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my stories

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Scott Powell from Peak Experiences

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Nate Michaux

Scott Powell who is the owner of a company called Peak Experiences. Scott created a place for dirtbags to come and stay and live and I'll be forever indebted to him because he provided the first foundation for me to heal and get stronger.

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The King Hussein cancer centre in Jordan

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Mostafa Salameh

The King Hussein Cancer Centre in Jordan that cares for people from around the world. it was there I met a 11 year old girl who's immune system was very low. My inspiring conversation with her about climbing Everest was the moment I decided that every climb in the future will be for a cause. Since meeting her we have raised over six million dollars for various causes around the world.

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The indigenous communities of Sierra Nevada

The indigenous communities of Sierra Nevada, are the guardians of the health of the planet. Their rituals are rooted in the understanding that the world is a single organism so whatever happens in one place is affecting the rest of the organism.

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Young bicultural change makers

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Kemo Camara

My hopeful story is this movement within the young bicultural community of African descent. We have been working with Nike and other busineses piloting programmes with this young generation who are all about creating the change that we want to see. This for me is where hope is coming from right now.

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The empathy and compassion in each of us

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Julian Abel

I think that hope is in each one of us. We have survived as humanity through care and compassion and every single one of us has the capacity for empathy and compassion. Our social nature has given us an incredible survival advantage and we can see the evidence of compassion in our physiology, our biochemistry, our genomics and everywhere else that you look. This is so hopeful.

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A young women in Sierra Leone

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Julia Lynch

My story is about a young women who grew up in an isolated village with no running water or power in Sierra Leone. She went on one of our programmes and started engaging her village in conversations around early age marriage which was a big issue. Before long 70 or 80 people attended and then other local villages opened up with further conversations around the issue. We have been walking alongside her in her ambition to go to University and eventually become a Lawyer.

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Enviromentalist Wangari Maathai

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Joyce Kamande

Enviromentalist Wangari Maathai who is founder of the Greenbelt movement, the first African women to win the Nobel prize. So inspiring especially as Wangari is from my tribe in Kenya.

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The Royal Academy of Engineering

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Josh Liu

I was lucky enough to work part time as their startup coach for their Innovation Fellowship. The Academy sends people like myself to support innovators and researchers to developing countries to help innovators to turn their ideas and innovations into impactful and sustainable ventures. I got to know an entrepreneur who tried to use 3d printing to produce low costs, prosthetic arms, that people can afford in his country. There was also another entrepreneur that took mobile and hygienic toilets, to remote villages that don't have proper toilets to use. The Royal Academy of Engineering are supporting developing countries in so many different ways. which is really inspiring to me.

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The Fair shot Cafe in London

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Joey Cuthbert

My hopeful story is an incredible cafe called Fair shot in London. A social enterprise that supports and transforms the lives of young adults with learning disabilities and autism through training them to be baristas and work in coffee shops. 95% of adults with learning disabilities are unemployed so through their hospitality program they take on a cohort of interns every year and train them up and then support them in finding work in other cafes. The support continues with Fair Shot providing a grant to the cafe where their intern is employed to contribute towards access needs and training for the first year. It's such a great thing to get my coffee from there every morning!

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Soup Kitchens supporting hundreds every week

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Joey Li

AR Projects provide warm meals and essential supplies to hundreds of people every week through their three soup kitchens, which act as portable hubs. These hubs are supporting those in need in various ways, including food, clothing, hygiene, mental health, and more.

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My adopted grandmother

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Jazz Woodward

My 70 year old adopted grandmother who is just forming a helping hand organisation for people who are in her age group that have experienced loss, and that are trying to start over and find their sense of purpose in life.

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Possible Futures

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Jacqueline Lim

A collective called Possible Futures, a collective of women from across the global south. They are organised in a way to stand in solidarity with indigenous communities, land defenders, peasants and also smallholder farmers. I'm just completely in awe of what they do.

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The Beachy Head Chaplaincy Team

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Jacky Youldon

Gus and Jenny who are part of the Beachy Head Chaplaincy Team. Their level of compassion is what I aspire towards. Using their skills in crisis intervention they offer supportive listening, to start a dialogue and to encourage more hopeful solutions than suicide.

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Three social entrepreneurs

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Iva Gumnishka

I get so much hope and inspiration from three women who are super passionate about social entrepreneurship. All of them have their families, their children, and they're juggling all of that and showing me that it's possible to do it and to be a successful woman in business and to have a strong social mission and to take care of your family.

