The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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Scotland’s Largest Greenhouse Set to Be Preserved as ‘Living Ruin’ and New Event Space
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Scotland’s Largest Greenhouse Set to Be Preserved as ‘Living Ruin’ and New Event Space

A historic greenhouse in Glasgow is set to finally be revived after 40 years of dereliction. $1.5 million will help a trust organized to save the building do just that, while simultaneously opening it up to events and perhaps more. Located in the northern district of the same name, the Springburn Winter Gardens was Scotland’s […] The post Scotland’s Largest Greenhouse Set to Be Preserved as ‘Living Ruin’ and New Event Space appeared first on Good News Network.

Over-50s Are Finding a Meaningful Second Act in Care Work
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Over-50s Are Finding a Meaningful Second Act in Care Work

Retiring by the age of 54 was not in Denys Andrianjafy’s original life plan. But after a series of strokes triggered ongoing health issues, including temporary blindness, nerve pain, severe headaches and high blood pressure, Andrianjafy was forced to take early retirement in December 2024 from the digital communications career he’d worked so hard to build. Yet within a month of officially leaving full-time work, it was clear that Andrianjafy needed to find something else on which to focus his energy and attention. “There’s only so much you can do to distract yourself  — walking the dog, playing bad golf, ignoring the list of chores at home,” says Andrianjafy, now 55, who’s based in Kent, U.K. Since retiring, Denys Andrianjafy has found meaning in his work as a companion carer. Courtesy of SHS UK He initially looked at volunteering positions that he could manage around his conditions, for which he takes numerous medications. Then, a friend working at home care company Seniors Helping Seniors UK (SHS) suggested he apply for a role. The company specializes in hiring people over 50 to provide in-home care for its clients. After completing the required training, Andrianjafy officially joined SHS’s Canterbury and Thanet branch in January 2025. As a companion carer, his main task is to provide a social outlet for his clients — whether it’s playing a board game, taking a walk or visiting a cafe. (“Carer” is the term used in the U.K.; such workers are more commonly called “caregivers” in the U.S.) He works around 18 hours a week spread across seven clients, with visits lasting between one and three hours. “It’s something that makes them feel they’ve got some choice in their lives — that they’re not just stuck in an armchair,” he says. “But what makes me feel great is that I can work again. I’m doing something positive, and I’m not running myself into the ground doing it. I’m looked after. I can control the hours I work, and I really enjoy it.” Weighed down by negative news? Our smart, bright, weekly newsletter is the uplift you’ve been looking for. [contact-form-7] The average age of SHS’s 190-strong care workforce is 59, with around 40 percent living with a health condition that would prevent them working a typical full-time job, according to business partner Sally Wilse.  Around 60 percent of SHS carers have had to leave full-time jobs due to needing to care for family members, so the company’s flexible model suits them. The average hours of work per week across the organization for carers is 15, says Wilse, adding that carers can also adjust their hours to suit their responsibilities and their capabilities. Sally Wilse says SHS’s care model was designed for those unable to work full-time. Courtesy of SHS UK “Our care model was designed to appeal to people who could not work full-time. It is designed to attract older carers, and older people have their own health conditions, so our carers work irregular hours so they can take care of themselves,” says Wilse. “There are structural challenges in traditional work, and Seniors Helping Seniors has worked hard on these, bringing people who are often distanced from work back into work.” SHS is offering valuable work opportunities at a time when these are hard to come by. People in the 50-plus age group were the most likely to be laid off in the U.K. last year, according to government data, a trend that has been consistent over the past 10 years. As a result, unemployment in the country is up to 5.1 percent, from 4.4 percent in 2024, with the National Institute of Economic and Social Research predicting it will hit an 11-year high of 5.4 percent this year.  Making matters worse is the fact that the number of jobs available isn’t stacking up: Further government data shows that vacancies are still down nine percent compared to a year ago, and are still below pre-pandemic levels. In parallel, the U.K. care sector has its own challenges. Long-term recruitment and staff retention remains an issue as it’s estimated that around 470,000 new carers, or 27 percent more, will be needed by 2040 to keep up with the country’s aging population. It’s a trend which SHS has been able to buck thanks to its “peer-to-peer” philosophy, through which people already classed as “seniors” can find meaningful work providing care and companionship to those who require support at home.  