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In a photo taken in 1949 near Coppermine, Canada, an Inuit girl proudly displayed her Canadian Inuit dog,

 In a photo taken in 1949 near Coppermine, Canada, an Inuit girl proudly displayed her Canadian Inuit dog,  also known as qimmiq. The dog was nestled in the girl's hood, which is traditionally used to carry babies and is called an artiggi. The hood is meticulously crafted with caribou sinew.  Inuit women wear a unique parka called an amauti, which has a pouch at the back below the hood to carry a baby. The girl in the picture was carrying a puppy in a similar position, which is adorable as she was imitating the mothers she had observed carrying their babies in this manner. I wish that the puppy had a long, joyful, and healthy life with her.

He neither saw people nor barked, nor did he walk around the kennel. He usually sat at one place with his face resting on his paws, looking sad.

  He neither saw people nor barked, nor did he walk around the kennel. He usually sat at one place with his face resting on his paws, looking sad. People would approach the 8-month-old puppy, who attracted them with his antics. He made odd sounds, barked, and played, while on the side, an 11-year-old Labrador named Barnaby would simply take a deep breath and close his eyes. The shelter worker would tell people not to pay attention to him as he just kept sleeping and had been there for 400 days. 400 days. Over a year. People ignored him because he was old, slow, and boring. Then one day, a father came to the shelter with his family. Initially, he started looking at the puppies, but then his gaze fell upon Barnaby. The father said, "We don’t want a puppy. We want this one." The worker was surprised, saying he sleeps a lot. The father laughed and said, "I think he’s perfect." Today, Barnaby left the shelter, took one last look back, then exhaled softly, looked at his n...

Isabella, 7, got on the bus with her hair in a tangled mess. She was crying.

  Isabella, 7, got on the bus with her hair in a tangled mess. She was crying. "My mom used to do it," she sobbed to the driver. "But she's in heaven now, and Daddy doesn't know how." Her hair was knotting up, and kids were teasing her. Mike, the bus driver, is a burly guy with a shaved head. He knows nothing about hair. But he couldn't watch her cry. He went home that night and watched YouTube tutorials for three hours. He practiced on his wife's hair. The next morning, Mike pulled the bus over 10 minutes early at the school drop-off. "Come here, Izzy," Mike said. He sat her on the front steps of the bus. With his giant, calloused hands, he gently brushed out the knots and wove a perfect French braid. "Now you look like a princess," Mike smiled. He does her hair every morning now. He drives a bus, but he delivers confidence. 🚌🎀

That's because you're doing it wrong.

 That's because you're doing it wrong. Here's how the typical novice eats rice with chopsticks: It's not wrong per se, but terribly inefficient and takes a lot of skill and practice to do it right. If you can do this without dropping rice all over your freshly pressed shirt, well, more power to you.  Here's how we do it when no one's watching: That's right. You bring the bowl up and, with your handy pair of chopsticks, push the rice into your mouth. You can easily polish off a whole bowl in under a minute with this mysterious and ancient technique. In the words of the Matrix, there is no spoon. There is only bowl.

What a woman and what a daughter love knows no bounds

  What a woman and what a daughter love knows no bounds What were the last words you heard someone say before they died? What is the best windows 11 or windows 10? Google Maps is getting an AI "Ask Maps" feature. What does it do? What is your attitude towards quantum psychology? What are some effective methods to recover money lost due to a scam or fraudulent activity? Can you tell me a funny story about your parents? What a sad story, what a beautiful soul… On September 11, 2001, a 27-year-old woman made a phone call from a hijacked plane and said eight words her family has never forgotten: “This is going to be so much harder for you than it is for me.” Her name was Honor Elizabeth Wainio. Everyone who loved her called her Lizz. Two days earlier, she had been in Paris. She had just returned from Europe — a dream trip years in the making. She attended a friend’s wedding in Florence. She walked the Champs-Élysées. She stepped into a church and lit a candle for...

On August 10, 2025, my 82-year-old mother who lived with me and who wasn’t feeling well for about a week,

  On August 10, 2025, my 82-year-old mother who lived with me and who wasn’t feeling well for about a week,  finally came to me and asked me to take her to the ER.  We thought maybe she had an intestinal blockage or other digestive issue, but it turned out she had stage 4 ovarian cancer that had metastasized to her liver, pancreas and basically all throughout her abdomen. She was transferred to another hospital that specialized in gyno-cancer treatment and we were told she was a candidate for chemo to be followed by surgery to remove the two large tumors that had been pressing on her intestines and interfering with her digestion and ability to eat and have bowel movements. I was skeptical that mom could withstand either the chemo or the surgery, but the doctors convinced her it would give her additional years versus the few weeks she might have if she did nothing. However, the thing that persuaded her to go along was them telling her she could go home after the first chem...

A week after I moved into the house, the previous owner called to say he had forgotten one camera in the living room,

  A week after I moved into the house, the previous owner called to say he had forgotten one camera in the living room, and what I saw that night made me realize my daughter had been smiling in my kitchen while planning a future that did not include me A week after I moved into the house, I got a call I almost ignored. It was late afternoon in Beaverton, Oregon. The kind of gray, rainy light that makes every porch look lonelier than it really is. I was in my workshop, halfway through fixing an old cabinet door, when my phone buzzed with a number I did not know. The man on the other end introduced himself as the previous owner. He sounded embarrassed at first, then suddenly serious. He told me he had forgotten to disconnect one camera from the old security setup in the living room. He said he had opened the app by accident, saw something he never should have seen, and needed to show me in person. Then he lowered his voice and said, “Do not call anyone. Just come alone.” That...