The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

@thelighterside

Job instability is pushing people to rethink their lives, not just their resumes
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Job instability is pushing people to rethink their lives, not just their resumes

For years, the go-to response to career difficulty was optimization. If work felt stagnant, or a job wasn’t coming through, the prescription was the same: update your resume, sharpen your skills, find a better angle. The assumption was that the system was fine and the problem was you. These days we’re beginning to see that this assumption is wobbly at best. Across career coaches and communities for people navigating job loss, a different question keeps coming up: not “how do I get back to where I was?” but “was where I was even where I wanted to be?” The shift is partly economic. Extended unemployment is more common now, especially for mid-career professionals and knowledge workers. But it’s also something else. A generation told for a decade to optimize, hustle, and build a personal brand is arriving at burnout and layoffs at the same time, and finding that more effort isn’t answering the question underneath the question. The shift from optimization to the bigger question Self-help was built on performance. Books, podcasts, productivity systems: the whole genre assumed you had a life and needed to do it better. How was always the question. What’s shifting is that people are asking whether instead. Whether the path they’re on is one they chose or one they more or less fell into. Whether what made sense at 28 still fits at 40. People have always asked these questions, usually in their 40s or after something goes wrong. What’s different now is that they’re showing up earlier, in more ordinary circumstances, prompted by a layoff rather than a reckoning. Career counselors say clients are arriving less often with “help me find my next job” and more often with “help me figure out what I want.” That’s a different conversation. The rise of the intentional reset The idea behind a life reset is to step back from the immediate pressure of job searching and ask bigger questions: what work is for, what success means to you, what kind of life you’re actually trying to build. Rather than treating a career gap as a problem to close as fast as possible, an intentional reset uses the time deliberately. Clarifying values. Figuring out what kind of work fits. Recognizing that the ambition that drove the first twenty years of a career may not be right for the next twenty. Coaches who specialize in career reinvention rather than job placement are finding more demand. A lot of it comes from people who have been searching for months, have done everything the conventional playbook says, and are starting to wonder if the playbook is the problem. Reinvention as a professional direction There’s another thread running through all of this: reinvention is starting to look like a career in itself. Some people who navigate a major transition end up wanting to help others do the same. New roles are growing at the edge: life strategist, career reinvention coach, transition advisor, all sitting somewhere between personal development and career counseling. The catch is that the coaching and life strategy space is almost entirely unregulated, and quality varies enormously. But there’s something to the underlying logic: people who have been through a difficult career change have useful knowledge for others in the same position. That holds, even when the industry around it is messy. The harder question underneath all of it The deeper issue is about who’s responsible for designing a working life. For most of the last century, that responsibility sat with institutions. Employers offered stability, pensions, and a clear path. The assumption that the structure was inevitable made sense when it held. It doesn’t hold anymore. The contract is gone, and with it the feeling that someone else was steering. People are making more of these decisions themselves now: what to do, what to value, what to build toward. That can feel isolating. But it’s also more honest about how things work. “Does this life make sense for me?” is a question most people were never encouraged to ask. A layoff isn’t a great way to get there. For a lot of people, though, it’s how they got there.  The post Job instability is pushing people to rethink their lives, not just their resumes first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

California canal solar project reduces evaporation and generates power
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California canal solar project reduces evaporation and generates power

