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True Independence: How to Remain Grateful During 6 Days Without Electricity or Running Water

flag on our deck railing

flag on our deck railingAfter nearly 15 years of looking at the bright side as publisher of the Good News Network, I instinctively knew over the last 5 days that no matter how much hardship was thrown at me, it would only make things worse to complain. With each mishap or misfortune, celebration was warranted because inevitably “something good” showed up.

On Friday, my husband and I embarked upon that most detestable of all home improvement projects, re-painting a room. I dreaded the thought of this room in particular – my home office – because it contained more than a decade of assorted office supplies and piles of paper work stored in drawers, filing cabinets and cupboards. Even if I were to hire someone to do the painting, I’d still have to be the one to sort through all the stuff hidden in the 12×13 room with cedar closet.

As I thumbed through the documents — some going back to parenting and creative pursuits pre-dating the Good News Network– I was filled with appreciation, seeing proof of my years of dedication to our kids, family, friends, and the development of my own spiritual and artistic sensibilities.

After the contents of the room were finally emptied into another room, we purchased our paint. The sturdy walls of tongue-in-groove knotty-pine had been painted dull yellow, probably in the 1970’s. Primer would be needed to cover the accumulation of crayon, dirt and grime. Everyone liked the idea of dark brown paint, offset by a fresh white ceiling.

painting-old-officePaint experts from the hardware store recommended a blue/gray tinted primer to make easier the transition to brown. After we got home and began the work, the mishaps began. A partially filled paint tray tipped over from atop the ladder while I watched in horror from across the room. The paint soaked into the old dirty carpet, but a new rug had been ordered so no harm done.

I soon realized that I’d forgotten that our earlier plan was to use the ‘white’ primer on the ceiling, so we needed to return to the store, which slowed our progress. But with temperature outside registering nearly one hundred degrees with 100 percent humidity, I said out loud, “As long as our air conditioner continues working, we have nothing to worry about.”

That evening, our paint brushes soaking, with only fifteen percent of the painting done, a massive storm rampaged through Virginia, Maryland and three other states, ripping out trees and power lines. Three million people were plunged into darkness, marking the largest such black-out in history and the end of our air conditioning.

By the next day our house had become mighty hot and our toilets full. We live in a wooded neighborhood with a water supply derived from a well powered by electricity. I immediately saw the silver lining: The trees bring shade, so our home was fully 8-10 degrees cooler than suburban streets, and we live on a lake. We started hauling water up the hill for our bathrooms and kitchen.

By the second day our teens were scattering to friends’ homes that were unaffected by the outage. Having recognized an opportunity to use someone’s working toilet, I went into a house I’d never entered before, though I’d dropped my daughter there dozens of times. Its owner, Tamara, is a lovely lady, a mom my age whom I immediately liked upon meeting 13 years ago when our daughters bonded at preschool. That day was her birthday.

In her kitchen, friendliness and cheer bubbled over as the girls watched us chat. (I sneaked away to use her toilet, none the wiser as to how lucky I felt at the timing of our visit.) I visited for over an hour, meeting her longtime boyfriend and hearing excellent news about her rehabilitated, beloved son.

carpet-redo-bedroomOn our second full day of painting the room’s old-fashioned textured ceiling with its thousands of ridges running the full length of it, and the edges of all the walls, and every deep crevice in between each board that ran floor-to-ceiling, I began to realize that this was going to take a lot longer than originally planned. We couldn’t repeat this entire performance (layering2 brown coats over the first gray coat) in a room this hot, with only a toaster-oven size window for ventilation. Blue-gray suddenly became the perfect wall color. I laughed to myself, satisfied with the notion of “a more cheerful” appearance (than brown) for the new office, and an end to this tyranny of fumes. Funny, because I’d earlier voiced my wish for a comfortable seat in that office for relaxing with a book or document, and we had a big blue armchair in another room that would match nicely with the new wall color. My gratitude grew, unwilted by the heat.

At the end of a long day, so sweaty but unable to use our shower, we jumped into swim suits and dove into the warm lake. It’s something we rarely do anymore, now that our kids are grown. More gratitude, as the fresh smell of the lake entered my nostrils and my skin turned soft.

The next day, after finished the painting, erasing every trace of 1970’s yellow, I went for another swim, rubbing off the blue-gray flecks from my fingers. Tired of eating food just to keep them from spoiling, we went out to a fancy restaurant for dinner.

