Introducing Pet Diaries: Life lessons learned from our pets. This 9-part series is brought to you by GOOD, in partnership with Purina ONE®, and explores how having a pet can change your place in your neighborhood, community, and beyond. Check out more stories at the GOOD Pets hub.


In early 2011, I went from being a high-powered advertising executive with an active social life to spending my days in bed on medical leave, hiding my illness from most of my family members. I had become chronically ill in a matter of months. While I felt completely broken and without much hope of ever getting better, my husband stayed with me throughout, and never gave up on me.

After more than a year of searching for answers and talking to more than 20 doctors, I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, a condition that causes widespread musculoskeletal pain throughout the body, along with two severe sleep disorders. All of this caused me to wake up 27 times an hour and experience constant pain. The lack of rest had taken a huge toll on me, preventing my body and mind from ever being able to heal properly.

My doctors said that going back to a nine to five job was not an option, so I reluctantly said goodbye to the career that I had worked so hard for. I wallowed in self-pity for a while, but my husband and therapist insisted that I start doing something—anything—with my time. Since I have always been a dog lover, I began volunteering for a local, renowned dog rescue called the Bill Foundation.

I dove headfirst into rescue, and it quickly consumed me. Not only was I saving lives, but also educating the public through a Facebook page I created. In a matter of months, I built an online community of more than 35,000 people who were vested in the daily happenings of Bill Foundation. I was also named the organization’s executive director. It felt like I had found my life’s purpose.

Then I met Tessa, a Havanese mix who had been left at the shelter by her owner after she suddenly went blind. I knew she needed more than I could ask any foster to take on, so I brought her home to stay with me for five months. Tessa and I went from doctor to doctor and ultimately received the grim diagnosis that she had hydrocephalus (an accumulation of fluid in her brain) and hyperactive nerves in her eyes that caused limited vision. They thought she would never regain her sight or walk again. But Tessa needed someone to believe in her, just like my husband had believed in me, and I was ready to pay it forward.

Reinvigorated, I assembled a group of doctors, and together, we took a leap of faith on Tessa, creating a “Hail Mary” cocktail of medications. But she was also having issues that medications could not fix and they believed her inability to walk stemmed from a lack of confidence. Tessa needed an endless amount of love, encouragement and patience if she was going to stand a chance at ever walking again.

My days were suddenly dedicated to working with Tessa and helping her feel more secure. I began by setting small but important goals for Tessa, starting with simply teaching her that she could stand up. Then I encouraged her to take just one step. I wrote daily on Facebook about what Tessa and I were doing throughout the day and found support in the online “village” I had created. With each progressive step Tessa took, our village cheered us on.

When I created a video detailing Tessa’s journey, our village helped it go viral, inspiring hundreds of thousands of people around the world to become invested in Tessa’s story. Everyone prayed for her health to improve and they gave me the strength and courage to keep helping her.

Three months into Tessa’s stay with us, she had a major breakthrough. I was in the kitchen getting something to eat when a wet nose touched my leg. I looked down expecting to see one of my other pups, but instead found Tessa, her tail wagging vigorously. It was her first time in the kitchen and she had walked about 20 feet further than the comfort zone she always stayed within.

A few months after that victory, a wonderful family adopted her. They have now helped her continue to make remarkable progress, so much so that she now navigates stairs perfectly and runs around outside, playing with her new siblings. Her doctors are astonished by her recovery and can only explain it as a miracle.

Tessa still is blind and has hydrocephalus, but I didn’t give up on her, and she has learned not to let limitations stop her. She tackles every obstacle in life as an exciting challenge, and she is no longer defined by her illness, but by her steadfast courage to never give up.

I’ve been thinking a lot about Tessa lately because my fibromyalgia has flared up again. Many days, getting out of bed is too difficult and I don’t feel I have the strength to try. It’s easy for me to not feel very good about myself on these days and it’s even harder to have hope that I will get better.

But then I think about Tessa and all that we accomplished together, so every morning, I wake up and I borrow a little courage from her, and I stand up. I take one simple step. Then I celebrate how far I have come and how far I can go, if I just try.

