En EEUU, unos turistas molestaron a un bisonte en época de celo en el parque natural de Yellowstone, desobedeciendo las órdenes de los guardas de no acercarse mucho al animal y no bajar del coche.
El búfalo pilló al turista y lo hizo volar, dejen a los animales en paz y libres.
When Tyrel Wolfe was just seven years old, he packed a small shoebox with Christmas gifts for a child he had never met.
Before sending it away, the boy from Idaho slipped something personal inside.
A photograph of himself dressed like a cowboy.
Thousands of miles away in the Philippines, eight-year-old Joana Marchan received that box.
She treasured the gifts.
But she remembered the boy in the photograph.
Joana even tried to send him a thank-you letter. It never reached him.
Years passed.
Tyrel grew up.
Joana grew up.
And the little cowboy photograph remained part of a childhood memory.
Then, more than a decade later, Joana searched for his name on Facebook.
She found him.
Her first friend request was ignored because Tyrel had no idea who she was.
So she tried again.
This time, they talked.
Joana told him about a shoebox sent across the world years earlier and the photograph of a seven-year-old cowboy hidden inside.
Tyrel asked his mother.
She remembered packing the box.
Suddenly, a forgotten childhood gift connected two lives again.
They kept talking.
Tyrel eventually saved enough money to travel to the Philippines and meet Joana in person.
What began with a shoebox slowly became love.
On October 5, 2014, Tyrel and Joana were married on a ranch in Idaho.
At their wedding, they asked guests to pack Christmas shoeboxes for other children.
Because years earlier, one little box had crossed an ocean.
And somehow, it found its way back to the boy who sent it.
Only this time, it brought him the woman he would marry
🚨#BREAKING: An off-duty firefighter is being hailed as a hero after he rescued TWO CHILDREN FROM A TEXAS LAKE WITH NO PULSE...
...PERFORMED CPR ON THEM AND BROUGHT THEM BOTH BACK TO LIFE ON TOP OF THEIR CAPSIZED BOAT!!!!!
His name is Jason Horne.
He was on Alvarado Lake celebrating the 4th with his 12-year-old daughter Emilie when people started screaming and waving them down.
A boat carrying NINE people had flipped and THREE children were trapped underneath it.
Jason immediately dove in to rescue them.
Under that boat, he found a little boy, he saved him, and then dove back in.
He felt a foot, it was a little girl and Jason tore her loose and brought her back, but she did not have a pulse.
He dragged her ON TOP OF THE CAPSIZED BOAT and performed CPR until she began breathing again.
He and others then flipped the boat and found a little boy with anchor rope WRAPPED AROUND HIS BODY.
The boy also did not have a pulse, he performed CPR on the boy until he got a pulse.
Astonishingly, ALL THREE KIDS SURVIVED!!!!
Every single one went home to their families.
His department said it best: "When others needed help most, Jason did what firefighters do. He stepped up without hesitation."
A 12-year-old girl sat in that boat and watched her father dive into a lake and come back up carrying other people's children.
She will spend the rest of her life knowing EXACTLY what a hero looks like.
He looks like her dad.
GOD BLESS JASON HORNE!!!!!!!🇺🇸
A 7-year-old boy became Disney World’s 200 millionth guest and was awarded free admission for life. Nearly 40 years later, he is still taking advantage of the prize, visiting the parks with his wife and children.
In July 1985, seven-year-old Virgil Waytes Jr. of Miami unknowingly became Walt Disney World’s 200 millionth guest as he passed through the entrance gates during his family’s first visit to the park.
Disney marked the milestone with live music, fireworks, and a special ceremony that left the young boy completely surprised. As part of the celebration, he received one of the company’s rarest rewards: a lifetime pass granting free admission to Disney theme parks around the world.
Nearly four decades later, Waytes still makes regular use of the extraordinary pass. It has no blackout dates and allows him to bring up to three guests on each visit. Now living in North Carolina, he often takes his wife and children to the parks, saying the greatest reward has been creating lasting family memories without the high cost of admission. Disney continues to honor the lifetime pass, and on some visits it has even covered food and merchandise purchases.
Former Hollywood Child Star Ricky Schroder describes the Satanic ritual he was forced to watch during his stint in Hollywood....
Not everyone joins the club, but this is one of the ways they present it to you..
In 2019, Charlotte Lay walked onto a railway track believing she had reached the end of her life.
A train was approaching.
But the driver, Dave Lay, had been alerted to someone on the tracks. He slowed the train, stopped at a distance, and climbed out.
Charlotte expected anger. She thought she was about to be told off.
Instead, Dave calmly introduced himself and asked her one simple question.
“Hi, my name is Dave. Are you having a bad day?”
Then he sat near her.
He didn't lecture her. He didn't tell her how lucky she was. He simply stayed and talked.
For around 30 minutes, Dave treated Charlotte like a human being having the worst day of her life.
