How being neurodiverse affects your relationship with money
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
Money management can be tough for anyone. And one-size-fits-all financial advice can leave neurodiverse (also called neurodivergent) people who are struggling with their finances feeling stigmatized, or at a loss for how to control their finances.But financial wellness is possible, by leaning on resources that target the neurodiverse community and making strategic use of financial tools.What is neurodiversity? Simply put, “neurodivergence describes how our brains work,” said Maria Davis-Pierre, a licensed mental health counselor and CEO/founder of Autism in Black. Davis-Pierre is neurodiverse; she is autistic and has attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.The brains of neurodiverse people work in unique ways that differ from the average or “neurotypical” person. According to the Cleveland Clinic, neurodiverse conditions include: autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, dyslexia, social anxiety, bipolar disorder and more.Neurodiversity isn’t uncommon. According to the National Cancer ...Teen in rushing waters rescued from San Luis Rey River
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
OCEANSIDE, Calif. -- A teen was rescued Wednesday from rushing waters in the San Luis Rey River, said the Oceanside Fire Department.The department was called out for a swift water rescue below the Douglas Bridge shortly before 10:15 p.m. San Diego rainfall totals: These San Diego areas received the most rain Responding crews and officers from the Oceanside Police Department located a teenage victim standing waist deep in fast moving water about 30 yards from the north bank of the river.According to witnesses, the female victim allegedly jumped from the bridge, which the department said is about 35 feet in height. Swift Water Teams from the Oceanside Lifeguard Division and Cal Fire worked together to rescue the teen, bringing her safely back to shore, officials said. Rescuers were concerned about the possible effects of the victim being exposed to the cold waters. Time to get fishy with it: What to know about California grunion run The teen was the turned over to Oceanside param...Nebraska trans health bill advances, despite filibuster vow
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Legislature voted Thursday to advance a contentious bill that would ban gender-affirming care for minors, despite threats from some lawmakers that they would filibuster the rest of the session.The vote came on the third day of debate, in which lawmakers angrily accused one another of hypocrisy and a lack of collegiality early on. By Thursday, the chamber had turned somber as some lawmakers opposed to the bill broke down in tears and pleaded with their Republican colleagues to reconsider their support for the bill. Members of the LGBTQ community who had gathered in the Capitol to protest the bill showed their displeasure with the outcome, booing and cursing lawmakers who voted to advance it as they left the legislative floor.“I am a ball of rage,” said Wrenn Jacobson, 29, of Lincoln, after the vote. “I’ve had to go back to therapy when this bill was introduced. I know so many people — so many kids — who will be hurt by this.”“They come for the ...Ohio toxic train derailment upends school baseball, track
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
EAST PALESTINE, Ohio (AP) — On the surface, everything looks normal.There’s the East Palestine High School baseball team learning the finer points of baserunning at one edge of Reid Memorial Stadium. At the other, a handful of sprinters dart through the mild March air, the blue parachutes attached to their waists mushrooming behind them as they pick up speed.Same as it ever was at East Palestine as it transitions from winter to spring sports. Only, not really.A little over a mile east of the small school — student population 285 — tucked near the Pennsylvania state line, cleanup crews are still dealing with the aftermath of the Feb. 3 train derailment. While no one was hurt, concerns over a potential explosion led state and local officials to approve releasing and burning toxic vinyl chloride from five tanker cars that forced the evacuations of half the village and closed schools for a week.More than a month later, the cleanup is ongoing. The legal wrangling over who to blame ...Ski-Doo maker BRP beats earnings expectations, and sees clear trails ahead
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
MONTREAL — BRP Inc. rode runaway powersport vehicle sales to a major jump in earnings last quarter, a better-than-expected performance the company says paves the way for further growth this year.The Ski-Doo maker reported that fourth-quarter profit rose 75 per cent year over year to $365.1 million, while revenue leaped 31 per cent to a record high of $3.08 billion.Sales of year-round products — all-terrain vehicles, side-by-side vehicles and three-wheeled motorcycles — fuelled the rise, increasing 47 per cent to $1.25 billion in the quarter ended Jan. 31 compared with the same period a year earlier.Seasonal products such as snowmobiles and Sea-Doos saw revenue surge 26 per cent to $1.32 billion.The results drove the Valcourt, Que.-based company to a 35 per cent market share for powersports in North America, its highest ever. It also claimed No. 1 market share among all original equipment manufacturers in the segments it operates in, up from fourth in 2020.“BRP’s Q4 resul...New deep-sea worm named after Trinidad & Tobago scientist
