The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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44 Miles of Major Balkan River Freed from Wartime Concrete Obstruction – LOOK
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44 Miles of Major Balkan River Freed from Wartime Concrete Obstruction – LOOK

In a small slice of good news from a far corner of Europe, native fish are swimming freely on an important river after conservationists removed a wartime concrete obstruction. The Pchinja River runs 80 miles through North Macedonia and into Serbia, but more than 40 miles of its path were interrupted by a mound of […] The post 44 Miles of Major Balkan River Freed from Wartime Concrete Obstruction – LOOK appeared first on Good News Network.

Brain health in old age starts taking shape far earlier than most people realize
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Brain health in old age starts taking shape far earlier than most people realize

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In long-term studies where people had their cognitive ability tracked from youth into old age, one finding keeps standing out. “One of the most important factors explaining someone’s cognitive ability at age 70 is their cognitive ability when they were 11,” researchers noted in a recent article in The Conversation. Not lifestyle changes made in middle age. Not retirement habits or brain training. Eleven years old. That data point lands differently when you consider what it implies. The differences in cognitive sharpness between older adults are often not explained by a faster decline in later life. They were there much earlier. “Older adults with poorer cognitive skills have often had these lower skills since childhood, rather than the differences being solely due to a faster decline in older age,” the researchers explained. This does not mean dementia is inevitable for anyone who struggled academically as a child, or that nothing done later in life matters. It means the window for shaping brain health is wider and starts earlier than the conversation around dementia typically allows for. A condition with very long roots Two large bodies of research are helping to fill in the picture. A 2023 study by researchers in Sweden and the Czech Republic examined birth factors and their connection to dementia risk later in life. Some of those factors, including sharing the womb with a twin, sit outside of anyone’s control. Others, like shorter spacing between births or a first pregnancy after age 35, are considerations that could factor into family planning decisions. Then, in late 2024, a team led by the Global Brain Health Institute (GBHI) in Ireland identified risk factors specific to young adults between 18 and 39. Drawing on expertise from 15 countries, the team set out to build a framework for brain health across the full lifespan. “Young adulthood represents a pivotal window for intervention that could significantly reduce the risk of dementia later in life,” said Francesca Farina, a neuroscientist at GBHI. The risk factors that compound over time The 2024 study grouped risk factors into three broad categories. Lifestyle-related risks include excessive drinking, smoking, physical inactivity, and social isolation. Environmental risks cover exposure to pollution, traumatic brain injuries, hearing or vision loss, and limited educational opportunity. Health conditions such as obesity, diabetes, hypertension, high LDL cholesterol, and depression round out the list, many of them arising from lifestyle choices but carrying their own downstream effects. Some connections are more direct than others. Brain injuries are an obvious route to later neurological damage. Drinking and smoking have well-established links to overall health decline. But others are less intuitive: hearing and vision loss are tied to dementia risk, possibly through brain degeneration or the social withdrawal that often follows sensory impairment. “Similar patterns are also seen when looking for evidence of dementia-related damage on brain scans, with some changes appearing to be more closely related to risk factor exposures in early life than current unhealthy lifestyles,” the researchers noted. In other words, what shows up on a scan in someone’s seventies may have more to do with what happened in their twenties, or earlier, than what they had for breakfast last year. Why young adults are central to prevention One of the clearest practical outcomes of this research is that young adults need to be brought into dementia prevention efforts, not just as future beneficiaries, but as active participants. “To secure healthier brain outcomes, young adults must be included as key partners in research, education, and policymaking efforts,” Farina said. There is reason to think that generation is ready for it. “There is a real appetite for young adults to learn more about their brain health,” said Laura Booi, a social gerontologist at GBHI. “They are highly aware of cognitive and neurodiversity, with many identifying with diagnoses like ADHD or autism. This awareness drives their strong interest in understanding and improving their brain health.” The researchers propose action at three levels. At the individual level, public health campaigns and school-based education could raise awareness of brain health risks from an early age, with funding potentially drawn from taxes on alcohol and tobacco. At the local level, an advisory council drawn from young adults could liaise directly with city and regional governments on brain health priorities. At the national level, the team recommends a formal brain health charter to keep prevention on the agenda across decades, not just electoral cycles. What still needs to be studied The known risk factors are not the final word. The research team flagged several emerging areas requiring further investigation: ultra-processed foods, recreational drug use, screen time, chronic stress, and exposure to microplastics. None are confirmed risks yet, but each represents a plausible route worth tracking. What the existing evidence already makes clear is that dementia does not arrive without a history. “Perhaps the time has come for dementia prevention to be thought of as a lifelong goal, rather than simply a focus for old age,” the researchers concluded. Whether health systems and individuals are prepared to act on that framing long before it feels urgent is a separate question, but the case for doing so has rarely been stronger.   Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post Brain health in old age starts taking shape far earlier than most people realize first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