I thinnk the worst of the outage was not being able to update the Good News Network website from any local wifi café. My trusty laptop happened to be with the Apple Store for repair this month. By Monday, though, I’d begun to look at options for trying to get online and file some good news for the loyal subscribers.

I finally found a friend who was able to lend me her laptop. Not only was I able to let subscribers know why there’d been no good news posted, but that girlfriend, an avid camper, thought of lending us a battery-operated fan, which proved immensely helpful at night when we tried to sleep over the next few muggy nights. Donna lives nearby, but we never seem to take the time to just meet and enjoy each other’s company.

The weather was feeling more humid and hotter yesterday. Because I posted a quick update on Facebook about our plight, another friend of ours offered her home, where I was able to clean up in a long, hot shower. On top of that, she blended a couple fresh homemade pina coladas for us. That communion time allowed us to catch up as old friends and her husband revealed intriguing information about our son, who recently stayed with them. (I’m sure I never would have heard the story otherwise.)

Today began — the sixth day without electricity and running water, with another delicious cup of coffee, made in a European press with boiling water from our propane camp stove. (I cooked a delicious pot roast on that stove last night using potatoes, carrots, beets and chuck roast.) I normally just have brewed coffee which is not nearly as rich.

Today is the 4th of July. I’m living like those men and women in the original thirteen colonies: Up at sunrise, carrying water, boiling water, writing on paper, eating fresh food, I am truly independent.

We should take seriously the pursuit of happiness. (It doesn’t just happen; you need to make it happen every day.) Experiences this week proved that if you look for the bright side, you will surely find it – even without internet, TV, running water or air conditioning.

On this Independence Day, we will party like it’s 1776!

[UPDATE: Just as we were cheering the huge fireworks display in the darkness above the lake — thanks to our kids, their friends and neighbors — we saw a sudden welcome sight: Our power came back on, which got the loudest cheer of all.]

True Independence: How to Remain Grateful During 6 Days Without Electricity or Running Water

flag on our deck railing

flag on our deck railingAfter nearly 15 years of looking at the bright side as publisher of the Good News Network, I instinctively knew over the last 5 days that no matter how much hardship was thrown at me, it would only make things worse to complain. With each mishap or misfortune, celebration was warranted because inevitably “something good” showed up.

Double Amputee First to Run at Olympics

track star and amputee, Oscar Pistorius

track star and amputee, Oscar PistoriusOscar Pistorius will be competing in the London Olympics in his favorite event, the 400-meter relay, as the first amputee track athlete to compete at any games.

While his selection for the 4×400 relay team was expected, it was a surprise last-minute turnaround by South African sports officials Wednesday that gave the 25-year-old the chance to run at the Olympics.

Chad Ochocinco Invites Grieving Widow to his July 4 Wedding

tweet by Ochocinco

tweet by OchocincoA woman named Cheryl took to Twitter yesterday, hurting over the recent loss of her husband of 30 years. She asked a fellow Twitter junkie, pro football player Chad Ochocinco, for his prayers.

Chad, it turns out, is getting married today and decided to make arrangements for Cheryl to fly overseas for the soiree, in a super-kind gesture to cheer her up.

8-Year-old Climbs Kilimanjaro to Help Cure Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

boy-climbs-mt-small

boy-climbs-mt-smallEight-year-old Tyler Armstrong this week became the second youngest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro.

“I did it! I climbed to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro for my friends Hawken, Suhail and Wil and the other boys with Duchenne who can’t climb,” said the Yorba Linda, California boy. He and his team climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro June 25 through July 2 to raise awareness and funds to find a cure for Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Tyler wants to raise $19,341 – a dollar for every foot he climbed – for CureDuchenne.org, a nonprofit that funds research to find a cure for the devastating muscle disease that impacts one in 3,500 boys.

8-Year-old Climbs Kilimanjaro to Help Cure Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

boy-climbs-mt-small

boy-climbs-mt-smallEight-year-old Tyler Armstrong this week became the second youngest person ever to summit Mt. Kilimanjaro.

“I did it! I climbed to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro for my friends Hawken, Suhail and Wil and the other boys with Duchenne who can’t climb,” said the Yorba Linda, California boy. He and his team climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro June 25 through July 2 to raise awareness and funds to find a cure for Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Tyler wants to raise $19,341 – a dollar for every foot he climbed – for CureDuchenne.org, a nonprofit that funds research to find a cure for the devastating muscle disease that impacts one in 3,500 boys.