Shade from solar panels installed above two California irrigation canals reduced water evaporation by up to 70 percent and cut aquatic weed and algae growth by up to 85 percent over a full irrigation season, according to data from Project Nexus, a state-funded pilot in the Central Valley. Those aren’t the numbers the program set out to prove; the primary case was always about energy generation. But for a technology that costs more to build than ground-mounted solar, the water and maintenance results may be what make the economics work. California’s canal network doubles as solar infrastructure California operates roughly 4,000 miles of open irrigation canals, delivering water to farms and homes across the state. Project Nexus, funded with $20 million in state money, tested whether that network can also generate electricity. The pilot, a collaboration between the University of California, Merced, the Turlock Irrigation District, and solar developer Solar AquaGrid, installed steel-framed solar canopies above two canals south of Modesto. One canal is roughly as wide as an alleyway; the other spans about the width of an eight-lane highway. Together they cover an area roughly equivalent to one and a half football fields and generate 1.6 megawatts of combined power. The math behind scaling up A 2021 UC Merced study modeled the effects of covering all 4,000 miles of California’s major open canals with solar panels. The projection: 13 gigawatts of generating capacity, roughly half the new solar California needs to meet its 2030 renewable targets, and 63 billion gallons of water saved each year, enough to serve 2 million people or irrigate 50,000 acres of farmland. Lead researcher Brandi McKuin is direct about the ceiling. Canal shapes, conditions, and locations vary too widely, and the construction costs are higher than those for ground-mounted desert solar. “It’s probably unrealistic to assume that we’re going to cover all 4,000 miles of California’s canals,” she said. Even so, the modeling showed that covering a fraction of the network would produce output worth having. Why the economics could justify the cost For canal operators, the question isn’t whether solar canopies generate power. It’s whether the total value of power generation, conserved water, land savings, and reduced weed maintenance justifies the additional cost over conventional solar. That math isn’t settled yet. A new UC Merced report expected in the coming months will be “critical” to whether the Turlock Irrigation District invests further, according to Josh Weimer, the district’s director of external affairs. The 85 percent reduction in aquatic weed and algae growth is not a minor operational footnote; canal operators spend considerable resources managing those weeds through the irrigation season. The California Department of Water Resources is also tracking the results as it evaluates solar canals for portions of the State Water Project, which serves 27 million people. Data from Project Nexus will be “essential” to understanding real-world performance, said Andrew Schwarz, the agency’s climate action manager. Early results in India and Arizona California is not the first. Gujarat, in western India, completed two solar canal projects more than a decade ago. In 2024, the Gila River Indian Community built one along Interstate 10 south of Phoenix, Arizona. The Gila River project is producing 1.5 megawatts, 25 percent more than projected, possibly because water cools the panels from below and raises their efficiency. Water temperature dropped a full degree Fahrenheit as it traveled through 3,500 feet (roughly two-thirds of a mile) of shaded canal, with no algae growth recorded. David DeJong, the irrigation project director, described the potential impact on the American West as a “paradigm shift.” From pilot to the first 100 miles Roger Bales, professor emeritus of civil and environmental engineering at UC Merced, estimates California’s canal network could generate up to one gigawatt of solar power within the next decade, provided the first 100 miles get built. “We have to get to a hundred miles, and then it might take off,” he said. The near-term strategy, according to Solar AquaGrid chief executive Jordan Harris, is finding locations where canals sit adjacent to existing energy needs: water-pumping stations, EV charging sites along highways, or anywhere a local power line can absorb generation without requiring new transmission infrastructure. McKuin said more research is needed before any broad commitment. “It’s still really early to say what the economic feasibility of this is,” she said. The data from one and a half football fields of solar canal won’t settle the question, but it’s the first real-world evidence that the three-part case for the technology holds up outside a simulation.  The post California canal solar project reduces evaporation and generates power first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

Decluttering expert shares exactly how she cracked the code to a blissfully organized home
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Decluttering expert shares exactly how she cracked the code to a blissfully organized home

