I’ll admit it: I got a completely free college education. The savings of my professor parents and my working-class grandmother, whose Depression-era mentality helped her tuck away an extra six figures during her lifetime, were enough to pay nearly all of the bill for my tuition at Wesleyan (a private school that’s one of the most expensive in the country). The $15,000 they couldn’t cover was paid for with student loans, but after I graduated, my parents picked up the tab on principle. The money I earned from summer and school-year jobs was for my personal spending and savings. “You should be able to concentrate on your education,” my parents said.


It’s been a huge relief to navigate my post-graduation years without massive debt. But don’t feel bad if you’re thinking I’m a spoiled brat; you aren’t alone. According to a new survey from Bank of America, just under half of Americans with assets of more than $250,000 said they won’t pay the entire tab for their children’s college education. Twenty-nine percent said making their kids pay for it themselves will help teach them financial responsibility.

I’d always felt sort of guilty about my family coughing up $160,000 to educate me. After I saw the survey, I started thinking: Would I do that for my kid if I could afford it? Is my fancy education worth that much?

“This is really an indication of how expensive college has become, the fact that even affluent parents are finding it to be too much,” says Anya Kamenetz, who writes about Generation Y, personal finance, and education. “A few decades ago, it was par for the course to save up for your kids to go school. Now parents don’t feel like it’s worth the price, and they’re seeking out other options.”

But when I asked GOOD’s community about it, I learned that many people have the former attitude, particularly those who have been saddled with serious debt. “I paid my own way and will pay back my loans 200 dollars at a time til I am 60,” Lesley wrote. “I hope I can help my kids big time.” Sara forks over a quarter of her salary every month to student debts, and she wouldn’t want to put her children in the same boat. “[Financial responsibility] is a lesson I feel I could teach a child by example, with less strain on their lives,” she told me.

Megan sees the difference between her life and that of her boyfriend, who has no student loans. While he has been able to take risks with his career, she has struggled with a huge amount of debt—and is still 12 credits shy of graduating. During school, she almost failed some classes because she was “working too much […] and I didn’t have the option to take time off because loan repayments would make it impossible to finish.” She wouldn’t want her children to have the same experience, she said.

Of course, there’s a huge difference between tuition fees at private and public colleges. “A good rule of thumb is that students shouldn’t borrow more than their starting salary”—anywhere from $30,000 for liberal arts students to $60,000 for engineering students—Kamenetz says. If you take on more than that, she warns, “you’re counteracting the benefit of going to a private school. The kid will be hindered by their debt for the next 25 years, and both the parent and the student should understand that.”

Some parents give their kids an ultimatum. “My parents said, ‘Go to a state school or pay the difference,’” Ashley, 28, told me. The choice was between Boston University and UMass-Amherst, which, she says, “seemed basically the same on the tour except BU was prettier and fancier. I’m really glad I don’t have crazy loans now, though.”

Jessica, 24, knew she was paying her own way, so she purposely looked into cheaper schools. She got through the University of Illinois by working multiple jobs, and even though “it was tough not having money at your disposal like the rest of your friends … [working during school] teaches a lot of responsibility.”

Working 15 hours a week or less while going to school has been shown to keep students engaged and focused, but any more that can put them at a disadvantage academically. Just 15 hours of pay usually won’t make a dent in tuition costs—even for state schools, where tuition costs an average of $7,600 a year. So some parents who want their children to be partly or solely responsible for their educations loan them money out of their own pockets, often interest-free. Jessica’s sister was admitted to MIT, a school that costs almost $40,000 a year, so her parents were her “personal lending group.”

As tuition costs rise exponentially and salaries stagnate, students and parents need to think long and hard about whether certain schools are worth their price tags, or whether higher education is even the right choice for everyone. Parents shouldn’t be bankrupting themselves or digging into their retirement—that’s why low-cost student loans and state schools exist in the first place. My dad insists that the reason my parents agreed to Wesleyan was not only because they thought it was an excellent school, but because it didn’t put them or me in financial jeopardy.

“Otherwise, I would have pushed you to go to the University of Wisconsin or SUNY-Binghamton or something,” he told me. “There’s no reason to put either of us through that hardship.”