Anonymous Wealthy Couple’s $30-million Gift to Help Vancouver’s Homeless

homeless

homelessA $30-million philanthropic gift from an anonymous wealthy couple is allowing the City of Vancouver to reopen Taylor Manor as a home for street people with complex mental health issues.

The contribution of the elderly Vancouver couple will allow the home to operate completely independent of ongoing government support.

The city’s representative on housing and homeless issues, was nearly moved to tears by the donors’ largesse, saying they had been feeling so hopeless recently.

(READ the story in the Vancouver Sun)

Thanks to Craig Withers for sending the story!

 

Hoax Prompts Free Food From Taco Bell for Alaska Town

the Power of Nice book cover

the Power of Nice book coverBethel, Alaska is a town so remote that it has a total of zero fast food restaurants. No Burger King. No McDonalds. No KFC chicken.

That’s why residents were thrilled when flyers circulated around town about a new Taco Bell arriving.

The joy, however, turned into disappointment. The flyers were a hoax — the result, police say, of a feud between two residents.

But all was not lost.

Where is the good news? Editor’s Note from a Starbucks Somewhere in Virginia

geri-with-mugwai-computer

Geri on computerI’m Ba-ack!

Friday was the last time I uploaded on the Good News Network because of a storm that hit here on the East Coast. Not only are we on our fourth day with no power in my home and office, but my laptop has been in the repair shop so I couldn’t update the site from offsite, either.

Finallly, this morning went to use a laptop at a friend’s house– a Windows computer, unfortunately, so it is taking me longer with every keystroke and click.

Power is likely to be out until Thursday, but I hope to get a selection of good news up today and sporadically until my new laptop comes in the mail. (Macbook Pro, YAY!)

I hope you can forgive the interruption in service.

Miracle Escape as Mum Saves Baby Daughter by Outrunning 32-ton Truck

truck

truckA miracle mum saved her baby daughter from being crushed to death when she outran a 32-tonne lorry – seconds before it demolished her home.

Jen Whitelam, 23, was halfway out of her front door with one-year-old Bella, when she spotted the out of control truck careering towards her.

The force of the crash demolished Jen’s two-bedroom home and crushed her Ford Focus car which was parked on the driveway.

Upload Your Smiling Face to Yoko Ono’s New Smile App

Smile film app by Yoko Ono

Smile film app by Yoko OnoIn the 1960s Yoko Ono conceived that her “ultimate film” would be one that included the smiling face of every person in the world. Now, her idea has come to life as an app.

The iPhone app, #smilesfilm, allows people around the world to view and upload snapshots of smiling faces. Users can also look at recently uploaded snapshots geographically on a map or view them in a moving slideshow chronologically.

Yoko thanked the people who had previously sent photos for her film, saying, “It’s so beautiful. I just didn’t know that there are so many beautiful people on Earth, since I am reading the papers every day of murders, bombings, and major pollution.”

Upload Your Smiling Face to Yoko Ono’s New Smile App

Smile film app by Yoko Ono

Smile film app by Yoko OnoIn the 1960s Yoko Ono conceived that her “ultimate film” would be one that included the smiling face of every person in the world. Now, her idea has come to life as an app.

The iPhone app, #smilesfilm, allows people around the world to view and upload snapshots of smiling faces. Users can also look at recently uploaded snapshots geographically on a map or view them in a moving slideshow chronologically.

Yoko thanked the people who had previously sent photos for her film, saying, “It’s so beautiful. I just didn’t know that there are so many beautiful people on Earth, since I am reading the papers every day of murders, bombings, and major pollution.”

New Islamist Egypt President Envisions Unity Government for All

Egyptian Islamist president welcomes Coptic leader -govt photo release

Egyptian Islamist president welcomes Coptic leader -govt photo releaseOn Sunday, Islamist Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood was declared Egypt’s first freely elected president in modern history.

He reached out Tuesday to Christians, women and secular revolutionaries to join his new Islamist-led government.

Good Samaritan and Employer Help Boy Whose New Bike was Stolen

biking little girl in NYC

biking little girl in NYCTwo teens grabbed a brand new, beautiful BMX bike worth $400, leaving its owner, a 13-year-old boy, crying on the sidewalk. But when a passer-by stopped to see if he was okay, the boy’s luck began to change.

