The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

@thelighterside

A goodbye note tucked in a Beetle sent a woman on epic quest to reunite car and owner
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A goodbye note tucked in a Beetle sent a woman on epic quest to reunite car and owner

Trisha Rosado bought a rusty 2003 Volkswagen Beetle convertible at a veteran’s auction in Philadelphia last August for $1,000. She and her husband collect Volkswagens, and this one looked like a parts car. It had been sitting unused for five years and was in rough shape. While cleaning it out, Rosado found an envelope tucked under the sun visor. It said “farewell my love bug.” Inside was a handwritten letter from the previous owner to the car itself. “Thank you for keeping me safe, for all the joy and fun we had,” the letter read. “You were my dream car. You made me feel special. I hope your journey continues and you bring someone lots of joy.” @the.beetle.queen We need your help! Please help us find the previous owner of this beetle. This car clearly meant so much to her. If we find her, we have a huge surprise for her. #vw #vwbeetle #tiktokhelp #fyp #virał ♬ original sound – The.Beetle.Queen It was signed by someone named “Tree.” “There’s no way we can chop this car up,” Rosado told FOX43. “We need to find the owner.” She posted the letter on her TikTok (@the.beetle.queen) page. The video got over 600,000 views and eventually reached Tree Palmieri in New York through a friend who recognized the story. Tree had owned the Beetle, which she’d named Herbetta, for 22 years. She’d bought it brand new in 2003 specifically to share with her father, a Marine who was obsessed with Herbie the Love Bug. “When I was little, my father was obsessed with Herbie,” Tree said. “He loved Beetles. My first movie was Herbie the love bug. We had a fish named Herbie.” Tree’s father only got to enjoy the car for three years before he died. The Beetle became her connection to him. When Tree and Rosado connected, the car was already being restored with help from generous donors. Rosado started a GoFundMe to get it in perfect shape and transport it back to New York. A woman enjoys the fresh air while taking a break from a road trip. Photo credit: Canva The reunion happened in December. Tree got Herbetta back, fully restored. “This is like my dad coming back, giving me a hug,” Tree said. When asked what her father would say if he could see the reunion, she didn’t hesitate: “He would say, ‘Go get ’em, kid. Go get ’em.'” Rosado’s perspective on the whole thing: “I may have found Herbetta, but Herbetta brought you to me.” The emotional connection people feel to their cars is real. An Aviva survey found that one in eight car owners feel a strong emotional connection to their vehicles, while 23% still think about their first car. Seventy-eight percent said a car had been part of major life events, and 19% said their vehicle reminded them of important moments. The comments on Rosado’s TikTok were full of people sharing their own car stories. One person wrote about selling their canary yellow 2000 VW Beetle when expecting their first baby: “I cried when the new owners drove away in it.” Rosado says she plans to restore more vintage Beetles from her collection and give them away to new owners. Tree’s letter didn’t just save one car. It started something bigger. You can follow Trisha Rosado (@the.beetle.queen) for more car and lifestyle content. The post A goodbye note tucked in a Beetle sent a woman on epic quest to reunite car and owner appeared first on Upworthy.

Sudoku puzzles kept triggering his strange condition. Crosswords were fine.
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Sudoku puzzles kept triggering his strange condition. Crosswords were fine.

In November 2008, a 25-year-old German physical education student went on a ski trip. An avalanche buried him under snow for 15 minutes. A friend dug him out and performed CPR. He survived, but the oxygen deprivation had done damage. After recovering in the hospital, the man developed involuntary muscle jerks. His mouth twitched when he talked. His legs jerked when he walked. But his arms seemed fine. Then, weeks later while in a rehabilitation center, he tried to do something he’d always enjoyed: Sudoku puzzles. His left arm started seizing. The seizures stopped the moment he put down the puzzle. Dr. Berend Feddersen, a neurologist at the University of Munich, had never seen anything like it. According to NBC News, there was nothing in the scientific literature about Sudoku-triggered seizures. But after studying the patient’s brain scans and watching what happened when he played the game, Feddersen figured it out. The 15 minutes of hypoxia had caused widespread brain damage, particularly to structures called U fibers in the right centroparietal region. These are inhibitory neurons that help regulate brain activity. When they were damaged, the patient lost the ability to suppress certain neural responses. The specific trigger was how the man solved Sudoku. He didn’t just work through trial and error. He visualized the puzzle in three dimensions, arranging numbers around a central point in his mind. “When he solves Sudoku, one of his strategies is to arrange the numbers in some 3D manner,” Feddersen said. “That’s very interesting, because when I do Sudoku, I just make trial and error.” A man playing sudoku on his tablet. Photo credit: Canva That 3D visualization activated the exact part of his brain that had been damaged. Functional MRI showed overactivation of the right central parietal cortex when he played. The result: clonic seizures of his left arm. This is what doctors call reflex epilepsy. According to a study in Neurology, around four to seven percent of patients with epilepsy experience reflex seizures triggered by external stimuli like playing games, reading, doing math, even bathing in warm water. For this patient, Sudoku was the trigger. But reading, writing, and even math alone? No seizures. Chess and card games? Seizures. Crossword puzzles? Totally fine. “Fortunately, he can do crossword puzzles. He never had problems with those,” Feddersen said. The man stopped playing Sudoku. Doctors prescribed anti-epileptic medication. By the time Feddersen published the case in JAMA Neurology in 2015, the patient had been seizure-free for more than five years. He was working as a journalist, though he still had difficulty with speech and walking. The case is unusual because the injury was targeted to a specific brain region, and the trigger was so specific. Most people with reflex epilepsy have seizures triggered by broader activities. This man’s brain damage created a situation where one particular mental task, performed one particular way, caused a seizure. He got to keep crosswords. But Sudoku was done. The post Sudoku puzzles kept triggering his strange condition. Crosswords were fine. appeared first on Upworthy.

