Meet Goliath, The Adorable Baby Cow Who Thinks He’s A Dog

When Goliath was born, he was very sick and couldn’t even drink from a milk bottle. So in order to give him the care he needed to survive, Shaylee Hubbs adopted him.

One morning, Hubbs left the house for a few minutes and when she returned couldn’t find Goliath anywhere. “We panicked and looked all around the house and checked for any open gates,” Hubbs told CountryLiving. “Everything seemed in order.”

“Then we walked into the house and look who we found lounging ever so comfortably on our couch — Goliath!!! This was triumph and victory, a nice comfortable place on the couch!”

And he’s also fit in with the rest of the family, becoming instant friends with Leonidas: “He would lick the little cow on the face and try to nudge him to stand up. He would lay down with the sick little cow for hours just to keep him company.”

Goliath has become so domesticated that he even loves eating dog food and being scratched underneath his chin.

 

97-Year-Old Cries Tears Of Joy After Finally Getting Her High School Diploma

Margaret Thome Bekema, aged 97, is proof that it’s never too late. She never graduated from Grand Rapids Catholic Central High like she was supposed to, because she was forced to drop out four years earlier in 1932 to take care of her siblings and her mother who was sick with cancer.

But now, 79 years later, Margaret has received an honorary high school diploma. Here she is bursting into tears when she was presented with her graduation cap.

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

“I thank you from the bottom of my heart,” Bekema told Mlive. “I had to quit school to take over the family. It was hard, you have no idea how hard that was.”

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

“I loved high school and I had lots of friends.”

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

Central Principal Greg Deja, who presented Margaret with her diploma, said: “Her life has been one of sacrifice and service. It has been so encouraging and inspiring for our community because her choices represent all the core values that we teach our students.”

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

Margaret’s diploma is dated at when she would have graduated, in 1936.

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

Emily Rose Bennett/AP

Watch the touching moment below:

 

A Barber Was Shocked When Pictures Of Him Cutting An Autistic Boy’s Hair Went Viral

These images of James Williams, from Port Talbot, cutting a little boy’s hair have been shared thousands of times since he posted them to Facebook.

He wrote that the little boy whose hair he is cutting in the pictures, Mason, was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder a few months ago.

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Williams said he had been trying to find different ways to cut Mason’s hair for a month, writing that the child “wouldn’t allow me to go near one of his ears” and would “run away … if he wasn’t up to it”.

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“But today,” he said, “I finally achieved it.” He and Mason lay on the floor “in silence”, he wrote, and Mason allowed him to “cut away” and give him his first “proper haircut”. “I love making both parents happy … by giving extra attention to Mason,” he wrote.

After he’d given the “finishing touch”, Williams said, he asked Mason for a high five but got a hug instead!
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A stunned Williams, whose barber shop is called Jim the Trim, told BuzzFeed he’d been “blown away” by the reaction to his post, and that the reaction had been “absolutely fab”. He said Mason was probably the third child whose hair he’d cut with similar issues. “A lot of families have these problems – it’s good to raise awareness,” he said.

And the comments under his post have been absolutely

And the comments under his post have been absolutely 😀.

Facebook: jimthetrimhair

The White House is prepping for a single weather event that could cost $2 trillion in damage

To our electronic way of life, the sun is a formidable foe, and the White House is taking protective action against it.

On October 29, the White House’s National Science and Technology Council released its strategic plan to prepare for an extreme weather event in space that could destroy satellites, spacecraft, and vital telecommunications systems.

Many of these electrical systems depend on one another, which is a recipe for disaster.

“These critical infrastructures make up a diverse, complex, interdependent system of systems in which a failure of one could cascade to another,” the NSTC reported in its plan.

A $2 trillion gamble

Every second, the sun shoots bursts of charged subatomic particles, in the form of solar wind, into space at speeds of 1 million mph.

The solar wind typically is weak enough that Earth’s magnetic field deflects most of it, as in the NASA illustration below:

If an especially powerful barrage heads our way, however, it could easily penetrate our magnetic field, fry our electric power systems, and kick us back into the dark ages — all within a matter of hours.

Canada got a minor taste of this back in 1989 when a powerful surge caused the collapse of Hydro-Québec’s electricity-transmission system for nine hours. If the storm had been stronger, it might have wiped out a lot more than just Québec’s electrical transmission.

Though a doomsday scenario like this hasn’t happened yet, experts estimated in 2008 that a single monster solar surge could cause up to $2 trillion in economic damage.