Eventually, she found the strength to leave the tracks.
The next day, Charlotte searched for the train driver who had saved her. She posted in a local social media group, hoping someone might know him.
Dave had been wondering if she was okay too.
They reconnected.
They started messaging.
About two months later, they met for coffee.
And somewhere between conversations, healing and ordinary days together, the stranger who sat beside Charlotte on the tracks became the man she fell in love with.
But their story wasn't finished.
In 2020, Dave began suffering from back pain. He thought it was nothing serious.
Charlotte kept telling him to see a doctor.
Eventually, he listened.
Dave was diagnosed with testicular cancer.
He later said doctors told him that if he had waited much longer to seek medical help, he might not have survived.
The man who once sat beside Charlotte when she wanted to leave this world was now alive because Charlotte refused to stop worrying about him.
In 2022, Charlotte and Dave got married.
Dave later put their story into words perfectly.
“Charlotte may say I saved her life... but she saved my life as well.”
Two strangers met on the worst day of one person's life.
Neither of them knew it yet.
But one simple conversation was about to save them both
The shopping cart wasn't invented to help you shop. It was invented to keep you shopping.
The first grocery cart wasn't about convenience—it was about psychology.
Back in 1939, grocery store owner Sylvan Goldman noticed shoppers stopped buying the moment their baskets became too heavy. His solution? Put the baskets on wheels so customers could keep filling them.
The funny part? People refused to use them.
- Men thought pushing one looked too feminine.
- Women said it reminded them too much of pushing a baby stroller.
To break the stigma, Goldman hired people to pretend to be regular shoppers using the carts. It worked. By 1946, the stackable design we still use today became the new standard.
Here's the hack that brings everything full circle:
Skip the flimsy grocery bags and place sturdy collapsible crates directly inside your shopping cart. As you shop, fill the crates instead of the cart itself. At checkout, scan each item and put it right back into the crates. Then lift them straight into your trunk—and later, straight into your house.
Fewer bags. Faster unloading. Usually just one trip.
We started with baskets, switched to carts... and somehow ended up right back at baskets. History has a funny way of repeating itself.
“I work the front desk at a small doctor’s office, and I wish people could see what happens on the other side of the phone.
Every day, older patients call us confused.
They are told to use the patient portal, upload documents, check lab results online, fill out forms before the visit, and confirm everything through a link.
Some of them do not know what a portal is.
Some do not have a smartphone.
Some have one, but they are afraid to click the wrong thing.
Last week, a man in his late 80s called about his test results.
He said, “Ma’am, I don’t mean to bother you, but the computer says I have a message and I don’t know how to open it.”
He sounded ashamed.
That broke my heart.
He should not have to feel ashamed for needing a human being.
Technology can be helpful. I understand that.
But when people who built this country are made to feel helpless because everything became a login and a password, we have gone too far.
Not everything needs to be an app.
Not every answer should be hidden behind a screen.
Sometimes people need a voice.
A patient person.
A real human who says, “Don’t worry, I can help you.”
Progress should not leave seniors behind.
Because one day, the world will move faster than us too.
And I hope someone is kind enough to slow down.
~Unknown
@SirBylHolte Tom Cruise. After learning alot about what Scientology is really about, I can not watch ANY movie with him anymore knowing how complicit he is with all of the abuse!
@catturd2 First thing I thought, they must not have been from here. We, who were born and raised here know better than to swim in rivers and ponds. Still very sad and tragic!
Nick Vujicic entered the world on December 4, 1982, in Melbourne, Australia, born with tetra-amelia syndrome, an extremely rare condition that left him without arms and legs.
His parents were devastated at first, and Nick spent much of his childhood struggling to understand why he was different.
School was especially difficult. He endured years of bullying, isolation and depression, and at just 10 years old, he attempted to take his own life.
What stopped him was the thought of the pain his parents would suffer if he was gone.
Over time, Nick learned to adapt and become remarkably independent. He taught himself to write, type, use a computer, brush his teeth, shave, answer the phone, swim, surf, fish and even play sports using his small left foot, which has two toes.
He later graduated from university with a Bachelor of Commerce degree, majoring in Accounting and Financial Planning.
At 17, Nick began speaking publicly about faith, hope and resilience. What started as talks to small groups eventually turned into a global mission.
Through his organization, Life Without Limbs, he has shared his message with millions of people in schools, prisons, stadiums, churches and conferences in more than 70 countries, encouraging countless individuals facing hardship, disability, bullying and mental health struggles.
Nick married Kanae Miyahara in 2012, and together they have built a family with four children. He has also authored several books, including Life Without Limits, and continues to travel the world proving that limitations do not have to define a person's future.
From a boy who once believed his life had no purpose to a husband, father, author and internationally recognized speaker, Nick Vujicic's journey remains one of the most inspiring examples of perseverance, faith and the power of choosing hope despite overwhelming odds.