The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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Fast-Acting Employees Prevent Disaster When Fire Breaks Out on Disney’s “It’s A Small World Ride”
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Fast-Acting Employees Prevent Disaster When Fire Breaks Out on Disney’s “It’s A Small World Ride”

Walt Disney World cast members take their jobs and park guests’ experiences seriously. They understand that a Disney vacation is costly and people come to the parks ready for magic. Guests expect attractions to wow, and when things go wrong, cast members swoop in to save the day. Recently, Magic Kingdom guests got a bit more than they bargained for when a fire erupted on the “It’s a Small World” ride. Video footage posted online shows smoke billowing from the ride’s loading area and guests quickly exiting. Fire breaks out at It's a Small World at Magic Kingdomhttps://t.co/IqrE9QLO0l pic.twitter.com/kiC7akQ1aA— Mattlegostar (@Mattlegostar2) July 1, 2026 Everyone Got Off of “It’s a Small World” Safely Apparently, a guest’s phone charger sparked the fire on “It’s a Small World,” and Disney cast members cleared the area to put it out and keep guests safe. Video of the incident circulated online, and many people couldn’t help but make jokes. “It’s a world of laughter, a world of tears. There was smoke on the ride, that will last for years. There is much to explore when you’re evacuated through a door. It’s a small world after all,” someone wrote on Facebook. This person also wrote a little ditty. “‘The world’s a hot mess after all! The world’s a hot mess after all! The world’s a hot mess after all! It’s a hot, hot mess!'” “We didn’t start the fire, but the world’s been burning and the doll’s still turning,” another person laughed. One person claimed to be on “It’s a Small World” when the fire occurred and reaped the benefits. “I was there! They evacuated us from the boats and we got to see the backside of the buildings then they gave us two lighting lanes! And I didn’t even have to finish the ride,” someone wrote. This story’s featured image can be found here

7 simple rituals that help you feel like yourself again
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7 simple rituals that help you feel like yourself again

