The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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What is an admin date? Why experts say it helps with productivity and loneliness at once
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What is an admin date? Why experts say it helps with productivity and loneliness at once

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM You probably have something on your to-do list that has been there long enough to feel embarrassing. An email you owe someone. A subscription that sneakily renewed again. A form you have been meaning to file since winter. Every week, it just sits there, and somehow it gets heavier. An admin date is the simplest fix for that. You pick someone you want to spend time with, you both bring your lists, find somewhere comfortable, and work through them side by side. A surprisingly elegant and simple solution that feeds two birds with one scone. Why doing life together helps Thema Bryant, a psychology professor at Pepperdine University and past president of the American Psychological Association, points to two reasons. First is accountability: having another person there raises the bar for staying on task. Second is modeling, a concept from behavioral psychology where watching someone else work through their own stuff subtly motivates you to do the same. “You can have both,” she says, “getting things done and connecting with people.” “In some ways, the reward is in community,” Bryant adds. “That social support is a big protector of our mental health. On the flip side, it can cultivate a sense of joy and connection. So it can be inherently rewarding to be in the company of people that we enjoy, even if we’re not doing a fun activity per se, but that presence in and of itself can be healing.” A few things worth sorting out first Before the first one, it helps to agree on the basics: how long you want to go, how much actual conversation you both want, and what kinds of tasks you are bringing. Some need quiet and a solid wifi connection. Others are fine with background noise. Once you figure out your needs, it’s easier to settle on a location. It’s also worth being selective about who you invite. Bosses and supervisors add a layer of pressure that tends to work against you, while the whole point is mutual benefit, not performing productively for someone who evaluates you. Close friends, a partner, a roommate, or members of a club you’re already part of are all good options. Dr. Aditi Nerurkar, a physician at Harvard Medical School who focuses on mental health, says admin dates are especially well-suited to people with a harsh inner critic. A realistic list and the right company “turns down the volume on unhelpful thoughts,” she says, and makes the whole thing feel less like a chore. “This is not about a competition. This is very much a collaboration.” Food and drinks come with the territory for most people. Maybe you’ll choose the coffee shop where every table has a laptop open, or a friend’s kitchen where the payoff is lunch. Consider putting all the targeted tasks of the group on a whiteboard and cheer out loud every time something gets crossed off. Sometimes the afternoon drifts into actual conversation, and that’s fine too. “By the end of the day, what we need to do gets done,” as one student put it. The list gets a little shorter, and your friend gets to spend the afternoon with you. Honestly, there are worse ways to spend a Sunday.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post What is an admin date? Why experts say it helps with productivity and loneliness at once first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

HPV vaccine brings cervical cancer deaths to near zero
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HPV vaccine brings cervical cancer deaths to near zero

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Between 2020 and 2024, not one woman between the ages of 20 and 24 in England died from cervical cancer. It was the first five-year window on record where that age group saw zero deaths, and a new study published in The Lancet now explains why: the HPV vaccine, introduced for school-age girls in England in 2008, is delivering on what it promised. Children vaccinated against HPV at ages 12 and 13 have close to zero risk of dying from cervical cancer before age 30, according to research led by Professor Peter Sasieni of Queen Mary University of London. Without vaccination, the team estimates roughly 23 deaths would have occurred in that age group over the same period. Since the school vaccination program began, approximately 200 lives have been saved in England. “It’s incredible to think that a single jab can almost eliminate a particular type of cancer,” Sasieni said. What HPV is and how it causes cancer Human papillomavirus, or HPV, is a large group of viruses that spread through skin-to-skin contact, most commonly sexual contact. Most people who contract it never know; the infection typically clears on its own. In some cases, certain strains trigger abnormal cell changes that can develop into cancer over years or decades. HPV is thought to cause 99 percent of cervical cancer cases, and is also linked to cancers of the anus, penis, vulva, vagina, and parts of the head and neck. The HPV vaccine targets the strains most likely to cause those cancers. Given to children before they encounter the virus, it offers near-complete protection. In England, girls have been offered it since 2008; boys were added in 2019, helping cut transmission and protect them from HPV-related cancers as well. Five years of zero cervical cancer deaths In every prior five-year period on record, deaths from cervical cancer in women aged 20 to 24 in England landed somewhere between five and 27. The girls who received the HPV vaccine in 2008, when they were 12 and 13, are now in their late 20s. Between 2020 and 2024, the count was zero. The decline tracks almost exactly with who was old enough to be vaccinated when the program launched. “As vaccinated generations grow older, we’ll see many more lives saved from cervical cancer,” Sasieni said, calling the current results “the tip of the iceberg.” Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, described the findings as an “incredible milestone.” Vaccination rates falling short of the 90 percent target The UK government has pledged to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem by 2040. The World Health Organization says 90 percent of girls need to be vaccinated by age 15 to get there. England is currently at 76 percent, and the shortfall is not evenly spread: uptake tends to be lowest in the communities that most need to be reached. “It’s essential that the UK government and health systems urgently address this with targeted action to reach communities where uptake is the lowest,” said Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of Cancer Research UK. Catch-up campaigns are now running through community pharmacies, and HPV self-testing kits are going out to women who haven’t come forward for cervical screening. Screening stays recommended for women ages 25 to 64 regardless of vaccination status. For women who missed the vaccine Alexandra Legg left school just before the HPV vaccine was introduced in England. In 2021, she was diagnosed with cervical cancer at 30, while planning her wedding. Her treatment involved removing lymph nodes from her abdomen. Surgeons preserved part of her cervix, and a year later, her daughter Ivy was born with the middle name Marvella, meaning “miracle.” “Those nine months were so scary because I was at such risk of losing her at any point,” Legg said. She’s since become a vocal advocate for the vaccine. “When Ivy is old enough, she’ll be first in the queue,” she added. Cervical cancer is still the 14th most common cancer among women in the UK, with around 3,300 diagnoses a year. For women vaccinated on schedule, the risk is now close to zero. How far that extends will come down to whether vaccination rates recover, and how many more young people get reached before the next cohort ages through.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post HPV vaccine brings cervical cancer deaths to near zero first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