Service dog wouldn’t stop pawing a stranger on a flight. Months later, doctors confirmed why.
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Service dog wouldn’t stop pawing a stranger on a flight. Months later, doctors confirmed why.

Katie was on a flight when she noticed the dog next to her wouldn’t stop pawing at her and whining. The woman sitting with the medical alert dog finally said something. “Okay, this is gonna sound strange, but my dog usually does that when someone has a heart issue. You might wanna get checked out.” Katie (@Uniquekatie02) laughed it off at the time, according to what she shared on X on May 13. But months later, during a routine checkup, she mentioned the incident to her doctor. They ran some tests and found a mildly irregular heartbeat. A woman with a medical alert dog sat beside me on a flight once, and the dog would NOT stop pawing at me and whining. After like the third time, she awkwardly goes, “Okay this is gonna sound strange, but my dog usually does that when someone has a heart issue… you might wanna…— Katie (@Uniquekatie02) May 13, 2026 The dog was right. Medical alert dogs are trained to detect physiological changes in people, and science backs up what sounds almost supernatural. A 2021 study published in PLOS One surveyed 61 people with medical alert dogs and found that the dogs alerted them to 33 different medical conditions. Eighty-four percent of owners reported that their dogs alerted them to multiple conditions, and 54% said their dogs alerted them to multiple people, not just their owner. The dogs detect these changes through scent. Research published in Scientific Reports documented that seizures have a specific scent that dogs can pick up through human sweat and other fluids. Craig Angle, co-director of the Canine Performance Sciences Program at Auburn University’s College of Veterinary Medicine, told Scientific American that dogs are essentially “natural biosensors, preprogrammed with 30,000 years of evolutionary algorithms, and 300 million sensory receptors.” A dog’s brain, he said, is designed to detect chemical information at thresholds much lower than most medical machines can manage. For cardiac alert dogs specifically, they’re trained to recognize changes in heart rate and blood pressure. When they detect something off, they alert through behaviors like pawing, nudging, or lying down. Some will bump their owner with their head repeatedly until they respond. The internet had thoughts about Katie’s experience. One person wrote, “Medical alert dogs are honestly terrifyingly impressive. Imagine getting diagnosed by a Labrador at 30,000 feet before your doctor caught it.” Humans spent billions advancing medicine and meanwhile a dog was just sitting there like “yeah something’s off with this guy” — Mr Daniel (@daniel_1679) May 13, 2026 Another joked about a future where dogs handle group health screenings: “Dogs meet up once a month, and we schedule a couple of people per minute. They walk to every dog, stopping for a few seconds to see if they alert. I am a genius, right?” I mean part of that money goes into training the dogs to communicate information to us in a way we can understand.— Inebriatits (@Raynful) May 13, 2026 Someone else pointed out the absurdity: “Can you imagine a world where your most accurate diagnosis has four legs and no medical degree!” DID YOU KNOW??Medical alert dogs aren't just reacting to what they see, but are actually "smelling the future". These dogs have an olfactory system so sensitive, roughly 100,000 times more powerful than a humans, that they can detect microscopic chemical changes in a person’s… https://t.co/SC7m89Wvr1 pic.twitter.com/m83ASRbLlg— I AM BLAZE THE CURIOUS (@Blazethecurious) May 13, 2026 Katie’s irregular heartbeat was mild, and she’s presumably managing it now. But the dog on that flight may have given her information she wouldn’t have had otherwise, at least not for a while. The post Service dog wouldn’t stop pawing a stranger on a flight. Months later, doctors confirmed why. appeared first on Upworthy.