The ideal situation, according to Kamenetz, is shared sacrifice. Ultimately, she says, “we’re going to need to figure out how to share this burden between generations.”

photo (cc) by Flickr user meddygarnet

  • Wildlife reserves and gardens alike can be regrown thanks to dogs wearing backpacks with seeds
    Photo credit: Photo credt: @wilderlife8107 on YouTubeNative plants can be regrown thanks to dogs.

    Whether it’s a forest recovering from a wildfire or our own backyards, nature can use some help. Spreading seeds to ensure grass or wildflower growth can be a time-intensive process. However, there is one way that can be fun, quick, and help your dog get some exercise: strapping a backpack full of seeds onto them.

    The practice has been popularized internationally by sisters Francisca and Constanza Torres with their three dogs. Many forested areas of their native Chile were devastated by wildfires. The sisters came up with a plan to help reseed and regrow what had been burned down. The two would strap backpacks filled with grass and wildflowers seeds onto their border collies. The backpack had a small opening that would allow the seeds to fall out and spread as their dogs ran, jumped, and played throughout the area. 

    This helped the forests regrow while also providing the dogs exercise. The dogs were also able to walk into nooks and crannies human planters normally can’t access.

    An idea goes international

    The idea spread past countries and coastlines as a nature reserve in Lewes, East Sussex, England offered dog walkers backpacks with seeds. The walkers would strap the packs onto their furry friends as they went on nature walks to help rewild the area.

    “We’re really interested in rewilding processes, but they often involve reintroducing big herbivores like bison or wild horses,” said the project’s manager Dylan Walker to The Guardian in 2024. “In a smaller urban nature reserve it’s really hard to do those things. So, to replicate the effect that those animals have on the ecosystem we aimed to utilize the vast number of dog walkers that are visiting the nature reserve daily.”

    The concept itself was taken from nature. For centuries, wolves would have seeds caught in their fur. Over time, movement, and grooming, the seeds would be spread throughout other areas of the forest. The wolves acted as natural carriers for seeds much like bees are for pollen.

    Reseed your garden with Rover

    This technique doesn’t have to be reserved for wildfire recovery or regrowing public gardens. Your yard could benefit from it, too. While you could find a pack for your pup and fill it with seeds, there’s another way. Gardener Patrick Vernuccio suggests just filling a tea strainer with seeds and clipping it onto your dog’s collar. It should perform the same effect.

    If you have your dog help seed your yard, be sure that the plants you hope to grow are dog-friendly. Use non-toxic seeds for dogs such as roses, marigolds, and pansies among others. The ASPCA has a full list of plants that are unsafe for dogs to refer to when you’re unsure.

    Man’s best friend can also be man’s best gardening buddy.

  • How the ‘fog harvesting’ women of Morocco are influencing how desert areas get drinking water
    Photo credit: Canva/Liu277339840 via Wikimedia CommonsClean drinking water can be collected from fog.

    According to UNICEF, over two billion people live in an area with water scarcity. Climate change, data centers, and other factors are impacting the amount of drinkable water available. However, for the last ten years the women of Morocco have been implementing a water collecting technology that could be useful in other dry areas.

    For centuries, the people of Aït Baamrane in Morocco relied on rain and groundwater from wells for drinking and irrigation. It is reported that women of the town would walk four hours to fetch 50-gallon drums of water to carry back. However, intense drought and desertification have made the region even more difficult to live in. Now, they primarily rely on “fog harvesting” for water, with technique showing remarkable success since they started in 2010.

    The women-led NGO Dar Si Hmad built what is now the world’s largest operational fog-water harvesting system. This not only has successfully provided an average of 6,300 liters of potable water for more than 400 people in five villages in the area, but significantly reduced the time and physical cost of carrying water.

    How fog harvesting works

    Fog harvesting is the collection of water droplets from wind-driven fog. While Morocco is a dry area, it does have fog near its mountains and coastal regions. The fog collection system is typically constructed in the form of a mesh net set up and pulled taut between two posts. The net is spread out at an angle that’s perpendicular to the direction of the wind carrying the fog. Freshwater droplets are formed as the fog passes through the net, dripping into a gutter that leads to a storage tank.

    The fog-water collected in this particular system goes through a thorough UV, sand, and cartridge filtering process. The system is also solar powered, making it environmentally sound and cheaper than other methods. Since the collected water is pure from the sky, it is free of most contaminants and pollutants.

