The Lighter Side
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The Lighter Side

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Postal Worker Drives 52 Miles After Work to Return Lost Wallet Found in -11F° Weather
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Postal Worker Drives 52 Miles After Work to Return Lost Wallet Found in -11F° Weather

Everyone in life has likely gone through it at least once: losing a wallet can be stressful to say the least. So can delivering snail mail in -11°F, but that didn’t stop a Pennsylvania postal worker from doing a good deed when presented with the opportunity. 25-year-old Bruce Armah, a new member of the mail […] The post Postal Worker Drives 52 Miles After Work to Return Lost Wallet Found in -11F° Weather appeared first on Good News Network.

How the Netherlands Bent Bureaucracy Into Something Beautiful
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How the Netherlands Bent Bureaucracy Into Something Beautiful

When Harry Kruiter first met Eric, the man could barely sit still. Tax bills were scattered across the kitchen table. His hands were shaking. Two years earlier, Eric’s wife had died unexpectedly, leaving him alone with their two young daughters and a pile of modest but mounting debt. By then, Eric had already seen more than 20 social workers. Each one had followed procedure. Each one had come to the same conclusion: Before Eric could qualify for debt relief, he would have to sell his most valuable possession — his car. But Eric’s daughters attended a special-needs school nearly 20 miles away. Without the car, the municipality was required to transport them by taxi at an annual cost of roughly €6,000 ($6,900). The emotional cost of not traveling together was harder to quantify. “The girls were crying every morning because they missed their dad,” Kruiter recalled. Psychologists warned that the distress could spiral into more serious mental health problems, potentially requiring interventions costing tens of thousands of euros per child. The car itself was worth about €2,100 ($2,400). The Breakthrough Method is now being used in municipalities across the Netherlands.Credit: JaySi / Shutterstock “This is bureaucracy at its finest,” Kruiter says wryly. “Because what you see in cases like this is that everybody is doing exactly what they are supposed to do — and the outcome is still disastrous.” Eric did not lack services. He lacked a system willing to see the whole picture.  In 2010, Kruiter co-founded the Institute for Public Values (IPW) in Utrecht, the Netherlands, together with his brother and the director of a homeless shelter, to tackle precisely these kinds of cases: households caught in overlapping problems such as debt, unstable housing, unemployment or addiction. As an action researcher, Kruiter had spent years studying families that were heavily supported by the state but made little progress. Again and again, frontline professionals blamed their clients or “the rules.” But when Kruiter’s team began combing through those same rules, they discovered something surprising. “There’s almost always legal room to do what’s needed,” he says. “The problem is that nobody dares to look for it.” Today, his Breakthrough Method is used in around 100 municipalities across the Netherlands, supported by a digital tool. That scale suggests it isn’t just a local oddity, but a potentially transferable model for any city grappling with entrenched social problems. It gives civil servants a structured way to make tailored, legally grounded exceptions when standard procedures are making things worse. Weighed down by negative news? Our smart, bright, weekly newsletter is the uplift you’ve been looking for. [contact-form-7] “If a family needs a car to stabilize their life, we should be able to provide a car,” Kruiter says. “If a student needs temporary income support to finish a degree, why would we block that? The question is always: What solves the problem?” The method rethinks bureaucracy as a tool, not a block. “We just want to find solutions and fix stuff, but we knew we really had to challenge the status quo of the welfare state because there is so much money and resistance involved,” Kruiter says. “The only way to challenge the status quo is by doing something that’s much more effective and cheaper.” For all its numbers and neat diagrams, the Breakthrough Method is, at its core, an intervention in organizational psychology. Bureaucrats are trapped in “defensive routines,” says Kruiter, and to reach them, he argues, means to beat them at their own game. “You have to get them to think: ‘Oh, I can actually also help people instead of defending the system,’” he says. The method confronts officials with the human consequences of their decisions and then shows, in their own language of law and money, that a different choice is both permissible and prudent.​ A recent peer-reviewed analysis in Action Research, co-authored by Kruiter and other IPW colleagues, describes the Breakthrough Method as a structured way to challenge institutional routines from within — mobilizing legal interpretation, financial modeling and client participation to justify solutions that might otherwise appear to violate protocol. In Eric’s case, Kruiter’s team reframed the conversation through the Breakthrough Method’s legitimacy triangle. First, they examined the legal grounding: Was there room within existing law to justify keeping Eric’s car? There was. Then they analyzed the financial logic: What are the full public costs if he doesn’t have a car? Not in theory — what does it cost in taxis, in psychological care for the children, in meetings between professionals that go on for years? The answer changed everything. And finally, they examine personal agency: Would this restore Eric’s ability to stabilize his life? Allowing Eric to buy his car back from the dealer he had sold it to (who fortunately hadn’t yet sold it on) and enter debt restructuring improved his life immediately. The number of professionals involved in his life dropped from over 20 to five. Public spending declined. Stability began to increase. “It’s not about bending the rules,” Kruiter explains. “It’s about using them to achieve what they were intended to achieve in the first place.” What started as case-by-case experimentation has since produced measurable results. In the Hague, a pilot targeting 150 heavily indebted residents was independently evaluated by Ernst & Young. The firm found average annual public savings of around €22,000 ($25,000) per participant, driven largely by reduced health care use and fewer social service interventions. On the administration side, the evaluation demonstrated that being able to implement solutions builds trust and reduces churn — long-term costly social interventions can be replaced by simpler, humane fix-ups early on. These findings align with broader evidence that integrated, person-centered approaches for high-need households tend to be cost-neutral or cost-saving when downstream costs in health, youth care and justice are included.​ Eighty-one percent of participants in a Breakthrough Method pilot program in the Hague experienced improved quality of life. Credit: 4kclips / Shutterstock Perhaps more important for structural reform, the method’s detailed, case-level cost mappings reveal “wrong pocket” effects: Many breakthrough investments are made in housing, income support and debt relief, while the largest savings accrue in health care, youth care and other domains. “That made a great case for most municipalities to finally start investing in social security again,” Kruiter notes.​​ A 2020 follow-up study by Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences reported that 81 percent of participants in the Hague program experienced improved quality of life. The health impact is no coincidence. “People with problematic debt use about three times more health care than the national average,” Kruiter explains. “And roughly 80 percent of those extra costs are in mental health care.” In that sense, the Breakthrough Method treats debt not just as an economic issue, but as a public health risk, intervening before financial stress cascades into crisis care. Kruiter says at the core of his work lies a simple question: “What do you need? Almost always, families tell you exactly what they need.” He describes working with a 21-year-old woman with a traumatic upbringing who had been expelled from multiple schools, had accumulated €20,000 ($23,000) in debt and was facing eviction. The standard bureaucratic pathway would have placed her on social assistance for four years before allowing her to return to education. “She said, ‘I want to go back to school now,’” Kruiter recalled. “And the system said, ‘Come back when you’re 25.’” Kruiter instead convinced the municipality to negotiate a debt buyout and found a school for the woman. She was expelled again, twice, but eventually completed her diploma. “When we asked her later what made the difference, she didn’t mention the debt relief,” Kruiter says. “She said: ‘You believed me when I said I could do this.’” Critics sometimes worry that increased discretion invites inconsistency or corruption. Kruiter argues the opposite. “In many municipalities, fewer than five percent of households account for more than half of social spending,” he explains. “If you don’t solve the situation for that group, you will never control your costs.” By requiring that each exception be legally defensible, financially sound and focused on restoring personal agency, the method turns what might once have been an informal workaround into a transparent — and auditable — decision. What strikes Kruiter is how universal the problem feels. “Bureaucratic life is basically, in big lines, everywhere the same,” he says. “Everybody understands that somehow bureaucracy prevents us from asking people what they need.”  After 15 years of work in the Netherlands, interest from abroad is mounting. IPW has presented the method at gatherings like the World Government Summit in Dubai and the Creative Bureaucracy Festival in Berlin. Cities and institutions in Dublin, Aarhus, Toronto, Norway, South Africa and Australia have expressed interest, and a hospital in Ontario is exploring applications on the health side.​​  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 In Dubai, where the welfare bureaucracy is still young, Kruiter’s team started with the very basics. “We told them: ‘You’re going to visit 10 families first and ask them what they need,’” he says. “Frontline workers came back very happy that they actually had talks and saw what people were struggling with, but also what people’s dreams and ambitions are.”​ The next frontier, though, is not geography but ownership. “We’re a bit done,” he admits. “We’re now 15 years into trying to teach government how to do this themselves.” IPW is working on a self-help version of the method so that residents can design their own breakthrough plans, with professionals supporting rather than steering. “We see that people make even better plans for themselves than the professionals we teach,” he says. “People can easily diagnose the solution for themselves.”​ His long-term vision is twofold: Equip governments to use the method internally, and develop a public-facing version that allows citizens to formulate structured breakthrough plans themselves.  Eric knew all along what he needed most. His case was not exceptional because it was dramatic. It was exceptional because someone calculated the taxi receipts. And for one family — and a growing number of municipalities — that recalibration makes all the difference.  The post How the Netherlands Bent Bureaucracy Into Something Beautiful appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.