The three muscle groups behind knee stability, and how to train them
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The three muscle groups behind knee stability, and how to train them

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Running, climbing stairs, squatting to pick something up from the floor: every one of these movements passes through the knees. It is easy to take that for granted until they start to complain. “Everybody could probably benefit from some sort of strengthening to improve stability of the knee,” says Carrie Whitelam, a physical therapist at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. Knee stability, as Whitelam defines it, is “the ability to maintain alignment and positioning of your knee during movement and activity.” The practical version is simpler: it is what keeps your knee from wobbling, caving inward, or grinding in ways that create pain over time. Three muscles doing most of the work Two kinds of structures hold the knee in place. Passive ones, including ligaments like the ACL and MCL, provide structural support. Active ones, including the muscles you train, provide dynamic control. The quads, hamstrings, and glutes are the three muscle groups most responsible for that dynamic control. Physical therapist Braidy Solie explains that each plays a distinct role: the quads straighten the knee, the hamstrings bend it, and the hips act as a “steering wheel” that controls the knee’s position and alignment throughout movement. When all three are strong and coordinated, your bones, cartilage, and ligaments don’t have to absorb the stress they were never designed to handle alone. When they are not, that stress lands somewhere it shouldn’t. Three exercises that build it Solie recommends three moves as effective starting points: the step-up, the forward lunge, and the lateral lunge. These exercises require the quads and hamstrings to work together at the knee while the hips maintain alignment, which mirrors what the knees are asked to do during most everyday activities. For a beginner approach, run them as a short circuit: each exercise for 30 seconds, rest 30 seconds, repeat for three to four rounds. Once the movements feel controlled and easy, add weight in the form of dumbbells or kettlebells and shift to three sets of 15 to 20 repetitions, gradually increasing the load over time. The step-up This is a good place to start. Standing in front of a sturdy box or step, you step up with one foot, bring the other to join it, then step back down and alternate which foot leads. The key is keeping your knee tracking directly over your foot the whole time, without letting it collapse inward. Solie values this move because when you place your foot on the step, “you’re pre-positioning your limb in the position that you want to maintain” through the whole rep, which makes it easier to learn what good knee alignment actually feels like. The forward lunge Forward lunging adds complexity. You step forward with one foot, lower both knees toward 90-degree angles, then push back to standing before alternating sides. The chest stays upright, the core engages, and the front knee stays above the foot rather than drifting past it. The lunge is trickier than the step-up because it involves decelerating as you step forward, which demands more from the stabilizing muscles. If the knee wobbles a lot at first, a squat is a useful starting point. Once the movement feels controlled, try two versions: one with a vertical torso, which loads the quads more, and one with a slight forward hip hinge, which shifts the work toward the glutes. The lateral lunge This exercise is certainly the most demanding of the three. You step out to one side, hinge at the hips, push them back, and lower into a bend before pushing off to return to center, then alternate sides. Because your center of mass is moving sideways while the knee flexes forward, it requires “a lot more coordination,” Solie says. Good cues: keep your chest up, don’t let the knee cave inward, and avoid letting the hip pop out at the bottom. If the full version is too much at first, try the static variation, where the foot stays on the ground, and you lunge in and out without the stepping motion. Why this matters beyond the gym The case for this kind of work is not purely about avoiding injury, though that is a compelling reason on its own. It is also about longevity: the ability to climb stairs, carry groceries, play with children, and keep doing the physical things that make life feel full, well into old age. “These types of movements have a great crossover for helping build knee stability during functional things throughout the day,” Solie says. Most people’s training is built around strength and cardio. Adding a few targeted moves for stability is a modest change with a long payoff.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post The three muscle groups behind knee stability, and how to train them first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