    Fog harvesting expanding

    Fog-harvesting/fog-catching has since expanded to other areas of the world. Movimiento Peruanos Sin Agua (Movement of Peruvians without Water) haven’t just built fog-catching nets in Peru, but in rural communities in Colombia, Bolivia, and Mexico. Fog-collectors in Spain collect droplets and water to help offset dry vegetation wildfires on the Canary Islands. Chilean fog harvesters are looking into expansion to help provide water for the poorest communities and dry urban areas.

    Other water collecting methods are being tested

    Scientists are also trying to find other methods to quickly and effectively draw water from the atmosphere. Researchers at MIT have developed a salt-based hydrogel that collects moisture from water vapor at night between glass panels. These panels create condensation of pure water when they are heated by sunlight. There is also research going into a sonic device that can quickly “shake water out of the atmosphere.”

    While scientists are in the midst of finding ways to obtain and conserve water in our future, there are steps people can take today. In terms of water conservation in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency has some resources that can help. Like collecting fog, collecting folks willing to pitch in can do wonders for the community.

  • Florida man found $30K in a fanny pack in a Wawa bathroom. He knew exactly what to do.
    Photo credit: CanvaA lost fanny pack contained a small fortune.
    ,

    Florida man found $30K in a fanny pack in a Wawa bathroom. He knew exactly what to do.

    “It’s not my money to take. I was not raised that way.”

    Florida resident Luis Salazar went through something many of us have experienced: he found someone’s lost property, a fanny pack, in a convenience store bathroom. Who hasn’t gone to a public restroom to find a dropped wallet, backpack, or purse and tried to return it to its rightful owner? For Salazar, though, there was a another factor: the lost fanny pack contained $30,000 in cash.

    On a Sunday afternoon, Salazar was using a Wawa gas station restroom in Riviera Beach, Florida. That’s when he noticed a fanny pack hanging on the safety railing. Salazar figured that the person who had used the restroom before him had accidentally left it behind. He tried to see if the fanny pack’s owner was still at the Wawa, but no luck.

    Salazar opened the fanny pack hoping to find some identification inside so he could return it to its rightful owner. While he couldn’t find a drivers license or any other ID, he did find something else: a thick pile of cash. In fact, it was $30,023.

    “My body was just numb, just seeing all this money that belonged to somebody else,” Salazar said to WPBF News.

    What do you do with a lost fanny pack filled with $30K?

    Salazar knew exactly what to do. He kept the money safe in the fanny pack and continued his search for the rightful owner. 

    As Salazar spent days looking for the owner, the owner finally noticed his $30,000 dollar-filled fanny pack was missing, and called the local police to help him find it.

    “I was like, ‘Oh my God, my freaking money’s gone. I’m out of all this bread. I don’t know what I’m going to do,’” the owner said to WPBF News, declining to be identified. 

    After reviewing the Wawa convenient store security footage, the police were able to identify both the fanny pack owner and Salazar. They contacted Salazar who happily brought over the fanny pack to the police station with every single dollar still inside. The fanny pack owner cried and hugged Salazar, thanking him for finding and returning it.

    The owner was incredibly grateful that an honest person found his lost pack.

    “I was pretty astonished that anybody would have done that,” he said. “Think about it. That’s life-changing money. People would kill for that kind of money.”

    Meanwhile, Salazar just did what he thought was natural.

    “If something doesn’t belong to you, you didn’t earn it. Give it back. Be kind,” said Salazar. “It’s not my money to take. I was not raised that way.”

    Most people are honest people

    While acts of honesty like Salazar’s should be celebrated, there are more people like him than you would think. A 2019 study researched human behavior by dropping over 17,000 “lost” wallets in 40 countries over the course of two years. The results found that wallets with money inside were more likely to be reported than those without cash. In fact, the more cash inside the wallet, the more likely it was reported.

    “The highest reporting rate was found in the condition where the wallet included $100,” the study’s lead researcher Alain Cohn told NPR. “Forty-six percent of wallets with no money were reported, compared with 61% of those with about $13 and 72% of those with nearly $100.”

    So Luis Salazar’s behavior was part of something that is (thankfully) more normal than most would expect.

    “I guess maybe there’s just more good people in the world than most people think,” said the fanny pack owner. “You never know who you’ll run into, and Luis is just one of those good people.”

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