Women’s wrestling champion earns praise for going easy on a terrified new wrestler
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Women’s wrestling champion earns praise for going easy on a terrified new wrestler

When you’re one of the best, it’s easy to get caught up in continuing to prove you’re the best. Displaying your dominance in a sport can be exhilarating as crowds cheer you on. But for one wrestler, fostering a love for the sport is more important. Tamara Humphries is a wrestler at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown who goes by the name Firefly. In a recent video, the college wrestler is intently watching as a referee seemingly explains different starting positions to another wrestler. The newcomer looks visibly terrified as she struggles to figure out how to position her body before the match starts. Wrestlers in a match. Photo credit: Canva Instead of letting things play out and using her own knowledge to her advantage, Humphries intervened. She taps the referee on the shoulder and signals that he doesn’t need to help. That’s when a sweet display of sportsmanship is shown. The championship wrestler starts from the position the other wrestler seems to be most comfortable with. Humphries also uses much less force while wrestling the girl to the mat. For some viewers, the more experienced wrestler took it easy on her competitor. Others saw the wrestling match differently and praised the wrestler for her acknowledgement of the girl’s fear while still giving her a match. Humphries isn’t a stranger to the fear she saw on the other wrestler’s face, which may have played into why her response was to be kind. View this post on Instagram The Pittsburgh native didn’t start wrestling until 10th grade. At the time, her inner-city school didn’t have a girls’ wrestling team, so she had to wrestle with the boys. In an old video uploaded to YouTube, Humphries shares how she was terrified the night before her very first match. “Listen, before my first match, I’m literally freaking out in my bed, terrified. I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ cause when I was on the team, there was no sanctioned girls wrestling at this moment,” the wrestler reveals in the year-old clip. “So I’m like, okay…I have to wrestle a boy. I’m looking up on YouTube, freaking boy versus girl wrestling, and it’s a bunch of girls getting actually demolished by guys. I’m like ‘oh my gosh, I’m cooked.'” Before joining the boys’ wrestling team, she was a cheerleader and ran track. Wrestling was a complete change that she had to take on alone. With girls’ and women’s wrestling starting to catch on, Humphries wants to do her part to make new wrestlers feel welcome. In the text overlay of a recent video, she writes, “Shout out to this super brave girl. This sport is terrifying! Never be afraid to start something new. We all start somewhere.” View this post on Instagram Viewers of the kind video heap praise on the young college athlete. One person writes, “U definitely took it easy on her and that was a very noble thing to do. Ive seen other clips of yours and know just how savage you can be when you need to be. You were a great ambassador to the sport for her. Many others would have smelled blood in the water and worked her over.” Another says, “This actually made me tear up. Wow. You are a GIRLS GIRL! You gave her a story, one day she’ll tell others, the reason she kept competing is because of this moment. It could’ve gone BAD, but you changed the trajectory. Well done.” View this post on Instagram This commenter adds on to the praise, saying, “I luv this. You showed her grace. Maybe someone did that for you. But it’s possible she can move forward and become better instead of giving up because of this one defining moment. And for you to have that wisdom is why you’re going to move mountains.” “Awesome sportsmanship, one of my teammates got clip farmed by a national qualifier this season and it was her first match ever,” another says. A coach views the act as a moment to praise both athletes, writing, “You’re great. You know that. You don’t need to show the world all the time. That’s admirable! Can we take a second to praise her? She was clearly scared and nervous. You can see it in her face. But she still went out there and competed. That’s more than most can say. Congrats to both of you from a dusty, old coach.” View this post on Instagram One commenter gushes, “Oh my god she’s trying so hard. This is the most touching thing I’ve seen in so long. You go girls!” Humphries reminds people in her caption that women’s wrestling is still new, and praises anyone trying it out: “I love running into people who just started to show them the sport isn’t so bad, with women’s wrestling on the rise, it’s nothing new. Never be afraid to start something new!! You guys are killing it.” The post Women’s wrestling champion earns praise for going easy on a terrified new wrestler appeared first on Upworthy.

