Long Distance Couple Meet Around the World to Take the Same Sweet Photo

Travel Photos

Milan, Italy

Long distance relationships are a challenge for even the most solid partnerships. It’s hard enough when a couple of hours driving separate two lovers, but it’s even more difficult when that division is thousands of miles. Rob and Joli Switzer are a couple whose love has gone the distance—both literally and figuratively. Rob, who is from the U.S. and Joli, who is from the Philippines, met in 2010 at a travelers’ meetup in Cebu City, Philippines. They became friends there and stayed in touch via Facebook.

As their relationship evolved from friendship to romance, the two decided to meet again three years later. Afterwards, they started their long-distance relationship. But despite the obvious logistical challenge—they lived 8,000 miles apart—Rob and Joli turned lemons into lemonade. They both loved to travel, so they made a point to “meet halfway” in different places around the world. From St. Petersburg to San Francisco, the two would explore the cities together. Whether it was a metropolis or vast desert, they would commemorate the journey with the same dip-and-kiss pose.

“Everyone was taking jump shots and signature travel poses, so we thought about creating our own cute romantic pose just for kicks,” Rob and Joli explained. “On a whim, we decided that the ‘dipkiss’ should be it.”

Since first becoming a couple in 2013, Rob and Joli have closed the gap in their lives; Rob proposed to Joli in Moscow, and the betrothed said “I do” in June 2017.

They now share these charming travel photos to inspire others who are in long distance relationships. “To all the LDR couples—always follow your heart, no matter the distance,” Joli said. “Have faith, do your part and it’ll all work out in the end!”

For those wondering how to make long distance relationships work, take a cue from Rob and Joli Switzer.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

The couple met in 2010 and despite living in two different countries—the United States and the Philippines, respectively—saw each other on a regular basis.

Travel Photos

Joshua Tree National Park, California, U.S.

Travel Photos

Chocolate Hills, Bohol, Philippines

Travel Photos

Lisbon, Portugal

Travel Photos

Barcelona, Spain

Travel Photos

Boracay Island, Philippines

Travel Photos

New York City, U.S.

How to Make Long Distance Relationships Work

Washington, D.C., U.S.

They would “meet halfway” in cities around the world. Each time, they take a photo with the same dip-and-kiss pose.

How to Make Long Distance Relationships Work

Monument Valley, Utah, U.S.

How to Make Long Distance Relationships Work

San Francisco, California, U.S.

How to Make Long Distance Relationships Work

Grandfather Valley, North Carolina, U.S.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Kizhi, Russia

How to Make Long Distance Relationships Work

Walt Disney World, Florida, U.S.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Napa Valley, California, U.S.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Peterhof, St. Petersburg, Russia

Eventually, Rob proposed to Joli on one of their adventures in Moscow, Russia…

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Moscow, Russia

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Moscow, Russia

…and they got married in June 2017!

Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Town Hill, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Long Distance Relationship Ideas
Long Distance Relationship Ideas

Dipkiss Travels: Website | Facebook | Instagram
h/t: [Bored Panda, BuzzFeed]

All images via Dipkiss Travels. 

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Couple Travels the World Performing Acrobatic Yoga Poses with Gorgeous Backdrops

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How to Stop Trump Blowing It Up

Trump gave his UN speech on North Korea on September 19, which means that the War Powers Act’s sixty-day period for unilateral presidential action ran out on November 18. Under the act’s explicit provisions, the president can engage in no further provocations, such as military incursions into North Korean airspace, without gaining a new Authorization for the Use of Military Force from Congress. The act’s ban on unilateral presidential action is not absolute; it expressly authorizes the president to respond unilaterally to “an attack upon the United States, its territories or possessions, or its armed forces.” If North Korea assaults American bases in Korea, or fires missiles at Guam, Trump is indeed authorized to respond with “fire and fury.” But in the meantime, he must restrain himself—and the statute provides his congressional critics with special procedures to insist that he keep his forces under control.