Man Survives Harrowing Experience After Getting Trapped in Cave
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Man Survives Harrowing Experience After Getting Trapped in Cave

Exploring caves can be an exciting and cool activity during the summer months. But even the most experienced spelunkers sometimes find themselves in a pickle from time to time. Brooklyn resident Aidan Kaminer decided to venture to Merlin’s Cave in Columbia County, upstate New York, in May 2026. He suddenly slipped and found himself in a perilous position. He became trapped between the rocks for seven hours, just minutes from exiting the cave. Aiden survived, but this was a trip he will never forget. Aidan Kaminar Admitted He Became Terrified in the Cave Aidan Kaminer shared his harrowing story with the New York Post. “The funniest part is we were basically done. We’d been in the cave exploring for five hours, and then we’re maybe ten minutes from the exit … and my foot slips,” he recalled. The slip happened as he was bellycrawling. “I was trying to free myself, but I just ended up sliding down more and getting more stuck. By the time I realized that it was a serious stick, it was a little bit too late,” he recalled. Aidan was with a group of cavers when he slipped. The cave requires at least three people and safety gear, including a helmet, multiple flashlights, and kneepads. “Merlin’s cave is definitely more technical. The first few hundred feet, you’re crawling flat on your stomach, getting through twisting caverns, and then after that, you come to a mini waterfall that you have to boulder down carefully, ”Aidan admitted. It took multiple rescue crews and a rock drill to finally free Aidan Kaminar. He said he tried his best to stay calm and cracked jokes while snacking on peanut butter cups. “I wanted to let others feel more at ease because it’s a tense situation … I didn’t at any point think like, ‘Man, I’m going to die in this cave.’ I wanted to make sure that everyone else felt the same way as much as possible,” he added. This story’s featured image can be found here

Baskin-Robbins Responds to Viral Trend in the Best Way
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Baskin-Robbins Responds to Viral Trend in the Best Way

If you’ve been on social media lately, you’ve undoubtedly seen the viral dot cake. It’s a very simple and aesthetically pleasing dessert. Bakers take a confetti cake, use a small bowl like a cookie cutter to make two small layers, put one of the layers back in the bowl, frost, then frost the other layer on top, frost, and then dip the entire thing into teeny tiny dot sprinkles. People are going positively gaga for these things. Baskin-Robbins noticed, and they’re now offering their own dot cake treat. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Baskin-Robbins (@baskinrobbins) The Baskin-Robbins Dot Cake Sundae Has People Going Crazy Yes, you read that correctly. Baskin-Robbins created a dot cake sundae that’s customizable for every fan. The sundae starts with a confetti cake base and frosting, an ice cream flavor of your choice, and rainbow nonpareils on top. Bakin-Robbins shared a sneak peek of the dot cake sundae on Instagram, and it looks pretty darn good. “You asked, we delivered. Dot Cake Inspired Sundae can now be found at select Baskin-Robbins® while supplies last,” Baskin-Robbins wrote. Fans want in on the dot cake sundae. “SO FIREEE,” someone wrote. “Now this is marketing!” Another person added. Sadly, this person wasn’t able to get their Baskin-Robbins dot cake sundae just yet. “Went to my Baskin the other day and was told it’s only at select locations and not very many had it.” Baskin-Robbins began in 1945 when pals Burt Baskin and Irv Robbins decided to open an ice cream shop with a fresh idea. “So while every other ice cream shop stuck with vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry, they decided to go big. Like, “let’s offer 31 flavors instead” big. Because ice cream should be an every day treat. And the people? Yeah, they loved that,” according to the company website. This story’s featured image is by Kevin Carter/Getty Images

Texas Family Went from No Grandkids to Four in Just a Few Hours
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Texas Family Went from No Grandkids to Four in Just a Few Hours

An East Texas family grew by eight feet in just a matter of hours in March 2026. According to KLTV, sisters Rainy Jones and Darian Lowe found out they were pregnant around the same time, which was amazing. Things got even crazier early in their pregnancies when they found out they were both expecting twins. “She found out she was pregnant, then I found out I was pregnant. She found out she was having twins, then I found out I was having twins,” Rainy said. Darian gave birth to her twins, Wilder and Walker, just after 12 p.m. on March 19. A mere 13 hours later, Rainy welcomed her twins, Ben and Rowan, just 13 hours later. “I was at the hospital, visiting and holding her babies, and then went home, ended up in an emergency situation where I had to be rushed to the hospital and then thirteen hours later had ours,” Rainy said. She said they wanted kids close in age, but never expected anything like this. “We wanted kids around the same time, but we never thought that it would be thirteen hours,” Rainy added. “We didn’t even expect it to be a month apart.” These Aren’t the First Twins in the Family Darian and Rainy told the news outlet their twins aren’t the family’s first. The woman has a set of twin brothers and sisters, Hudson and Hadly, who will turn 12 this year. Shannon Jackson, the newly minted grandmother, loves the babies so much. “I went from zero to four instantly,” she said. “I used to dream for a big family cause I didn’t have much growing up and wow. It’s huge that I can share this with my girls.” Darian’s babies are identical and were born close to their due date. Rainy’s twins are fraternal and came two months early. This story’s featured image can be found here