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Yeukai Taruvinga who founded Young Horizons

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Isobelle Ford

Yeukai Taruvinga is my story of hope. She is originally from Zimbabwe and moved to the UK when she was 18 years old. She was involved in some political protests in Zimbabwe and her life was in danger. She thought she was coming here for a couple of months, until things calm down and she's still here 30 years later. Her asylum claim was very difficult, stressful and long, but she used that time to volunteer for boards of different charities in London working with young people from very diverse backgrounds. She decided that this was her life's calling. As soon as she got her refugee status, she set up a social enterprise called Active Horizons and she works now with young refugees, young asylum seekers and young people.

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Alan Watson Featherstone from Trees for life

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Eliza Marshall

My person is Alan Watson Featherstone who in 1986 founded the award-winning conservation charity, Trees for Life, which works to restore the Caledonian Forest in the Scottish Highlands. In the 80s rewilding and mother trees wasn't necessarily something that was being talked about, but Alan decided that the Glens of Scotland needed to be rewild so he raised over a million pounds which for a 'normal man' is extraordinary. He showed us this huge part of the Glens that is now rewild and it was all to do with making fences, planting the right trees, keeping the deer out which happens now in loads of areas but it was quite radical at the time. He lives a simple life in Findhorn, they're absolutely back to nature who love their vegetables and hug their trees, but his insight and his love and his passion for something that he started from absolutely nothing I think is a huge story of hope .

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Education Entrepreneur from Iran

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Christiana Bukalo
Christiana Bukalo

An Iranian entrepreneur is my hopeful story. He is building schools across Germany in which children can grow up with a knowledge that is centred around what the world actually should be like and a curriculum that teaches them how to interact with human beings and with nature.

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Youtuber Mr Beast building wells

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Chris Duffy

I was really impacted by something I watched online recently where Youtuber Mr Beast partnered with multi agencies on the ground to build 100 life changing wells for schools and communities across Africa. This was one of his philanthropic projects which I found really hopeful.

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A refugee in Uganda called Edward

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Carwyn Hill

My hopeful story is a refugee called Edward from South Sudan who is living in Uganda. He is an extraordinary guy supporting so many people who are in need. What he's done is a reflection of a far wider number of people with around 1.4 million refugees living in Uganda.where in the context of such challenge there are extraordinary stories of courage, hope and resilience.

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Indigenous land use and healing

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Ben Rawlence

My hopeful story is a community that is processing its history and coming to be a force for indigenous land use and protection and conservation in Canada. They have rightly recognised that their relationship with the forest is their key to adaptation and survival in the future and they're blazing a trail showing the rest of us how it's done. They are showing that despair is often the first step towards repair and that processing the past is often the key to unlocking a more transformative and positive future.

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A Compassionate bus driver

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Audrey Lin

For me hope is found in the ordinary moments of life and the acts of kindness that will never be a headline or even noticed. I was blown away by the overwhelming compassion of a bus driver in downtown San Francisco who treated a blind women with such joy and love and kindness when she got onto the bus. This impacted me to the point where I thanked the driver for going the extra mile. 'My sister also has a disability, so of course I want to help when I can.'

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The slow ways project

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Andrew Howley

I recently came across The slow ways project which I found inspiring and hopeful. They are encouraging people to use existing paths that criss cross the landscape and move at the speed of natural human movement.

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The Bio Leadership Fellows

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Andres Roberts

My story of hopefulness is all about the 80 people who have been part of the Bio Leadership Fellowship, all carrying a story that is changing the world in so many beautiful and creative ways. It's a call for people all around the world to come and be part of a community with each person holding a question or a project of potential change. It's through that that I've got to meet already 80 people and more, each of whom is carrying a story where they genuinely are doing something for the good of this life in so many beautiful and creative ways. Nobody can do this alone. It doesn't matter if you are the Secretary General of the UN or an organic farmer in India, you can't do it alone. But what is happening is that there are now threads of connection across communities that are really committed to making change happen. There's so much work to but the fact that the dots are getting connected is what gives me buckets of hope.

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Waterbear streaming platform

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Amooti Binaisa

I think the Waterbear streaming platform is a hugely hopeful story. It is the first interactive streaming platform dedicated to the future of our planet featuring award-winning documentaries, enlightening short films and impactful series.

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Liz Robinson at Big Education

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Mark Haviland
Mark Haviland

My hopeful story is Liz Robinson, who runs an organisation called Big Education. A multi trust academy that is focused on the idea of reexamining how we educate our children to ensure that we are drawing out the very best in them as opposed to pouring into them what we think is useful for an economy, is easy to measure and easy to build a system for. Liz and the people that she works with are all incredible innovators in the education space and yet they are deeply entrenched within the system. They know the politics, they know the systemic challenges that it faces and the pressures that are being put on everybody in that system. They are determined to find a way through proof points not through some conceptual magic, but through evidence and proof and case studies to take a new way of teaching to society to government and ensure that we draw out of children the best that is possible.

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