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM There’s a specific kind of “off” that’s difficult to capture or express in words. No, you’re not feeling sick or sad. You’re not stressed exactly. Just… off. A little irritable, a little flat, carrying something you can’t quite put your finger on. You’ve cleaned the kitchen, gone for a walk, scrolled past a hundred wellness tips, and none of it has helped bring you back into balance. Sound familiar? Another workout or productivity hack probably isn’t what this is asking for. What tends to help is a reset: something slow and deliberate that gives your nervous system a chance to catch up. Spiritual and cultural traditions around the world have built rituals around exactly this. Most of them take less than ten minutes. Pause before you try to fix anything When something feels off, the instinct is to solve it: scroll, distract, push through, add something to the list. But pushing through what you haven’t acknowledged usually just buries it a little deeper. “When my energy feels unsettled, I try not to immediately fix it,” says Misun Delmon, a wellness practitioner and ritual designer. “My first ritual is usually creating stillness. I dim the lights, open a window if possible, and burn either incense or something grounding. Then I sit quietly for a few minutes without my phone or distractions.” It’s easy to miss how much you’re carrying when you’re always in motion. A few quiet minutes can be enough to notice what’s weighing on you, and sometimes noticing is most of the work. Use scent and smoke with intention Burning sage, incense, or palo santo has become popular in wellness spaces, but these practices go back centuries across many cultures. What made them meaningful was never the smoke itself. It was the intention behind lighting it. “A lot of people treat palo santo or sage like a quick room fragrance,” says Delmon. “But traditionally these materials were used much more intentionally. Before lighting anything, I always recommend slowing down for a moment and asking yourself: What am I trying to release? What energy do I want to invite in?” Open a window, move through your space a little more slowly, and let the ritual be about the question rather than the scent. Whether you’re processing a hard week or a low feeling you can’t explain, approaching it with intention changes the experience. Try a ten-minute reset ritual “One of the simplest rituals is what I call a reset ritual,” says Delmon. “Open a window. Light incense or a candle. Slowly tidy one small area around you, even just your desk or bedside table. Take a few deep breaths and consciously release tension from your body.” Then: “Sit quietly for two minutes without consuming anything. No scrolling, no music, no stimulation.” Fresh air, something familiar to smell, one tidied surface, two minutes of not taking anything in. Small things, but in a day that never stops, that’s a real interruption. Clear something physical When things pile up around us, they tend to feel heavier inside too. That connection between environment and inner state is why sweeping, cleaning, and organizing show up in renewal rituals in cultures around the world and throughout history. You don’t need to overhaul anything. Pick one small thing: change your sheets, clear a cluttered surface, throw out any dead flowers, wipe down a mirror, sort out your entryway. The goal isn’t a perfect space. It’s movement where something felt stuck. Create a space that belongs to you Most people have one spot in the house where they naturally feel calmer. If you don’t have one yet, it’s worth making one. It doesn’t need to be elaborate: a candle you love, a few books, a plant, a journal, one object that means something to you. What matters is that going there is a reason to slow down. Over time your body learns what that corner means. It starts to associate it with rest before you’ve even settled in. That’s not a small thing. Let go of what you’ve been holding onto Not all the heaviness we carry comes from what’s happening right now. Some of it comes from what we’re still holding long after a situation has ended: an unresolved conversation, a relationship that’s shifted, expectations that no longer fit where we are. Even good changes can leave behind a kind of residue that takes up space. Symbolic rituals have persisted across so many traditions partly because they help create closure when life doesn’t offer it on its own. Writing down what’s circling in your mind, journaling about what you’re ready to release, or naming what you’ve been carrying can be enough to start moving through it. The ritual itself matters less than the act of asking: what am I still holding that doesn’t need to come with me? Build a nighttime ritual that signals the end of the day For a lot of people, the day doesn’t end when work does. One screen becomes another, and sleep happens but real rest doesn’t. Something as small as reading for a few minutes, stretching, or lighting a candle in a quieter room can signal to your nervous system that the doing part is over, not as another wellness box to check, but as a real transition between one day and the next. “I always say ritual does not need to be complicated,” says Delmon. “Even lighting one candle with intention can become a meaningful act of emotional closure.” Not perfection, not an elaborate practice. Just a few deliberate minutes to put down what’s heavy before tomorrow starts.    The post 7 simple rituals that help you feel like yourself again first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

How environmental DNA turned river water into a global wildlife census
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How environmental DNA turned river water into a global wildlife census

There’s something almost absurd about how we’ve always measured wildlife. Two trained ecologists visit the same river, spend days cataloguing what they can see, and come back with completely different species lists. Neither is wrong. The data just can’t be compared, which means it can’t really be used. “If you and I went to the same river, we would not produce the same species list,” says Dimple Patel, CEO of NatureMetrics. “This makes it very difficult to bring together data sets that people are actually able to reconcile as well as standardise on a global basis.” Instead, her company began building with just a simple bottle of water. Every living thing leaves a genetic trace Everything that lives near water sheds DNA into it: skin cells, saliva, traces that linger for days to weeks. That’s environmental DNA, or eDNA. One liter of river water contains enough to identify every species that passed through recently. “Every living organism will shed DNA into its environment,” Patel says. “From that litre of river water, we will then be able to map back each of those traces of DNA back to the fish, the amphibians, the mammals, the insects that they started from.” NatureMetrics ships sampling kits anywhere in the world. No specialist training. Patel’s team wanted to test just how simple the process could be, so they handed a kit to a five-year-old. “She got excellent results.” The filter goes back to a lab, where DNA sequencing technology, the same used in forensic science, identifies every species in the sample. No trapping, no netting. The ecosystem isn’t touched. “It takes a fraction of the time, a fraction of the cost, but gives you an incredibly accurate and rich data set,” Patel says. The significance of this moment Freshwater species populations have fallen 84 percent since 1970. More than half of global GDP depends on nature in some form. Degraded soil threatens food supply chains, and losing natural flood barriers puts communities at real risk. Measuring all of that, at scale, in a way that holds up across sites and researchers, wasn’t really possible before now. NatureMetrics has processed samples in 116 countries, working with more than 600 organizations. This year it hit a milestone: 10 percent of Earth’s surface surveyed using eDNA. The platform maps species detections, tracks change over time, and can show whether restoration work in a degraded area is doing anything. The clients include WWF and conservation groups, but also mining companies, energy producers, and agricultural supply chains. Consumer goods companies have been using the data to understand the bacteria and fungi that make food production possible at all. “How can we on a biological level help nurture the soil that is going to continue to give us food for the next 50 years?” Patel asks. Nature on the balance sheet NatureMetrics was recognized as an Earthshot Prize finalist a couple years ago. The prize, founded by the Prince of Wales, has given Patel something useful when talking to industries that are slow to change: proof the science has been reviewed by someone other than the company selling it. “Having someone like the Earthshot Prize, where you know they have done due diligence — being able to say we’re supported by them, they trust our technology — it really opens a lot of doors,” she says. The doors she wants open are in corporate boardrooms. Patel wants biodiversity to move out of field science and into finance, to show up on the same documents where companies account for what they own and what they owe. “We want nature to be on balance sheets,” she says. “We want organisations and companies to be actually valuing the impact they’re having on nature and accounting for that in the way that they operate their businesses and make their decisions.” The data to make that possible already exists. The harder part is getting the people who run large companies to treat it as something worth looking at. “We’re looking to give nature a spot in the boardroom,” Patel says.The post How environmental DNA turned river water into a global wildlife census first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