SHS UK’s flexible approach under the banner of “zero-hour contracts” also benefits employees like Andrianjafy. That’s despite such contracts becoming controversial: For some workers, zero hour contracts result in unpredictable and unreliable hours week to week, as employers aren’t required to offer people a minimum amount of shifts. But Adrianjafy feels that SHS uses zero-hour contracts responsibly. He and his fellow carers with health conditions can earn an income, while also taking care of themselves. For him, it means a schedule that’s manageable around his health. SHS’s shift coordinator regularly checks on whether Andrianjafy is okay with the planned workload for the week. “I’ve had friends ask me how I feel about a zero-hours contract, and it works for me. It’s being used in the way it’s meant to be, and I’m absolutely fine with that,” says Andrianjafy. Dr. Ben Maruthappu, CEO and cofounder of Cera. Courtesy of Cera Operating on a larger scale is Cera, the U.K.’s second-largest home care provider, employing 10,000 carers and nurses. Like SHS, it has thought creatively about who to hire. In October 2024, it launched an initiative to get people who were long-term unemployed back into paid work, providing health care assessments, mental health support, training and discounted driving lessons. Through the initiative, Cera recruited 2,447 new carers, 34 percent of whom were previously unemployed. Eight percent have a health condition or disability stopping them from securing full-time work. The company plans to hire another 5,000 carers and nurses over the next year. “We’ve supported people back into work, training them to become qualified carers, building their confidence that they have the right skills for the job, and providing comprehensive practical and emotional support,” says Dr. Ben Maruthappu, Cera’s founder and CEO. “We offer a lot of flexibility and support for people with health conditions and disabilities, ensuring they can continue working. This includes tailored job design to accommodate physical disabilities or health conditions, with the understanding that requirements may change over time. For example, if someone is no longer physically able to stand for long periods to continue providing care, we may find them a role coordinating care instead, supporting them with our training program to help them transition into their new role.” One of Cera’s carers, Luffy Latiff, 54, was unemployed for a year before finding work with Cera. She and her family moved to the U.K. from Malaysia in December 2022 so she could embark on a one-year film production postgraduate degree. Yet roles in that field were hard to secure, despite Latiff having worked in the production industry in Malaysia since 1997. Luffy Latiff was unemployed for a year before finding work with Cera. Courtesy of Cera Latiff heard about Cera through Age Concern, a charity she was volunteering with, and began working as a personal carer around 10 months ago. She keeps a busy schedule, working up to 36 hours a week over around 25 clients. Not only is Latiff relieved to have work after applying for 700 jobs, but she feels a sense of purpose knowing the difference she makes in people’s lives. “It makes me feel better psychologically, and I’ve been able to build my confidence back. Back in Malaysia, people would think I was taking a backwards step by becoming a carer, but it’s opened my eyes. Helping someone feel safe and respected is really important,” says Latiff. But in spite of the valuable role that caregivers play, rates of pay in the care industry remain low. SHS carers are paid between $18.92 (£14.12) and $28.53 (£21.29) if they’re a companion carer, and $21.03 (£15.69) to $33.05 (£24.66) per hour for carers who provide personal care. Companion carers like Andrianjafy are mainly responsible for social activities, while personal carers like Latiff assist with things like bathing, toileting and administering medication. Carers earn more depending on whether they work early mornings, evenings, weekends or public holidays, and based on their skills and experience. Andrianjafy, for example, has been trained to administer some medicines, despite being a companion carer, and to support clients with dementia. SHS’s Wilse says the organization pays the voluntary “real living wage.” This is now $19.84 (£14.80) an hour in London, and $18.03 (£13.45) across the rest of the U.K. — higher than the mandatory minimum wage, which is $17.03 (£12.71) per hour. Cera pays between $31,898.07 (£23,800) and $38,867.39 (£29,000) a year for full-time carers. The lower end is the equivalent of the minimum wage. The higher end represents the real living wage. Neither company commented further. Wait, you're not a member yet? Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can. Join Cancel anytime Campaigns are already underway to lobby the U.K. government to only award care contracts to providers offering the real living wage, and to increase funding to the care sector so wages can be lifted. But Denys Andrianjafy isn’t in it for the money. He’s simply passionate about his new career, and now wants to take up a degree in aged care. “I now see this as my main chapter,” he says. “Everything else brought me to this, and it’s fabulous. It’s really made me look at life in a completely different way.” The post Over-50s Are Finding a Meaningful Second Act in Care Work appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.