That’s almost 10 times the cost of any single natural disaster in recorded history. And NASA predicts there is a 12% chance we’ll get hit in the next decade.

The White House isn’t about to gamble with those odds.

Countdown: 12 to 15 hours’ warning

While there’s not much we can do to prevent a surge of powerful solar radiation from striking Earth, there are steps that we can take to mitigate the damage.

sunThe first step is predicting when one might hit.

Right now, the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center has 24/7 surveillance on the sun for this specific purpose.

“You can think of the sun as kind of like a volcano,” Thomas Berger, the center’s director, told Business Insider. “It’s difficult to predict precisely when it’s going to erupt, but you can see the signs building up.”

Once such a flare occurs, NOAA can give the proper agencies — including airlines, space-satellite operators, and power companies — a 12- to 15-hour warning before it strikes Earth, Berger said.

“That’s not as much as we’d like to give, and it would be better if we can give more, but right now that’s about the best we can do,” Berger said, adding that continued solar research by NASA would almost certainly improve future warning systems.

But simply knowing a storm is headed your way isn’t enough. You also need to predict how strong it is — and that information doesn’t come until much later, Berger said.

Countdown: 15 to 60 minutes to act

To determine storm intensity, NOAA has what Berger calls a space “tsunami buoy,” which is floating about 932,000 miles from Earth between our planet and the sun at a point in space called L1, shown below:

681577main1_lagrange points ace 670The buoy is called the Advanced Composition Explorer, or ACE. When a storm hits ACE, it gives NOAA a better handle on what exactly we’re in for:

“ACE relays that information back at the speed of light, so we have about 15 to 60 minutes before the storm hits the Earth after it hits that buoy satellite,” Berger said. “And using that we can say … ‘OK we know exactly how big this thing is and how bad it’s going to be.'”

ACE is 17 years old and will soon be replaced by the Deep Space Climate Observatory satellite, or DSCOVR, which will serve as America’s primary warning system for solar storms.

Rallying help in America and beyond

In its report, the White House calls upon two dozen national departments, agencies, and service branches to reach a number of benchmarks in the next one to two years.

Electric pylons are seen after sunset near the town of Slutsk, south of Minsk July 18, 2014. REUTERS/Vasily FedosenkoThomson Reuters

These benchmarks are designed to address actions like “creating engineering standards, developing vulnerability assessments, establishing decision points and thresholds for action, understanding risk, developing more effective mitigation procedures and practices, and enhancing response and recovery planning,” according to the report.

For example, the Department of Homeland Security, in partnership with the Department of Energy, has been given 120 days (from the strategy plan’s publication date) to develop an “all-hazard Power Outage Incident Annex” that will include steps to respond and recover from an extreme solar surge, if one strikes.

America isn’t the only one taking steps. An extreme solar event could affect the entire globe, which is why the European Space Agency (ESA) is now working with scientists across 14 European countries on developing a warning network, it reported on Thursday.

“The development of space-weather precursor services in Europe is a growing success, and also promises commercial opportunities that we could not foresee just a few years ago,” Juha-Pekka Luntama, ESA’s space weather manager, said in an ESA press release.

All of these efforts are great news because Earth is the only home we’ve got.

What are examples of a very, very, very big mistake to make in life?

Here are 10 examples of big mistakes that can be made in life :-

1. Being dishonest with yourself

Honesty within is absolutely vital. White and other coloured lies may be said outside. Perhaps there are justifications for that.

But if lies are told within, it is a HUGE deal.

Your entire life compass will be lost if this is done continuously.

We all have bearings that keep us steady. And truth (as much as we know it) to ourselves is how we keep progressing.

2. Not having a sense of humour

Our sense of humour is a touch of grace we bring to life.

We tread lightly on life when we laugh. Mostly at ourselves.

We are all funny. Our quirks, likes, conditionings and absurdities.

With laughter, we neutralise the angularities and friction. We smoothen our way.

3. Sacrificing the present for the future

Life is lived this moment. Always.

There is no life except the present. A succession of NOWs.

Is this a justification for not being disciplined? Is this an argument for abandonment?

Not at all.

Because we understand that life is a succession of NOWs, we create moments that lead to a rich life.

But we don’t “sacrifice” the present moment we now have for a future we don’t yet have.

Eg we don’t neglect our young children now to build a so-called richer future for them when they are grown up.

We could ask – how then do we achieve our dreams if we don’t sacrifice “X”?

Perhaps a more useful question would be – What is the best use of my time now that is in alignment with my values and vision?