  • Australia produces so much solar power that they’re giving three hours of it away each day for free
    Photo credit: CanvaSolar energy surpluses during the day offers Aussies free energy.

    In a time when energy costs are rising, Australia is taking a different approach. The country has acquired so much solar power that they’re giving it away. In fact, those who sign up for the program will get three free hours of energy each day.

    This comes from a government-run offer dubbed Solar Sharer. It offers a free three-hour period for those who sign up. This period runs from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. in Queensland, Victoria and New South Wales. The period runs from noon to 3:00 p.m. in South Australia. 

    Free, but not unlimited, power

    While the power is free for those who are eligible and have a smart meter, there is a daily cap of 24 kilowatt-hours (kWh). Any amount above that will be charged. However, the energy cap is based on the Australian Energy Regulator’s assessment of what a five-person household uses each day. 

    While that free period each day provides a great window to use major appliances or charge electric cars, there are some catches. Solar Sharer isn’t yet available to residents outside those areas, but energy brokers are making similar offers. There is also no guarantee that electricity rates won’t get higher outside of those free periods either.

    Who benefits?

    The program is designed for those who are a part of a solar power grid. It also benefits people who work from home the most. If the people in the household are at their job or the office, they likely won’t be able to take advantage of the deal.  

    While Energy Consumers Australia supports this offer, they are concerned about how governments and retailers relay the information to customers. In short, they don’t want people to be surprised if their electricity rates are charged higher during the non-free periods. They’re also concerned that, by their measure, only three in 10 eligible people were aware of this offer.

    “We don’t want to have people signing up to these plans assuming it will decrease their bills, when in fact it could do the opposite,” the consumer advocacy group said to The Guardian.

    There is a chance that rates won’t get higher if more people are able to take advantage of Solar Sharer. Since most electricity use is during the evening when more people are home from work, changing up the usage towards daytime hours can benefit everyone. It would still be an uphill battle as electric light is mostly used in the evening and nighttime when it’s dark.

    Similar programs elsewhere

    While there are catches, this isn’t the first program of its type. There are similar successful free energy programs in other nations. Areas such as Germany and the Nordic countries create so much green energy through wind farms that they make similar free power offers. California has also offered government programs for low-income households and farmworkers housing cheap-to-free solar energy.

    While kinks definitely need to be sorted out, creating so much generated energy to the point that it can be given freely is a good problem to have.

  • Motorcyclist trapped under a 3,300 pound car saved by Australian car salesmen
    Photo credit: @ACurrentAffair9 on YouTubeA man was saved from being crushed under a car.

    Tyler Wiebe was on his way to work on his motorcycle in Brisbane, Australia. Then a car approached in the wrong way in traffic, colliding with another car that then hit Wiebe. The accident threw Wiebe off his bike and under a car. He was trapped under the 3,300-lb. vehicle, doomed until a group of salesmen and onlookers came to his rescue.

    “I was being dragged and when it stopped, my head and chest were under the car,” Wiebe said to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The crash and being pinned down under the vehicle gave Wiebe several injuries. He suffered broken ribs, a broken collarbone, and a collapsed lung.

    But that would be diagnosed later. At the time, the car’s weight was crushing Wiebe to the point that he couldn’t breathe. His heart was also unable to beat, the pressure causing his eyes, mouth, and nose to bleed.

    “Initially it was ‘can I get out?’ and then it was ‘man I am dying, this is it,’” recalled Wiebe. “[My] wife and two kids are not here, and this is it.”

    Hope comes in the form of a car salesman

    After being stuck for two minutes under the car, help arrived from the nearby Auto Request Kedron, a used car dealership.

    “I was in the office at the time, so I heard the bang [and] came running to the doors,” Mick, one of the employees, said to A Current Affair.

    “I realized there was someone trapped under the car,” fellow employee Rob added.

    They rushed into action, recruiting other coworkers to help.