The new year is prime time for decluttering. As people take down holiday decor, figure out where to store it, and decide where new gifts should go, many are also resolving to get more organized. Decluttering is not easy, but organization expert Dana K. White shares practical advice that can make the process far more successful. She says the key to finally cracking the decluttering code was learning to let go of perfectly good items. “If you try to declutter but struggle, here’s the realization I had to come to: decluttering means getting rid of perfectly good stuff,” she writes in the caption of a recent video on YouTube. “Instead of trying to make myself think something is bad, I have decluttering strategies that help me let go of good things that don’t fit in my home.” She calls it a “major mindset shift” that “will free you to make the progress in your home that you’ve been wanting to make if you find yourself stuck in the process of decluttering or at the thought of decluttering.” Why this mindset shift changes everything White explains that while letting go of perfectly good items can be a difficult mindset shift, it pays off in a big way. “I used to think that decluttering was getting rid of things that were not good or things I didn’t need or things that were not useful,” she says. “But that is actually not the heart of decluttering.” Instead, she had to redefine what clutter really was.  “Clutter is anything that consistently gets out of control in my home,” she says. “That means what is clutter to me isn’t necessarily clutter to you. If it is something that is actually important enough to me that I keep it under control, then I don’t have to consider that clutter.” White says she noticed this most clearly when it came to clothing. “With clothing, it was a huge mind-blowing moment for me to realize clothing could be clutter,” she says. “I didn’t know it because the phrase that came out of my mouth and into my brain was: ‘But clothing is useful. But clothing is something that we have to have.’ Clothing was out of control. I had so many clothes in my house that we could go way too long without having to do laundry. Therefore, the dirty clothes piles were out of control, ridiculously high. And that was clothing being out of control.” White calls herself a “functionalist,” judging clutter by whether items fit in their space and are easy to access. “I don’t consider myself a minimalist,” she explains. “My goal is not to have the least amount that I can possibly have. I don’t consider myself a maximalist, like how much can I possibly keep. I consider myself a functionalist. It allows me to still like an item and get rid of perfectly good stuff.” What happened when people tried it On Reddit, people embarking on their own decluttering journeys shared how White’s advice helped them. “Yes that totally resonates with me and it was liberating as I purged glassware that I don’t use. But now I’m still working on selecting my favorite coffee cups. Argh,” one Redditor commented. Another shared, “It’s easy for me to let go knowing it’s going to someone else who might need or want to use it more than I ever had.” Another declutterer wrote, “If you do not use it, just pitch it or give it away. You will never get your purchase value back. It does nobody any good sitting in a box in the garage for ten years.” What makes this advice actually stick Most decluttering advice tells you to evaluate your stuff, ask if it sparks joy, decide if you’ve used it in a year and imagine whether you’d buy it again today. White’s approach is different because it skips the evaluation entirely. The question isn’t whether something is good or useful. The question is whether your home can actually hold it without things getting out of control. That’s a much easier standard to apply, and it removes the guilt that usually stalls the whole process. You’re not saying the item is bad. You’re just saying it doesn’t fit, and that’s enough. This article originally appeared in January It has been updated. The post Decluttering expert shares exactly how she cracked the code to a blissfully organized home appeared first on Upworthy.

Europeans who moved to the United States share 13 reasons they prefer their new lives in America
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Europeans who moved to the United States share 13 reasons they prefer their new lives in America