Eg in the above example – try finding ways to work from home at least part time. Or look at ways to do more things together as a family.

4. Not managing your money well

Why are there people (even celebrities) who make a ton of money and a few years later become broke?

After all, it is good to have money. For bills and a few thrills.

But if you don’t manage the money you have, it will slip through your fingers like sand on a windy beach.

If you don’t manage your money well, the money you make will be used to keep plugging the holes through which money is wasted.

So everyone needs to learn a few basic money management techniques.

Make more money and invest.

Save more money and invest.

Or both.

5. Not taking responsibility for your life

A child depends on her parents for everything. And as the years go by, that child would mature and make more decisions and choices for herself.

Even then, many things are beyond our control. Many things are not our fault.

Regardless of that, taking responsibility for our own lives is important. It gives us the power to change things.

It gives us the power to act instead of reacting.

6. Living by default, not by design

This is a natural extension of (5).

If you don’t take responsibility for your own life, you will be giving control of your destiny to others. You would be living by default.

If we choose to live by design, we would empower ourselves through the choices and decisions we make for our lives.

7. Taking loved ones for granted

We are harried in our daily lives.

Schedules to keep. Bosses to satisfy. Colleagues to impress.

Be polite, be cool, behave.

To all. Except those nearest and dearest to us.

Not because we mean to be mean. Or thoughtless.

But because we “need” to be nice to everyone else. Because we can often get away with not being that nice to those who love us. And forgive us.

It may be tempting to take our loved ones for granted.

To fail in our courtesies to those we care about most.

Don’t do that. Don’t take your loved ones for granted.

Treat them with at least the courtesy and respect you accord others. Value and appreciate them.

Let them feel that you do.

8. Giving up without trying (hard)

If something is worth it, fight for it.

If something is important, strive for it.

Try. Hard.

It would be a mistake to give up easily.

When you try and succeed, it is victory.

When you try and fail, it is feedback.

Learn, improve, try again.

9. Neglecting our health

Healthy food, healthy thoughts, healthy emotions.

Restful, plentiful sleep.

Healthy relationships.

These are the cornerstones of our lives. The foundation on which our lives are built on. Our dreams need them to thrive.

Live with respect. To your health.

Don’t throw away the gift of good health through destructive physical, mental, emotional and social habits.

10. Not living life like it’s a precious miracle

You are a miracle.

A unique creation of the divine.

You are a spark of creativity, love and joy in this brimming cosmos.

Your energy is that which propels the stars and planets.

How dare you live any other way than seeing this as a miracle?

That each of us exists is a wonder in itself. That we continue to exist spinning lives and dreams and creations is a precious, awe-inspiring miracle.

I choose to live with gratitude for this miracle.

Where attention goes, energy flows.

In being grateful for abundance, more abundance is created.

It would be a HUGE mistake to live life like it is just ordinary.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

This ingenious lady built her new home out of shipping containers — and it looks fantastic

Most of us who are looking to get that first place of our own, are also battling with student loans, student overdrafts and secret student credit cards that we’ll never tell our mum about.

A house is out of the picture.
Buying a house is bloody expensive.

Claudie Dubreuil, from the town of Mirabel, Quebec, Canada, decided to build a house out of a highly unorthodox building material. First, she found an engineering firm, from whom she ordered four large metallic shipping containers.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Within two weeks, the containers were ready, and the builders managed to erect the frame of the new house in just one day. The containers were then covered in pinewood panelling.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Inside, the house looks wonderful.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

The huge panoramic windows create a glorious sense of space.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

A spiral staircase has pride of place in the new house.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

The kitchen is fitted out with everything anyone could ever need.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

It has an electric oven, a refrigerator and an extractor fan.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

The bathroom also looks gorgeous.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Claudie dreamed of one day having a bedroom with a Bohemian theme to it. The room merges seamlessly with the bathroom and shower.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

On the ground floor, you can still see parts of the shipping containers as they originally looked.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Whilst on the upper floor there’s an open area with an outside shower.

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Looks pretty luxurious, right?

This Woman Built Her Dream Home for Just £21,000. Here’s How…

Source:suburbanmen

This huge construction, including interiors and cost of land, came to just £21,000 in total. Imagine how cheap a smaller container could be…

While creating a house like this is obviously not as easy as simply buying one getting a huge  mortgage, it is cheaper and a whole lot more fun, unique and eco friendly!

We’re off to Ebay to look at second-hand industrial containers.