Bruno Mars read his dad’s amazing text after getting a street named after him. The ending was perfect.
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Bruno Mars read his dad’s amazing text after getting a street named after him. The ending was perfect.

On April 10, Las Vegas threw Bruno Mars a parade, declared it “Bruno Mars Day,” and renamed a stretch of Park Avenue “Bruno Mars Drive.” The singer rode down the Strip in a pink convertible with showgirls, got a key to the city from Clark County Commissioner Jim Gibson, and received a ceremonial Nevada state flag from Governor Joe Lombardo. But the moment that got everyone was when Mars stood in front of the crowd at Toshiba Plaza and read a text from his dad, Peter Hernandez. “My loving son, I know you don’t like advice, but getting a street named after you is a monumental moment,” Mars read aloud. His father admitted he was extremely proud, but reminded his son to stay humble and let his fans know “it’s their street” and that he’s overwhelmed by the honor. View this post on Instagram “I wish I were there, but my heart is with you. And you know, wherever you are, your mother is with you, too,” the text continued. Mars’ mother passed away, and the mention of her brought the emotion. Then his dad told him to tell the fans he loved them. Mars did, and the crowd went wild. “I am so proud of you, I could cry,” Mars continued reading. “All my love, son, and thank you for answering my text yesterday…” He paused. “P.S. Please send money.” Mars cracked up. The crowd cracked up. Perfect dad move. View this post on Instagram According to Nevada Public Radio, Mars joins a very short list of people with Las Vegas streets in their names: Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., and Penn & Teller. The renamed street runs between Park MGM (where Mars has had a long-running residency at Dolby Live) and T-Mobile Arena. The whole event was kicking off Mars’ “Romantic Tour” at Allegiant Stadium. After the ceremony, he performed with his band The Hooligans and announced he was donating $1 million to Las Vegas Children’s Hospital. MGM Resorts matched it. Mars told the crowd he’d been advised early in his career not to play Vegas yet, that it was where entertainers go to retire. “But I said, ‘Nah, I love this city so much.'” Bill Hornbuckle, CEO of MGM Resorts International, said Mars has the “legacy and legs” to perform in Las Vegas for years to come. Hundreds of people waited in hot temperatures for hours just to see the parade. A study published in Social Psychological and Personality Science found that parental awe (not just pride) strengthens well-being more holistically, making parents’ lives feel happier and more meaningful. The researchers noted that awe helps parents connect with something larger than themselves, and you don’t need an extraordinary achievement to feel it. Though in this case, getting a street named after you and making your dad laugh with a “send money” joke probably qualifies as pretty extraordinary. The post Bruno Mars read his dad’s amazing text after getting a street named after him. The ending was perfect. appeared first on Upworthy.

Dolly Parton Reveals Hilarious Reason She Doesn’t Do Rides at Dollywood
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Dolly Parton Reveals Hilarious Reason She Doesn’t Do Rides at Dollywood

Dolly Parton’s Dollywood is a 160-acre theme park in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. The family-friendly park opened in 1986 and celebrated its 40th season in 2025. Even though Dolly loves the park, she’s not big on the moving attractions. “I don’t like to ride the rides, everybody knows that about me,” she told Peachtree TV. “I have a tendency to have motion sickness. And then I’m a little bit claustrophobic. I don’t like to be closed in. And I just think ‘Well, I just have too much to lose.'” Of course, the funny blond beauty also had to make a joke. “My boobs could fly out; my hair could fall off. Any number of things could happen to me on those rides.” Dollywood Has Something New This Year, the Dolly Parton Just Might Try This year, the park plans to open NightFlight Expedition, “the world’s first indoor family hybrid coaster and whitewater river raft ride.” Although Dolly Parton herself doesn’t ride many rides at Dollywood, she might give this one a try. “I’m just so proud that Dollywood has grown so much in its first 40 years that we’re able to add a ride like NightFlight Expedition,” Dolly shared. “I have no doubt it’s going to be a huge part of Dollywood’s next 40 years. We’re always trying to take the natural beauty of the Smokies and make it part of everything we’re doing in the park, and they’ve definitely been able to do it with this ride. This ride sounds amazing. We’re adding Dollywood to the list of must-see amusement parks. If the queen herself says we need to ride NightFlight Expedition, we’re listening to the boss. This story’s featured image is by Ron Davis/Getty Images