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The Extra Woman

In the fall of 1939, the writer and self-help guru Marjorie Hillis married Thomas Henry Roulston, owner of the prominent New York City grocery chain Roulston & Sons. She was forty-nine years old, and he was in his early sixties. The bride did not wear white at her wedding. Instead, according to Joanna Scutts, Hillis’ devoted biographer and the author of the sharp new book The Extra Woman: How Marjorie Hills Led a Generation of Women to Live Alone and Like It, Hillis wore a “gown of ‘pale smoke blue’ in marquisette . . . with an ostrich feather perched on her tightly curled iron-gray hair.” Though Hillis’ outfit was ethereal, there was a lot of added heaviness to her nuptials; she had become a household name for her clever books about never wanting to get married, and here she was, willingly walking down the aisle. It was, to put it in modern parlance, an off-brand move for the writer. An editor at Vogue and a staunch bachelorette, Hillis made her literary debut in 1936 with a manifesto about the glories of being a single woman in the city, titled Live Alone and Like It. The book sailed off the shelves, as young women flocked to cities looking for job opportunities and wider horizons, subsequently finding themselves in dire need of a savvy guide to the brave new world they themselves were creating. Hillis not only wrote the definitive book on 1930s solo living but became its public face; a Washington D.C. News article about her carried the headline “Author of Best Seller Bases Her Books on Theories She Has Proven for Herself.”

When Hillis fell in love, she knew that she was taking a huge gamble. She had written a stack of bestsellers (after Live Alone and Like It came books on personal finance and cooking for one) based on singlehood and had sewn a cult of personality around her ability to remain glamorous and unattached, answering the doorbell in elegant velvet lounging robes, holding a “glass of excellent sherry.” How would her readers take to her decision to wed? Along with the announcement for her engagement, the Chicago Tribune playfully printed the words “Didn’t Like It” above her picture. As Scutts writes, “marriage effectively silenced Marjorie Hillis” — not just because she could no longer be a champion of the companionless but also because she realized that being a contented wife was not thrilling material. “There was nothing radical in ‘live together and like it,’ ” Scutts writes. However, Hillis’ hiatus did not last for long. Roulston died suddenly in 1949, and she found herself flush with ideas again. She wrote You Can Start All Over, a snappy guide to stylish widowhood. Hillis was nothing if not a survivor, bouncing along the zeitgeist and turning her struggles into fashionable sound bites.

Scutts comes from an academic background — she studied at Cambridge and then earned her Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature at Columbia, and currently serves as the first Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Women’s History at the New-York Historical Society — and she admits early on that she considered Hillis’ story to be a trifle, a subject she “cheated” on her formal studies with, after a friend gave her Live Alone and Like It as a gag gift. Hillis — who did not even have a Wikipedia page when Scutts found her — was her cocktail party anecdote; she loved telling the story of this woman who published a monster bestseller and then was pulled under the historical tides, loved reviving interest in Hillis like she was her press agent from beyond the grave. Suddenly, it became clear to her that this side interest was becoming encompassing, and that Hillis’ story had larger implications for women’s history. She writes: “Despite the charming retro touches, like the insistence that any self-respecting Live-Aloner ought to own at least four styles of a mysterious garment called ‘a bed jacket,’ Marjorie Hillis’ philosophy struck me as almost painfully relevant to modern single women like me who were balancing the fantasy of independence with the fear of being alone.” (It is worth noting that while researching the book, Scutts, like her subject, fell in love and married, despite the implied dissonance with her main thesis.)

The resulting book is itself a kind of a marriage, between Scutts’s academic training and her more personal engagement with Hillis as a flesh-and-blood character. The resulting book is far from a straight biography and offers instead  a colorful dissertation on midcentury womanhood, exploring Hillis’ impact from several angles in order to sketch out a prismatic understanding of feminism and freedom at the time. Scutts carves her chapters into short, information-packed sections on topics like the history of self-help books, the back-story of Hillis’ ambitious editor at Vogue, the politics of Rosie the Riveter, the origin story of The Joy of Cooking, and other deeply researched asides. This could make the book feel like a bowl of potpourri, but Scutts was smart to continually weave Hillis’ story into her diversions. This makes Hillis’ story feel far-reaching — she touched so many aspects of women’s rights and financial independence — but it also grounds an enormous history in a personal narrative.

