We have to explain that it’s not free money,” said project CEO Jorge Alcobia. The road to this moment wasn’t without skepticism. “They’ve been let down in the past,” Alcobia said. “They didn’t expect us to keep our promises.” Felipe Nascimento, president of the self-governing region, offered a more direct read on what has been built: “This will be truly transformative, both for nature and for the people.” Generations of knowledge, now with a paycheck For some residents, the project has opened entirely new futures. Yodiney dos Santos spent years foraging in the forest; now he leads scientific expeditions into it. He’s also candid about the fragility that the project is trying to address. “My ancestors came here from Angola,” he said, “and, for food, they brought the edible West African snail, which then escaped. Now those snails are pushing out the endemic Príncipe snails.” Protecting this ecosystem isn’t abstract. It means actively managing the mistakes accumulated over generations. A model worth watching and questioning Not everyone is convinced. Edmundo, who is now selling cacao to the project after years of having no buyer, welcomes the economic access. But another resident raised a pointed question at a community gathering: “It’s a monopoly — is that good? And what if everyone buys motorbikes and chainsaws?” It’s a fair tension to sit with. The Faya model works only as long as the money keeps coming, and right now that money flows from one person’s fortune. But Shuttleworth is explicit about the larger ambition: “If it’s successful, I hope other irreplaceable ecosystems might benefit from the idea at scale.” On Príncipe, the question of whether paying people to protect nature can outlast its founding patron remains open. What’s already clear is that the old forced choice between a livable life and a living forest doesn’t have to be the only option on offer.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post How paying people to protect a rainforest is rewriting colonial history on a tiny African island first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

How to find your personal aesthetic when the internet keeps showing you everyone else’s
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How to find your personal aesthetic when the internet keeps showing you everyone else’s

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Style has a way of feeling most elusive exactly when you’re looking for it. You know what you’re drawn to. You know what you like on other people. But translating that into something that feels genuinely, consistently you? That’s where things get slippery. The good news is that finding your personal aesthetic isn’t a puzzle to solve all at once. It’s a process, and the fact that your style has shifted over the years isn’t a problem. It’s just evidence that you’ve been living. As stylist and writer Leandra Medine Cohen put it: “Let your style happen to you. Let life begin to show on you, allow nature to take its course and then adjust, modify, accept what you are and make it the best.” The ingredient she says gets overlooked most? Honesty. “You can’t know your style until you know yourself.” That’s the real starting point. Here’s what comes after it. Start with the people and things that make you feel something Everyone has style icons, even people who insist they don’t. Think about the movie characters whose wardrobes you’ve quietly envied, the musicians who wear exactly what you wish you reached for, the accounts on your explore page that give you an immediate, slightly irrational “I need that” feeling. Those reactions are useful data. Chase them. When you collect reference points, look for what you actually share with them. Proportion, silhouette, color palette, or just the overall mood of their spaces or outfits. Icons work best as genuine reference points rather than dress-up templates. If you’re trying to replicate a look that doesn’t suit your actual body or lifestyle, you’ll keep buying things that feel right in the cart and wrong in real life. This works just as well for home aesthetics as it does for clothing. Once you’ve gathered a handful of people or images that consistently speak to you, look for the throughline in common colors, shapes, textures, and recurring moods. That throughline is where your personal aesthetic actually is. Build a mood board before you spend anything Before any shopping, whether it’s for clothes or furniture, lay your inspiration out visually. A mood board doesn’t need to be elaborate. Canva works perfectly well. So does a printed collage taped to a wall. The goal is simply to see your references next to each other so the patterns become impossible to ignore. Cast wide when you’re building it. Color swatches, photographs, film stills, and a picture of a meal that captures a certain atmosphere. Really envision the life and the space you want, then step back and look at what emerges. You’ll see what you already own that fits, and you’ll recognize the pieces that belong to an older version of you and have been taking up room ever since. Give yourself time, and be patient with the process Here’s where the internet becomes a two-sided thing. The same platforms that surface all that gorgeous, global inspiration are also the ones that make your home, wardrobe, and taste feel perpetually a step behind. That’s not an accurate read. That’s just a feed. Personal aesthetic doesn’t arrive fully formed. It develops through experimentation, through phases you’ll eventually cringe at, and through the slow accumulation of things that genuinely suit you. Style writer Lydia Okello put it well: “Don’t feel like you have to change everything all at once — it’s okay to gradually morph into the next iteration of your personal style, like an Animorphs cover.” When you find yourself drawn to an account that feels like baguettes and bikes in Amsterdam, take a moment to ask what part of that actually maps onto your life. What can you genuinely borrow rather than wholesale adopt? That selectivity is what makes a personal aesthetic actually personal, rather than just someone else’s look that you liked for a season. Developing your style is a lot like developing your sense of self: both get richer the less you rush them, and both have a way of making more sense in retrospect than they do in the middle of the process.   Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post How to find your personal aesthetic when the internet keeps showing you everyone else’s first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

The Native Seed Farm Safeguarding California’s Future
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The Native Seed Farm Safeguarding California’s Future

On a stretch of prime agricultural land in California’s Sacramento Valley, native grasses, milkweed and wildflowers grow in tight rows under the state’s wide blue sky. Orange poppies, purple lupines and golden tidy tips create a living palette against the backdrop of the Sutter Buttes.   The post The Native Seed Farm Safeguarding California’s Future appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.

He Made a Battery Pack Using Disposable Vapes to Power His Electric Car (WATCH)
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He Made a Battery Pack Using Disposable Vapes to Power His Electric Car (WATCH)

A man has powered an electric car using a homemade battery pack built out of discarded vapes, on a quest to show that so many valuable resources are being cast off every day. Last year, GNN reported that Chris Doel had stripped down the lithium batteries from 500 disposable vapes, power sources he describes as […] The post He Made a Battery Pack Using Disposable Vapes to Power His Electric Car (WATCH) appeared first on Good News Network.