A new survey of 3,000 girls just blew up 3 modern girlhood myths
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A new survey of 3,000 girls just blew up 3 modern girlhood myths

The narratives and stereotypes we see online don’t always match up with real life, and that’s especially true of today’s kids in Gen Z and Gen Alpha. It’s easy to label them as iPad kids, lazy, entitled, or whatever the insult du jour happens to be. Girls, perhaps, are the most misunderstood of all. That’s why the Girl Scouts released a major report based on a survey of 3,000 girls ages 5 to 13 from a wide range of racial backgrounds, income levels, and geographic regions. The findings paint a picture of what it’s really like to be a girl today—and what we’re all getting wrong about today’s girls. Here are three big myths about modern American girlhood that the landmark report shatters: 1. The ‘male loneliness epidemic’ is getting all the headlines. Girls are lonely, too. We tend to think of girls as more social and better at forming deep relationships. But surprisingly, 70% of the girls surveyed reported feeling lonely, including 64% of girls ages 7 and younger. That’s a striking statistic, considering children this age attend school and are surrounded by peers almost every day. Alana Officer of the World Health Organization told Education Week that there’s a difference between social isolation and loneliness. Adults who have limited contact with peers or only a small number of friends may experience social isolation. But loneliness is more of a “painful experience that arises from this disconnect or this discrepancy between the social connections that you do have and those that you want or you feel like you really need.” Officer says there may be an “unmet expectation” when it comes to the relationships girls do have. It’s a problem that’s likely been made worse by devices and social media, as well as the loss of community spaces, after-school programs, and other third places—places where girls could spend time with friends face-to-face. But there’s a bright side: Friends still matter. Gen Alpha might be labeled as “iPad kids,” but girls know exactly how important friendship is. More than half of those surveyed said they found the courage to try something new or difficult because a friend was by their side. 2. Girls don’t prefer to spend their time on screens and devices Screen time and social media use are among the biggest parenting concerns today. And the amount of time girls spend on these activities is on the rise. Most experts see that trend as problematic. But the survey shows we’ve got the symptom all wrong. Screenshot Girls would rather be doing lots of things besides messaging, scrolling through social media, and playing mindless games on an iPad. The survey finds: “The story that girls are choosing screens over everything else misses the point. They are choosing what is available, not always what they prefer. When girls are asked directly, they say something the dominant narrative tends to drown out: 65% of girls ages 5–13 would rather be creative than engage with screens, 59% would rather go outside and play, and 59% would rather spend time with family.” The findings indicate that a harsh, punitive approach to getting girls off screens is likely to miss the mark. Instead, they need more opportunities to do what they’re interested in—structured peer activities like Girl Scouts or sports, unstructured time outdoors, and adults modeling family time that doesn’t involve devices. 3. Girls aren’t preoccupied with their appearance Girls have a complicated relationship with their appearance. On the one hand, data shows that a preoccupation with appearance is starting earlier and earlier. Access to social media means that even very young children aren’t shielded from expectations about how they can—and “should”—look. The Girl Scouts survey backs this up. Girls as young as 5 reported receiving more attention and praise for the way they look than for their abilities, and many also reported having negative thoughts about their bodies. Three in five girls surveyed said feeling bad about their appearance affected their confidence at school. You can see it in tween and teen trends: makeup, fashion, and skincare. Looking their best is all the rage. Yet 96% of the girls surveyed said they like the way they look, even though about a third still wanted to change something about their appearance. Crucially, the Girl Scouts survey shows that appearance isn’t what really matters most to today’s girls. While they may feel pressure to look a certain way, they’d much rather be known for being smart, funny, or creative than for being “pretty.” Body image has plagued tweens and teens—especially girls—for generations. The solution is more complicated. But the survey responses strongly suggest that adults and parents need to be more mindful of the language we use around girls and when speaking to them. When we casually call little girls “beautiful” or speak negatively about our own bodies, they’re listening loud and clear. We can’t support the next generation if we don’t understand them, and media narratives and social media trends paint only part of the picture. Surveys like this one help us understand what kids are thinking, what they’re going through, and what they really need from the adults in their lives. “Girls are not asking for less challenge, they are asking for more advocates and support,” the report concludes. “More spaces where they can build confidence, skills, and a sense of belonging. More time to take risks and try new things without the pressure to do it perfectly.” The post A new survey of 3,000 girls just blew up 3 modern girlhood myths appeared first on Upworthy.