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A new species of deep-sea worm that can live in environments on the ocean floor that are either extremely hot or very cold has been named after a marine scientist from Trinidad and Tobago.Behold the Judiworm, whose official name is Lamellibrachia judigobini.“This must surely be a crowning point of my extensive marine career,” Judith Gobin, a marine ecologist and a professor at the University of the West Indies, said in a statement Wednesday.The name is meant to honor Gobin for her discoveries and efforts to protect marine life in the region, according to Magdalena Georgieva of the Natural History Museum in London.The University of the West Indies said in a statement that the new species was collected during exploratory missions from 2012 to 2014.The worm lives near hydrothermal vents and cold seeps across the Gulf of Mexico and around Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago at depths up to more than 10,800 feet (3,300 meters). The vents can reach temperatures o...Espionage thriller ‘Rabbit Hole’ a new challenge for action star Kiefer Sutherland
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
Toronto-raised actor Kiefer Sutherland does not spend time, as he puts it, “surfing the web.” He doesn’t browse online for news and still visitsa library for research. It’s his recipe, he says, for avoiding misinformation. “It’s from all sides of the political spectrum,” says the star of a new deception-themed series, “Rabbit Hole,” premiering this Sunday on Paramount Plus. “There is no circumstance in this universe where two plus two equals five, and yet in an effort to belong to something, people will gravitate to that. I think that this is a potentially very dangerous thing that’s happening in our society.”Discerning between truth and manipulation has been a signature pattern behind some of Sutherland’s television roles, from the early 2000s as protagonist Jack Bauer in the counterterrorism drama “24,” which ran for nine seasons, to the ABC/Netflix political thriller “Designated Survivor.” In “Rabbit Hole,” Sutherland adopts a similar path as John Weir, a corporate espiona...‘Scream as loud as you can’: 5 boys rescued from NYC tunnel
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Five mischievous boys had to be rescued after they crawled through a storm drain tunnel in New York City and got lost, authorities said.In audio released by the fire department, 911 dispatchers work to pinpoint the boys’ exact location and then tell them to scream once rescuers are close enough to hear.“Now you can scream as loud as you can,” a dispatcher says. “They want you to scream and yell.”The five boys, aged 11 and 12, crawled into a storm drain on Staten Island at about 6 p.m. Tuesday, fire department officials said at a news conference Wednesday. The boys walked about a quarter mile and then called 911 when they couldn’t find their way back, officials said.“We’re stuck in the sewer,” one of the boys says on the recording. “You’re stuck where?” a dispatcher responds.A second dispatcher says he is familiar with the area and tries to determine exactly where the boys are. “Once you went down, was the sewer left, right, straight — where was it?” the d...Supreme Court restores man’s conviction despite police violation of Charter right
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has restored the conviction of an Ontario motorist who had been drinking, even though police made an unauthorized stop on a private driveway.In a unanimous ruling Thursday, the top court said that given the circumstances, the evidence obtained from the unlawful police stop should not have been excluded by an appeal judge.The Ontario Provincial Police were patrolling near Thessalon First Nation on Lake Huron after midnight in March 2016 when they noticed an all-terrain vehicle about to leave a parking lot outside a convenience store.The officers decided to conduct a sobriety check of the motorist, Walker McColman, and followed his vehicle down a road and onto a private driveway that served his parents’ home.Upon approaching McColman, an officer noticed signs of intoxication, including a strong odour of alcohol and his inability to stand up straight.McColman was arrested and taken to a police station for breathalyzer testing. He was convicted...Paraguay launches corruption probe of former president
Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:32:21 GMT
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Paraguay’s attorney general launched a criminal investigation Thursday into U.S. allegations that a former Paraguayan president and the current vice president were involved in corruption and had ties to a terrorist group.Paraguay’s Attorney General Emiliano Rolón Fernández said a team would look into the U.S. allegations that former President Horacio Cartes and Vice President Hugo Velázquez engaged “in systemic corruption that has undermined democratic institutions in Paraguay.”Cartes and Velázquez have previously denied the allegations.The U.S. government, meanwhile, added three people to a list of Paraguayan officials it suspects of “significant corruption” and who would be barred from entry into the U.S. along with their family members. That list, started in 2019, now numbers nine officials.The U.S. in January issued explosive allegations that Cartes and Velázquez had ties to the Mideastern militant group Hezbollah, which Washington has designated a...Latest news
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