Her dog wouldn’t stop sniffing her breath. She thought it was weird but it saved her life.
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Her dog wouldn’t stop sniffing her breath. She thought it was weird but it saved her life.

Dogs can be weird. Any dog owner will tell you that, but typically their shenanigans are just personality quirks. Unfortunately for Colleen Ferguson of Kent, England, her dog’s weird behavior wasn’t just a silly personality thing. For several weeks, Ferguson’s German Shepherd was obsessively sniffing her mouth. This was a new behavior that she found quite odd. The dog, Inca, was only two years old, but she seemed to know something was wrong with her owner and was doing her best to let her know. Inca constantly sniffed around Ferguson’s mouth and frowned. A woman and her dog outside. Photo credit: Canva The dog’s persistence caused the then 60-year-old woman to become concerned, which led her to the dentist. Everything checked out fine, but Inca was still frowning after sniffing Ferguson’s mouth. This prompted Ferguson to visit her doctor to be tested for other things that might change the smell of her breath. According to Medical News Today, diabetes can cause the breath to smell differently. Gluten intolerance and Celiac disease can also cause bad breath, according to Imperial Dental Center. Ferguson was cleared of any gut-related issues after tests from her doctor. Yet Inca would not stop telling her something was wrong. Growing more concerned about her dog’s new behavior, Ferguson decided to do a full-body scan to rule out anything unusual. “Her behavior towards me changed, she just started homing in on my mouth. Every time she could get a sniff of my mouth she would frown,” Ferguson told The Mirror. “She just had this focused intent on my mouth, and you couldn’t push her away until you had done an outbreath. When she got that she would give me such a look and walk away. In no way did I expect lung cancer at all. It was such a shock because I am a non-smoker, and because I taught biology, I was very anti-smoking.” Turns out, Inca was trying to tell her she had a tumor growing in her lungs. Thanks to the dog’s keen nose and insistent behavior, Ferguson was able to catch the cancer early. Before long, the science teacher was off to surgery, where doctors removed a golf-ball-sized tumor. Doctors operating on a patient. Photo credit: Canva “The surgeon said…’that dog saved your life. We never catch it at stage one,'” Ferguson told the BBC. This remarkable discovery took place in 2015, and since then scientists have been working on recreating a nose like Inca’s. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is currently developing an “e-nose,” a mechanical nose that scientists are training with AI to detect cancer. They have moved to the trial phase, testing more than 500 urine samples to see if the artificial nose is as accurate as a dog’s nose in detecting cancer. Dr. Andreas Mershin, a quantum physicist, developed the device that will be used to screen donated urine samples. The samples were prescreened by Medical Detection Dogs, and the results of the e-nose will be compared with those of the dogs. A dog sits in the grass. Photo credit: Canva “This is a major milestone,” Mershin told Medical Detection Dogs. “We’ve worked to emulate the dogs’ abilities and train machines in a similar way—rewarding them for correct identifications. It’s like giving our devices a new sense: a nose. Phones already have eyes and ears, but machine olfactors are the next frontier in health technology and AI sensing. This could transform the world of diagnosis, screening, and early detection.” While the e-nose is currently designed to detect prostate cancer, once it’s perfected, the mechanical nose will hopefully detect other cancers as well. Ferguson, for one, is thankful that her dog’s nose detected her lung cancer early, giving her a renewed chance at life. “I was just so lucky,” she told The Mirror. “Every day is special with her. To catch it at stage one is just remarkable. I don’t know how I would have survived with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. She saved me a lot of fuss. It was meant to be.” The post Her dog wouldn’t stop sniffing her breath. She thought it was weird but it saved her life. appeared first on Upworthy.