The man followed the thieves and called police, but the bike was not recovered.

The concerned man also told his employer about the incident. After hearing his story, All-Lifts Inc., an industrial rigging company in Albany, sent him out with money to purchase a new bike.

The new bike was delivered to the boy Tuesday afternoon.

(WATCH the video, or READ the story in the Times Union)

 

File photo of NYC bike-rider

Thanks to Auto Security Features, US Car Thefts Decline for Eighth Year

Hyundai Genesis

Hyundai GenesisU.S. auto thefts likely fell for an eighth straight year in 2011 as security features made cars more difficult to steal, an insurance-industry group said.

According to preliminary data released today by the National Insurance Crime Bureau, thefts dropped 3.3 percent last year, to the lowest level since 1967.

Unemployed Hero Saves Baby from Oncoming Subway – Job Offers Pour in

buttercups-field-sun

Photo by Sun StarA sudden gust of wind blew a baby stroller onto the tracks as a train rumbled into a Brooklyn station yesterday — but an unemployed Brooklyn man on his way to a job interview jumped off the platform and saved the tot from certain death, authorities and witnesses said.

“Right before the train came, I was able to pull up the stroller and myself, too,” said Delroy Simmonds, 30.

“He got the baby just in time,” a witness said.

He missed the job interview but after news of his heroics spread, he received numerous job offers and accepted one as a maintenance man at Kennedy Airport.

“It says a lot about his character that he would jump on the tracks to save a (child),” Guy Rodriguez, who hired Simmonds, told the NY Daily News.

(READ the original story in the NY Post – Also, updated story w/ job offering at NY Daily News)

Photo by Sun Star

CodeNow Teaches City Kids Coding, Sparking Lifelong Interest

CodeNow Graduates

CodeNow GraduatesBill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and Steve Jobs, who changed the way we live, all had this in common: Access to technology at an early age.

A Washington, DC nonprofit called CodeNow is teaching underrepresented youth the fundamental skills of computer programming. While taking free courses, the city kids — almost 40% are girls —  build robots, Twitter apps, and a better future.

Since launching in 2011, CodeNow has provided nearly 2,000 hours of free training and distributed 41 Netbooks to students who otherwise might have minimal access to a personal computer.

“During trainings, we were amazed to watch students take to programming,” said one CodeNow staffer. “They were like sponges ready to soak up everything we gave them. Their thirst to learn was far greater than we ever expected.”

To better equip volunteers and the kids, who each receive a Netbook upon graduation, CodeNow has launched a campaign to raise awareness. Get more info on their IndieGoGo campaign where they are halfway to their goal of raising $15,000.

(WATCH the video below)

Man Finds Beloved Stolen Sports Car After 40 years

Austin Healey 1965 model

Austin Healey 1965 modelOne night last month, Bob Russell, who was unable to sleep, climbed out of bed and sat down at his computer to do some late night eBay searching. Russell, who lives in Southland, Texas, says that every so often he’d do a search for his 1967 Austin Healey, a beloved sports car that was stolen in 1970.

“I used to always look at Austin Healeys parked on the side of the road. Every once in a while, I’d search the Internet. I knew finding it would be impossible,” Russell told The Hamilton Spectator in Ontario.

His wife was happy, too. lt was the car in which they had their first date as a couple.

Thanks to Craig Withers for sending the link!

Family Dog Saves Boy from Drowning

black lab in dirty pool (CNN video)

black lab in dirty pool (CNN video)A heroic dog saved a toddler from drowning after the boy fell into a pool this weekend in Michigan.

When his mother finally found the 14-month-old, he looked like he was floating in the pool, but actually the black labrador was holding him up, not moving an inch until help could arrive.

Find Health and Happiness on a Walk in the Woods

Your Brain on Nature book cover

Your Brain on Nature book coverDo you want to be happier, healthier, and smarter? I have just the prescription for you: add a daily dose of nature to your routine.

Over the past decade, researchers from fields as diverse as biology, psychiatry, engineering, horticulture, neuroscience and medicine have realized what most of us know intuitively: nature is good for our health and wellbeing.

These experts have discovered countless links between time spent outdoors and cognitive, physical, and emotional improvement. Studies show that enjoying a natural setting — like a park, beach, wetland, or forest — can reduce blood pressure, anxiety, and stress levels. Exposure to nature can help you sleep well and increase vigor and liveliness. It can even boost your immune system.