Yes, cats do treat men and women differently. Researchers say it’s all in the meows.
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Yes, cats do treat men and women differently. Researchers say it’s all in the meows.

If you think your cat might be a little sexist, there’s now some scientific proof to back it up.  Modern research has continued to reveal that a cat’s meow is a very nuanced system of communication used solely for the humans in their lives.  A recent study led by a team from Ankara University in Turkey had 31 cat owners wear chest cameras to see how their felines greeted them as they returned home.  Cats know exactly who they’re talking to One thing quickly became clear: Cats were much more vocal when the person coming home was male. Man and cat Canva According to the study, male cat owners produced an average of 4.3 vocalizations (meows, purrs, or chirps) during the first 100 seconds of entering the room, compared to an average of 1.8 for female owners. However, before you assume that this is because cats are closer to their males humors. The researchers have a different theory: men require more direct communication. Previous studies have confirmed that women tend to give their cats more attention, pick up subtle, non-verbal signs of their cats’ emotions, and are more likely to speak in a register that feels both safe and familiar to their feline, all leading to a more “intense relationship.” Woman with cat. Canva Men, on the other paw, are far less inclined to give baby talk or take a hint.  And thus, cats seemingly have adapted to give their male caregivers more “explicit vocalizations,” as the researchers put it, to grab their attention. The study also found that a tail up and rubbing up against a leg (also known as allorubbing) when greeting their owner indicated a positive relationship, whereas yawning, shaking, scratching, or licking could be a coping mechanism for stress or frustration.  More than meowing for their supper British shorthari enjoying lobster Canva As for whether or not cats only interact with their humans for food—not only has that stereotype been debunked previously; this study tracked “food-related behaviors” (like running to the food bowl or eating) alongside the social greetings. The findings clearly showed that greetings were in no way a method to gain food. They were purely for social recognition.  In other words: cats are not as aloof or food-driven as we have been made to believe. The excited welcome many owners receive at the door is exactly what it appears to be: a social interaction between companions, rather than a calculated attempt to fill an empty food bowl. Every cat has its own language While this study is admittedly small, and therefore can’t definitively argue that cats treat all men differently than all women, what it does say is that cats have a remarkable way of customizing their communication in the best possible way for their pet parent to hear them.  As scientists continue learning more about feline behavior, one thing is becoming increasingly clear: our cats are paying much closer attention to us than we may have realized. The post Yes, cats do treat men and women differently. Researchers say it’s all in the meows. appeared first on Upworthy.