A landmark new study shows that 45 percent of older adults cognitively improve as they age
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A landmark new study shows that 45 percent of older adults cognitively improve as they age

Most people assume that by the time you hit your 60s, you’ve reached the point of continuous mental and physical decline. The mind just isn’t as sharp, and the body becomes overtaken by inflammation, stiff joints, and brittle bones. However, a new study from Yale University says that, for the most part, this is only true for those who believe it. A new study published in the journal Geriatrics found that when researchers followed 11,000 participants over the age of 65 for up to 12 years, 45% of them improved in either the mental or physical domains, with some improving in both. About 28% improved physically, and 32% improved mentally. To determine whether the participants improved or declined, they completed a global mental performance assessment and a walking test. “Many people equate aging with an inevitable and continuous loss of physical and cognitive abilities,” lead author Becca R. Levy, an international expert on psychosocial determinants of aging health, said in a statement. “What we found is that improvement in later life is not rare, it’s common, and it should be included in our understanding of the aging process.” Older adults improve cognitive function, physical function over time, disproving common views of aging. Individuals with more positive age https://t.co/3xI8pAhqjt— Reddit Journal of Science (@rsciencejournal) March 8, 2026 When it comes to aging, attitude is everything The researchers hypothesize that the major reason some people show improvements is their beliefs about aging. Those who have a more positive view of the aging process were much more likely to show improvements in their mental and physical health. Those with negative views on aging were much less likely to show any improvement. It makes sense because if you believe that you can improve after the age of 65, you’re much more likely to try. If you think that you can or cannot improve your health over the age of 65, you’re probably right. “Our findings suggest there is often a reserve capacity for improvement in later life,” Levy said. “And because age beliefs are modifiable, this opens the door to interventions at both the individual and societal level.” A group of older women exercising. Photo credit: Canva How to stay mentally and physically fit after 65 Improvement after 65 requires regularly performing age-appropriate mental and physical exercises. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week, which can be divided into about 22 minutes a day. Here are exercises that can help people age well: 1. Brisk walking Studies show that walking is great for seniors’ mental and physical health and can help reduce the chances of developing cardiovascular problems as well as cognitive issues, including dementia and Alzheimer’s. A group of people walking. Photo credit: Canva 2. Resistance exercises Resistance exercises, or strength training, can help prevent muscle loss and improve metabolic health. They’re also known to elevate mood and improve sleep quality. Examples of strength training exercises include light weights, squats, and standing push-ups against a wall. 3. Meditative movements Mental and physical exercises such as tai chi and yoga have been shown to improve health in older adults. They are great for flexibility, mental sharpness, and muscle strength. The combination of mindfulness, breathing, and movement benefits both the body and mind. The post A landmark new study shows that 45 percent of older adults cognitively improve as they age appeared first on Upworthy.