Getting a base tan before summer? Dermatologists say stop.
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Getting a base tan before summer? Dermatologists say stop.

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM A base tan provides roughly SPF 3 of protection. Dermatologists recommend SPF 30 every single day. Those two numbers are worth sitting with before you start “easing into” sun exposure this spring. The logic behind the base tan feels intuitive: build up melanin gradually before summer, and your skin will be better prepared for more sun later. It sounds reasonable. But it is not supported by science. What a tan actually is “The idea of a base tan offering protection from sunburn is a dangerous myth,” says Hallie McDonald, MD, a board-certified dermatologist in Austin, Texas, and co-founder of ERLY. When skin darkens, it is producing melanin as a defense response to UV radiation. But that response is a marker of damage, not a signal that the skin is adapting well. “The damage is already being done,” Dr. McDonald says. UV exposure from the sun or a tanning bed causes DNA mutations in skin cells. Over time, those mutations raise the risk of basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma. The deepening color is evidence of that process, not confirmation that the skin is building any kind of tolerance. The cumulative math What makes the base tan logic particularly flawed is the asymmetry. The protection it offers is negligible. The damage it causes is permanent and compounds over the years. Each session of sun exposure without adequate SPF adds to a running total that the body cannot fully reverse. Up to 80 percent of UV rays penetrate cloud cover, which means sun damage accumulates on overcast days too, regardless of season or perceived intensity. Broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher, applied daily and reapplied every two hours during outdoor time, is what actually intercepts UV at a meaningful level. That protection requires no pre-exposure preparation of any kind. Getting the color without the cost For anyone who wants a sun-kissed look heading into warmer months, Dr. McDonald recommends sunless tanners containing dihydroxyacetone (DHA), a compound that temporarily stains the top layer of skin. The cosmetic result is comparable to a light tan, with no UV exposure and no DNA damage. Tinted sunscreens offer another option for the face. The idea that a little damage now buys you better tolerance later does not hold up in the data. A sunless tanner with DHA delivers the color without any sun exposure, and broad-spectrum SPF 30 applied daily delivers the actual protection. That combination works. A base tan does not.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post Getting a base tan before summer? Dermatologists say stop. first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

New guidelines link heart and brain health for the first time
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New guidelines link heart and brain health for the first time