Moving across the world to a new country takes a lot of courage, and many people do it with the hopes of a fresh start and a better life. According to Pew Research Center, 53.3 million immigrants were reported living in the United States in January 2025, many coming from European countries. While there are many differences between American and European culture, Europeans are fond of many things the United States has to offer. On Reddit, Europeans who moved to the United States opened up about the exact reasons they love living in America compared to Europe. From finances to nature and more, Europeans shared 13 ways life got better when they moved across the pond. Here are all 13 reasons they gave “People who earn a lot of money can potentially earn A LOT more money in the US.” – futurus196 “Americans are really good at: Eh, f*ck it. Let’s do it! And then they’ll do it, doesn’t matter what it is, because there’s a sense of community that’s uniquely American. Invite the neighborhood to a pool party, call your friends last minute for a Saturday grill, pile up in car for a road trip to NYC or Vegas, organize a legendary bachelor party… It’s fun-loving spontaneity and a sense of adventure that I have not found anywhere else.” – CaaaathcartTowers “I also like the outdoors and nothing beats the fresh morning air in Florida, I was tired of built up cities where you could not even open your car window at the lights or else you die from the diesel fumes. It’s still crazy for me to see plants that my mom would have in a pot on the window sill in Romania grow here in the ground to be 10x the size.” – ratonbox “I think culture is easier to integrate and way more diverse than Europe, plus high salaries and more choices of climates. You literally cannot find a place in Europe with good job market and warm weather.” – djmanu22 “I’m British but used to live in Munich, Germany. I had very well paid jobs in both countries. I’ve travelled all over the world. However, from the moment I stepped foot in the US (first as a tourist) I fell in love. I’m now living in SoCal and I just love the lifestyle. I love the weather, the beaches, the way of life. Also, being British over here is pretty cool, you generally always get a great reaction to your accent. I had plenty of opportunities elsewhere but I also know I will here. The US is at the epicenter of western culture, I love what the country stands for. No place is perfect, the US certainly not, but the positives far outweigh any negatives.” – SDunited  “Nobody said it, I think one important aspect it’s friendliness, open mind culture in America and an unlimited things to do and see if you have the money of course. Rich western European countries are socially inept compared to America. People are cold and unapproachable and [in] America it’s the opposite. And America it really feels like a dream, never get bored, lots of indie culture, epic nature, national parks, amazing road drives ex. Pacific Coast, awesome states and cities like California, NY, LA, SF, or small towns…” – User Unknown Standard of living came up a lot “Family here and in Spain. No one here wants to go back because the standard of living here is better. Bigger house, your own yard, higher salaries, etc. Additionally kids have a much better future. Unofficially unemployment rate for those 18-30 is 50%.” – LolaStrm1970 “Better salaries, better social life (I love how kind and open Americans are, in my experience anyway), better opportunities, better healthcare (covered by my employer and it’s incredible). I also think the university system is way better here and top 20 universities in the US are better than any university I could go to in the UK minus Oxbridge. I’ve lived in the US, UK, EU, Asia and Middle East, and I love the US the most and believe that people take it for granted. It’s beautiful.” – User Unknown “On a big level, prices in US are lower without VAT and the inflation % is very low by comparison. Unemployment is extremely low in U.S. and it’s easier to find housing, rent out your home, and easier to find servicemen to fix things. On a small level, I have more (and cheaper) water, electricity, and gasoline. That means I can have air conditioning, a clothes dryer, and more. Simply put, I’m more comfortable in U.S. Final reason, I can drive to 5 different grocery stores in 5-10 min away, and the stores offer SO much variety because they have more shelf space. It’s a beautiful place to see a grocery store in the U.S. lol ” – Traveler5023 And a few that go deeper than expected “US has its flaws. But after staying for a few years I found out it’s really dynamic with great people from all over the world. The culture is mostly open to foreigners and I’ve never been discriminated against. It is easier to integrate. It is also more meritocratic so you can come as an outsider and do really well. You can have a really good quality of life here and earn great money that lets you e.g. save for retirement and potentially retire early. That’s actually our plan. One day we’ll retire back to Europe, however, we won’t be relying on social security since we don’t believe those systems will be in a good shape. We’ve also received outstanding health care here, even compared to back home, my wife gave birth to our little one and everything was pretty great.” – Proper_Duty_4142 @thepasinis Europeans vs Americans – Part 2! ♬ Old Disney Swing Jazz – Nico “As much as the healthcare costs an exorbitant amount of money, I’ve been able to access treatments out here that I don’t think would be as readily available in my home country. Other than that, my people are here. There’s nothing for me in my country of origin.” – Pour_Me_Another_ “People who are focused on work, money and those who gain a lot of personal validation from personal financial success over other aspects of life particularly tend to favor the US. The concept of having ‘enough’ tends not to feature as highly in their worldview.” – jamesemelb “I find Germany so boring… yeah, you can travel and have tons of vacations. But your day-to-day life is dull, I can’t tell for other European countries. The USA has a more rollercoaster approach to life; there are many ups and some downs, but you are always looking forward to the ride.” – Zealousideal_Ad9966 What this list actually says about America Reading through all 13 of these, the recurring theme isn’t wealth or weather or career opportunity, though those come up a lot. It’s something harder to quantify: a sense that things feel possible here in a way that can be difficult to find elsewhere. The spontaneous pool party invitation. The sense that outsiders can integrate and succeed on their own terms. The sheer scale of the country, from the grocery store aisles to the national parks. None of it is universal, and plenty of Europeans would make an equally compelling case for staying home. But for these 13, the trade was worth it, and their specificity is what makes the list worth reading. This article originally appeared in January. It has been updated. The post Europeans who moved to the United States share 13 reasons they prefer their new lives in America appeared first on Upworthy.