    “[I] saw Rob running and he was just whistling out saying, ‘Hey, boys, hurry up,’ ” Corbin recalled. “I remember seeing him, just like two legs. They weren’t moving at that time.”

    The salesmen tried to lift the vehicle up to get Wiebe to safety, but the car wouldn’t budge.

    “We tried to lift it off. We couldn’t, and then on the second attempt, we had a couple of other good Samaritans come and help us,” said Brian, another employee of Auto Request Kedron.

    Reportedly 15 people were finally able to lift the car and free Wiebe underneath. He was rushed to the hospital where he went under emergency operations. Under hospital care, Wiebe’s condition stabilized and he survived. Had he been under that car any longer, the worst would have happened.

    Wiebe was humbled and grateful to the salesmen and others who stepped up to save him.

    “I get more time with my daughters, I get more time with my family and a second lease on life, so just thank you, thank you,” Wiebe said in his hospital bed.

    Certified legends

    When he was discharged from the hospital, Wiebe set up a reunion with the employees of the used car dealership. He was able to introduce his family to his rescuers and thank them face-to-face. Wiebe presented them with matching t-shirts, each one with a logo reading “Certified Legend” on the front and an illustration of a person lifting a car over their head on the back.

    “You guys are legends, but now you’re certified legends,” Wiebe said to his heroes.

    A father and husband was saved thanks to the alertness and quick action of the nearby community.

  • Texas engineers develop a jacket that pulls fresh drinking water out of thin air
    Photo credit: @fascinatingonX/CanvaWearing this jacket could help keep people hydrated.

    For too many, access to clean drinking water is incredibly difficult. According to the World Health Organization, over two billion people live in water-stressed areas due to pollution, climate change, or population growth. However, engineering experts in Texas have developed a possible solution: just put on a jacket.

    The engineers and researchers gathered at the University of Texas at Austin developed a prototype jacket that can pull drinking water out of thin air. The jacket could help anyone frequently in areas where drinkable water is scarce. This could be used recreationally by campers, hikers, and runners—but it could also save lives. Emergency responders, soldiers, and agricultural workers could also collect water for themselves and others simply by wearing it.

    The technology behind the jacket is similar to the materials used in netting for water harvesting of air and fog. This time, however, the idea is to collect water while also being mobile.

    “Water harvesting from air is usually imagined as a stationary device such as a box, a panel or a large sorbent bed,” said Guihua Yu, chair professor of the Cockrell School of Engineering’s Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering and Texas Materials Institute. “Here, we wanted to rethink the form of the technology. If the fabric itself can collect water from air, it opens a new direction for personal and portable water access.”

    How does this jacket collect water?

    The textile used to create the jacket was derived from a device the same team created. That device was a specially engineered hydrogel fabric made from biomass-derived materials. This hydrogel fabric takes moisture from the air and then releases it as water via condensation when it’s heated by sunlight. The water can easily be collected.

    The jacket’s textile collects moisture from the air and funnels it into detachable harvesting units. The units can be placed into a foldable collector piece where they are heated to produce water. The material and system doesn’t just absorb water like other materials. Instead, it actively converts vapor into water while functioning as a piece of protective clothing.

    The jacket is able to produce between 400 to 900 milliliters of drinkable water daily. This is a vast improvement upon other similar inventions that yielded less water and were significantly bulkier to wear. The jacket’s material could collect and produce more water over time and testing, depending on the humidity of the terrain.

    Aside from creating clothing out of the material, the researchers hope to make backpacks, tents, emergency shelters, and other outdoor gear from it. The hope is that this could create more clean water access for disaster response units and everyday people living in water-stressed areas alike.

    How much hydration do you need in the heat?

    Until water-collecting jackets are commercially available, it’s important to have drinkable water nearby at all times, especially during the summer. When out in the heat, the Center for Disease Control recommends having a drink of water before working outdoors. Then drink a cup of water every 15 to 20 minutes. This can help keep your body cool and hydrated to prevent heat stroke. That said, stay alert and stay indoors if there is a heat warning in your area.

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