Bride Who Survived Cancer Shares Emotional Dance With Donor Who Saved Her Life

This is the tender moment newlywed Greta Hokanson shared a dance with the man who saved her life when she was just 16.

Greta was diagnosed with leukaemia in 2006, and the only cure was a bone marrow transplant.

None of her family were a match, but after joining the bone marrow register, she discovered that a 44-year-old man from Arkansas was one of her matches. She decided to go for the risky surgery.

Thankfully, it was a success and a year later, Greta met Danny Daniels — the wonderful, generous man who had saved her life.

So when it came to Greta getting married, it was only natural that she invite the man who made it possible.

“When we were making our guest list, I told my mom that I really wanted to invite Danny and Angie, his wife,” Hokanson said. They sent the invitation, not expecting Daniels, an Air National Guard member who’s currently stationed in Arizona, to make it.

“I had an online RSVP system, and when I got his response with the message, ‘We can’t wait to see you!’ my jaw dropped to the floor,” Hokanson said. “I got tears in my eyes, and I called Tony, who was so excited because he’d never met Danny. Only me and my parents had. I really couldn’t believe it.”

When she married Tony Hokanson on Oct. 10, she was joined by 260 friends and family — and her donor.

But that wasn’t all. They pair shared a special, emotional dance during the reception.

“Angels Among Us” by Alabama played, a perfect tribute to a selfless man.

There wasn’t a dry eye in the house.

“I had only seen him during [the] receiving line, so it was our first chance to talk,” Greta said. “I gave him my thanks again and I got really emotional. I can’t get over what his selfless act means.”

Greta still deals with some after-effects of leukemia, like joint pain and fatigue. But it also led to her changing her career from teaching to nursing. Now a nurse at United Hospital in St. Paul, she said that the nurses who cared for her while she was sick inspired her.

For Danny, the best part of the day was seeing Greta live the normal life he hoped she would have.

Greta Hokanson

“I was very proud at the wedding, just like a father would be. It felt like my own daughter getting married.”

25 life lessons from a 100-year-old man

My great-grandfather is 100 years old, and living a century has taught him a thing or two.

Andy Anderson’s life story is one for the big screen — he met my great-grandmother on a Saturday, and they married on the following Saturday. They stayed together until my grandma took her last breath 67 years later.

In between those 67 years, they had two children, adopted another son, and were the greatest party throwers in the county (we have the pictures to prove it).

Without going to college, Andy worked his way to the top: He became the corporate manager of the dairy department of Safeway for the entire country.

He earned the nickname Mr. Cheese, which eventually turned into Grandpa Cheese among the family — a name that has admittedly gotten a few brow raises.

My point is, Grandpa Cheese has taught me a lot about life. I could think of no better person to give the world a few life lessons than him. Here’s what he has learned in his 100 years.

  1. Always maintain a good sense of humor.
  2. Never be too good to start at the bottom.
  3. Exercise every single day, even when you don’t feel like it.
  4. Don’t spend more money than you make.
  5. Drink orange juice every day.
  6. Love at first sight is not a fable.
  7. Having a bad job is better than having no job at all.
  8. Eat around the mold; don’t go wasting food.
  9. Your family is the most precious thing you will ever have in life.
  10. Eat sausage every day — it worked for me.
  11. Your life is delicate, and if you neglect yourself, you’ll spoil. That’s what cheese taught me.
  12. Don’t ever be afraid to be your true self.
  13. Everyone has too many clothes. Wear what you have and quit buying more.
  14. You must be able to forgive, even if it’s difficult to do.
  15. Save your money now and spend it later.
  16. Love is not always easy; sometimes you have to work at it.
  17. Find something comical in every single situation.
  18. If you’re faced with a problem, don’t delay trying to figure it out. But if there’s no way to figure it out, you have to forget about it.
  19. Make sure you’re doing what you love; don’t be afraid to follow those dreams you have for yourself.
  20. Education is important, but not necessary. Life can be an education in itself.
  21. Explore your world and stay curious.
  22. Try not to take yourself so seriously.
  23. My full name is William Bradford James Anderson, and my initials always remind me to ask myself, “Why be just anybody?”
  24. Have common sense. Think about the most reasonable answer to every situation. If you don’t have common sense, you’re a bust.
  25. Life is a gift that you must unwrap. It’s up to you to determine if what’s inside will lead you to happiness or dismay. You have the power to make that decision for yourself.

If you’re wondering what Grandpa Cheese is up to these days, he’s riding his motorized scooter around Benicia, California, and “planning on what I’m going to do when I start to get old,” he says.