9 common English words and phrases that take on entirely different meanings in England
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9 common English words and phrases that take on entirely different meanings in England

Evan Edinger, an American-British YouTuber living in London who often shares playful comparisons between life in the two countries, recently highlighted how even approaches to the mother tongue can vary widely. And we’re not talking about “lifts” versus “elevators” or “fries” versus “chips” here. Even terms that seem universal among English speakers can turn out to mean entirely different things. “English is full of words that quietly flip meaning when you cross the Atlantic. Words that you think sound polite…[but] can really land you in hot water if you use them across the pond,” Edinger said in a now-viral video, before listing some of the most surprising ones he’s come across while living abroad. Read below and see if there’s an innocent phrase you use often that could be met with furrowed brows should you ever go on a jaunt in jolly old England. Here are 9 words that quietly flip meaning 1. “Quite good” Using a graph from YouGov, Edinger showed how in the UK, “quite good” actually ranks lower than “good,” meaning something “quite good” is worse than something “good.” It’d be the same as saying something is “fairly good,” or just so-so. Conversely, in America, it’s used as an intensifier to denote something “better than good.” As Edinger put it: “American ‘quite’ and British ‘quite’ are quite the opposite.” View this post on Instagram 2. “With all due respect” If you ever hear a Brit say this, Edinger warns that “they do not mean it.” It’s really just a polite, passive-aggressive way of saying “you’re an idiot, and I think you’re full of sh*t.” To be fair, plenty of Americans use “with all due respect” to preface remarks that are anything but respectful. But you get the gist. 3. “Thanks, I’ll bear that in mind” Generally speaking, many Brits use “I’ll bear that in mind” as an indirect refusal, while Americans are more likely to mean it sincerely. The ones that cause the most confusion 4. To “table” something Edinger noted that this phrase is a particular source of confusion between Americans and Brits. In the UK, to “table” a discussion means to bring it forward for immediate consideration. Americans, by contrast, use it synonymously with “shelving” something, saving a less important topic for a later date, or better yet, never mentioning it again. 5. “Moot point” Originally, a “moot point” was something brought up in a public assembly or court. Brits have held onto this meaning, so when something is “moot,” it’s an important topic worth debating. However, in America, a moot point is “usually something completely irrelevant,” because the opportunity to act on it has passed. 6. “Solicitor” Americans might associate the word with a “door-to-door salesman…or a prostitute,” Edinger quipped. In the UK, however, a “solicitor” is a far more prestigious title, referring to a legal professional who provides specialized legal advice. As an American, you might be wondering, why not just call them lawyer? In the UK, however, “lawyer” is a broad term for anyone who works in law, without the same formal qualifications implied by “solicitor.” 7. “Public school” Public schools in America are free and government-funded, and are the source of many debates among parents and educators for that very reason. In the UK, however, “public school” refers to private boarding schools for the wealthy elite, the most famous of which is Eton College. “State school” would be used to describe what Americans know as a “public school.” Bonkers. 8. “Momentarily” To an American, this means “in a moment.” To a Brit, it means “for a moment.” The real-world implication of this discrepancy really shines in Edinger’s pilot analogy. If a Brit heard that their plane would be “landing momentarily,” it might suggest touching down on the tarmac only briefly before going back up. Hope you don’t have a connecting flight! 9. “Not bad” Edinger explained that while “not bad” could mean “good” to a Brit, he thinks it’s another tool for understating true feeling. In that sense, “not bad” can mean anything a little better than good, much like how Americans tend to interpret “quite good.” What this list actually tells us Language is one of those things that feels completely universal right up until the moment it isn’t. If you and a British colleague are in a meeting and you suggest “tabling” something, you could walk out of that room with completely opposite understandings of what just happened. And if they told you your idea was “quite good,” you might feel great about it while they quietly file it in the bin. The deeper point is that politeness, directness, and even respect don’t translate the way we assume they do, and that’s worth knowing before you board the plane. You can follow Evan Edinger on YouTube and Instagram. This article originally appeared in January. It has been updated. The post 9 common English words and phrases that take on entirely different meanings in England appeared first on Upworthy.