Every week, we publish a short, quiet newsletter we call Nice Newsโa little oasis in your inbox. Itโs not to distract you from the troubles of the world, but to remind you that this world is also wonderful. That peopleโeveryday peopleโare out there doing wonderful things. That life, when we stop and notice it, is astonishing.
Steve Jobs once said that one of the ways we show our gratitude to humanity is to โmake something wonderful and put it out there.โ Thatโs what we try to do every week.
This week, the wonderful showed up in two places.
First: a breakthrough in pancreatic cancer, the same disease that took Jobs from us. In a quiet Long Island lab, Cold Spring Harbor scientists discovered a way to intercept the spread of this devastating illness. It involves targeting two proteinsโFGFR2 and EGFRโthat fuel the aggressiveness of tumors in patients with KRAS mutations (which is nearly all pancreatic cancer cases). Itโs early, but the results in mice are promising. If it works, it could mean earlier intervention, better outcomes, even prevention .
For anyone who has watched someone they love disappear too quickly from this diseaseโฆ this is hope. This is light.
Second: bubble rings from humpback whales.
Yes, you read that right.
In a study that sounds like something out of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, researchers observed humpback whales blowing intricate bubble rings directly at humansโnot for hunting or courtship, but possibly to connect. To play. To interact with us in their own intelligent way. One researcher called it โan invitation or party trickโ โ and some believe this may help us decode signals from other intelligent life in the cosmos .
Think about that: the ocean may be full of friends we donโt yet know how to talk to.
So why do we write Nice News?
Because the miraculous is not rareโitโs just under-reported.
Because in the words of Paramahansa Yogananda, โwhat is miraculous is all around us.โ His teachings remind us that divine intelligence runs through everythingโnature, science, healing, art. And that the yogi, the scientist, and the dreamer are all reaching toward the same light .
Jobs read Autobiography of a Yogi every year. It was the only book on his iPad. In the end, he left behind not just a company, but a philosophy: stay hungry, stay foolishโฆ and make something wonderful.
So today, letโs notice the whales. Letโs celebrate the science. Letโs be kind, and curious, and grateful to be alive in this timeโa time when wonderful things are happening.
Because they are.
Every week. All around us.