‘Anatomy of a Scandal’ Star Welcomes 3rd Baby at 44
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‘Anatomy of a Scandal’ Star Welcomes 3rd Baby at 44

Actress Sienna Miller quietly welcomed her third baby at 44, and she’s “madly in love.” The Anatomy of a Scandal star shared the news while sitting for an interview with E! News. “It’s happened,” she said. “I have a tiny baby next door.” Sienna didn’t share the name or gender of her baby. “It feels like stringing sentences together is a bit challenging,” she joked. “I’m on very little sleep, but I’m madly in love with my baby.” Sienna Miller is a mother of three. She shares a daughter, Marlowe, 12, with her ex, Tom Sturridge. She also welcomed a daughter in 2023 with her current boyfriend, and father of her newborn, Oli Green, 29. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sienna Miller (@siennathing) Sienna Miller is Loving Pregnancy and Babies in Her 40s The starlet broke an 8-year social media hiatus on March 20th to announce the pregnancy. In a post with no caption, she simply shared a photo of her baby bump. But she technically first shared the news when she showed up to the 2025 Fashion Awards in London to walk the red carpet on in December 2025. At the time, she was visibly pregnant. Sienna Miller is enjoying a second round of motherhood. As she told Glamour in March, being pregnant in her 40s is much more enjoyable than in her 20s. “Having had a baby at 29, and then having a baby at 42, and now 44, it’s so much easier when you don’t have the conflict of feeling scattered and like you want to be doing X, Y, Z,” she admitted. “If I’m in bed at 9 p.m. with a book, I’m so happy now. And now I’ve got the excuse to do it. Life is in a more grounded space. I think the 30s are chaos. You’re like, ‘I want to settle down. I want kids.'” This story’s featured image is by Joe Maher/Getty Images for BFC.

Little Boy Calls 9-1-1 Because of a Monster Under the Bed—Officer Responds in the Most Wholesome Way
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Little Boy Calls 9-1-1 Because of a Monster Under the Bed—Officer Responds in the Most Wholesome Way

When a young boy named Nico saw a monster under his brother’s bed, he knew he needed some help. So he did what anyone in danger would do. He called 9-1-1. Fortunately, the officer who responded understood that Nico very much believed the threat was real. So he made sure Nico felt safe before sending him back to bed. A body cam video posted by The Public Services shows the heroic officer arriving at the scene in the middle of the night. Nico was waiting by the door, armed with a Nerf gun and wearing goggles and a helmet for protection. Nico hadn’t bothered waking up his parents. He just went straight to the police. When the officer asked if Nico thought he needed the S.W.A.T. team, he said no. The officer admitted that he was actually part of S.W.A.T., so the two of them could handle it. Nico explained that the monster had “big teeth” and “black fur,” and it was making “scratching sounds.” Despite the horrifying description, the officer walked into the danger zone, reached under the bed, and pulled the monster out by its neck. After Calling 9-1-1 and Bravely Confronting the Monster, Nico Became an Honorary Member of the S.W.A.T Team Of course, the monster wasn’t a monster at all. It was a mask with sharp teeth and glowing red eyes that growled when the police officer picked it up. The officer offered to “get rid of” the monster. He also praised little Nico for calling for help when he felt scared. But he said that next time, Nico needs to tell his parents first. But the police officer didn’t want the night to become a bad memory. So he gave Nico a special treat. “You know what? You did an excellent job, and we didn’t need the S.W.A.T team. So I’m going to go get you something from my car real quick,” he said as he walked to his car. When the officer came back, he handed Nico a “S.W.A.T. team challenge medal,” which made him “an official S.W.A.T. team member.” Nico was overjoyed by his new title and promised the officer he’d get some sleep, so the story had a happy ending. But after everything that happened, the most astonishing part was that throughout the entire encounter, Nico’s parents never woke up. You can find this story’s featured image here.