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For years, cardiologists and neurologists have largely worked in parallel, treating cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline as separate concerns. A new set of guidelines released in 2026 is changing that, and the shift is more practical than it might sound. The C-CHANGE/CMAJ 2026 guidelines, developed through the Canadian Cardiovascular Harmonized National Guideline Endeavour, offer 11 harmonized recommendations that address brain and heart health simultaneously. It is the first time clinical guidance has formally recognized the two systems as interdependent. That has real implications for what happens at your next checkup. What the guidelines actually change The most concrete shift concerns atrial fibrillation, the most common heart rhythm disorder. Despite a well-established association between atrial fibrillation and elevated dementia risk, there had been no formal directive for clinicians to screen these patients for cognitive decline. The new guidelines close that gap. For patients with coronary artery disease, the guidelines now recommend routine depression screening. The link runs in both directions: depression worsens cardiovascular outcomes, and heart disease can trigger or deepen depressive episodes. The guidelines also recommend SSRIs as a treatment option for this group, a notable step given lingering concerns about antidepressant use in cardiac patients. Intensive blood pressure control gets a dedicated recommendation as well. Beyond its cardiovascular benefits, lowering blood pressure aggressively in high-risk patients has been linked to reduced risk of cognitive decline and dementia. The guidelines acknowledge the trade-offs, particularly in older adults, where the approach can increase the risk of dizziness or falls. The vaccine finding The strangest recommendation involves vaccines. The guidelines flag influenza, pneumococcal, and shingles vaccines as potentially protective for both the heart and the brain. The influenza vaccine may reduce stroke and heart attack risk. The pneumococcal vaccine has been associated with lower dementia risk. The shingles vaccine may offer some protection against dementia as well. Researchers are still working out precisely why. The leading theory involves the inflammatory burden of infections: chronic inflammation is a recognized driver of both cardiovascular disease and neurodegeneration, so reducing infection-related inflammation through vaccination may carry benefits that reach well beyond the lungs or immune system. A note on geography These guidelines come from Canada. The United States does not yet have an equivalent. The American Heart Association published a 2024 scientific statement on cardiac contributions to brain health, but a scientific statement and clinical guidelines are different things: one summarizes evidence, the other tells doctors what to do. That gap matters. Without formal screening and treatment guidelines in the U.S., how much of this research reaches American patients depends heavily on individual clinicians. What to ask at your next appointment The guidelines formally recommend shared decision-making as part of care, which means patients have standing to raise these questions directly: whether cognitive screening is warranted, especially with atrial fibrillation; whether depression history has been factored into cardiovascular care; whether blood pressure targets account for brain health; and whether vaccination records are current. For anyone with atrial fibrillation, heart disease, or elevated cardiovascular risk, these guidelines offer a new framework for what to request. The harder work is getting that framework from the page into the exam room.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post New guidelines link heart and brain health for the first time first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

The Royal Family Arrives For Easter Service in Their Sunday Best
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The Royal Family Arrives For Easter Service in Their Sunday Best

Princess Kate, Prince William, and their children joined several members of the royal family for Easter service. This year marked their first since 2023. Kate and her family were photographed strolling towards St. George’s Chapel, which is located on the grounds of Windsor Castle, on Sunday, April 5th. She was elegantly wearing a tailored cream skirt suit with a matching hat. Princess Charlotte, 10, wore a tan pea coat over a white dress. Prince George, 12, and his dad sported navy suits with light blue ties, and Prince Louis, 7, donned a black double-breasted suit with a light blue tie. The Royal Family joined the King and Queen Camilla for the Easter Sunday Service at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle. https://t.co/myMomuZh8k— The Royal Watcher (@saadsalman719) April 6, 2026 King Charles also attended Easter service, wearing a simple blue suit with a white shirt and gray tie. His wife, Queen Camilla, perfectly complemented him in a long, bright red coat and matching hat. Other royals included Princess Anne, Sir Tim, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Earl of Wessex, Peter Phillips and Harriet Sperling, and Lady Sarah Chatto. This Was Princess Kate’s First Easter Service Appearance Since 2023 This was Kate, William, and their kids’ first Easter service walk since 2023. The family missed the tradition for two years after Princess Kate was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer. Kate announced her remission on January 14, 2025, and she slowly returned to her full royal duties, with her health as her primary focus. “It is a relief to now be in remission and I remain focused on recovery,” she wrote on Instagram. “As anyone who has experienced a cancer diagnosis will know, it takes time to adjust to a new normal. I am however looking forward to a fulfilling year ahead. There is much to look forward to. Thank you to everyone for your continued support.” This story’s featured image is by Karwai Tang/WireImage.