Scutts makes an effort throughout The Extra Woman to connect Hillis’ story to contemporary feminism, but she is at her very best when she is recounting shimmering details from midcentury history. Her chapter on women and food — especially the section about women drinking alone, which pulls from sources as diverse as The Philadelphia Story, The Savoy Cocktail Book, and a 1933 tome about teetotalism called Bacchus Behave! — is peppered with quirky and crystalline factoids, the kind that you might want to recount at your next cocktail party. Scutts may not have known at first that Hillis’ life would make for a great book, but she did have a hunch that it would make a great window through which to view a forgotten and fascinating slice of women’s history. One obscure woman’s story can be a vessel for understanding the lives of thousands; it is in doing justice to this fact that Scutts does justice to her leading lady.

 

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Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area in Tennessee…

Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area in Tennessee protects the free-flowing Big South Fork of the Cumberland River and its tributaries. The area boasts miles of scenic gorges and sandstone bluffs, is rich with natural and historic features, and provides visitors with a wide range of outdoor recreational activities including hunting, hiking, fishing, rock climbing, horseback riding and whitewater paddling. This time of year, you can also enjoy the stunning fall colors. Photo by National Park Service.

The Solution To Professional FOMO

Fear of missing out is such a strong phenomenon. In fact, it even has its own shortened hashtag on social media- #FOMO.

In recent years, social media has heightened feelings of FOMO and created a vicious cycle that is often hard to escape. This feeling of missing out extends even into our professional lives. For example, a professional networking event can make you feel like you are missing out when you have to choose between two interesting seminars.

Now, how do you solve professional FOMO?

The answer is in technology.

What Is The FOMO Cycle?

fomo cycle

In general terms, the FOMO cycle stems from social media. You see something your friends or colleagues are doing on social media, you feel left out.

So, you vow to do more cool or interesting stuff. You end up doing something you probably don’t want to do just so you can post about it on social media. This sets off someone else’s FOMO cycle. It’s such a problem that 48% of event attendees say that they attend live events just so they can have something to post about on social media.

There Are A Lot Of Opportunities To Have FOMO

If you have colleagues or friends who travel to large events, you might find yourself feeling a little bit of the FOMO.

CES in Las Vegas is one of the biggest trade shows, boasting nearly 110,000 visitors each year. This is where they roll out all the cool futuristic inventions everyone is going to be talking about in the next coming weeks. Wouldn’t it be great if you can be there in person?

SXSW is another major event with more than 70, 000 attendees. It’s where things like Twitter have been rolled out in the past. Could you imagine being able to brag to your friends and colleagues that you were there when they rolled out Twitter?

Event FOMO is not unique to young people and it doesn’t only happen with music festivals. Professionals can have FOMO on cool professional stuff, too.

Thankfully, Tech Can Help To Alleviate FOMO

fomo

Now, imagine that you are at a conference and you have to choose between two awesome speakers who are giving their presentations at the same time. Both are topics that are important to your profession and they are both well-known and respected in their fields.

How do you choose? And what do you do when you find out that you missed a really groundbreaking talk about something that is super relevant to your field?

In this day and age, you shouldn’t have to choose.

These days, event organizers are starting to realize it’s all about the tech. Nearly 80% say that their tech budgets have increased since last year and that increase accounts for an additional 10% more of the budget over last year.

What’s more, increases in event tech spending on things like live streaming, podcasts, and event apps account for a reported 20% increase in event attendance. It marked a 27% increase in productivity and a shocking 20-30% decrease in costs, too.

It may seem counter-intuitive to spend money on technology that can allow people to participate without being there but that is what is happening right now. People want choices and tech gives them choices.

No longer do professionals have to choose between two seminars they want to attend. Now, they can catch the podcast later!

Giving people more options is always a great way to ensure they are satisfied with attending and that they keep coming back.

How To Prevent Fear Of Missing Out

To avoid FOMO at professional events, here’s what you can do:

  • Make the most of the event app; it can help you plan where to go and when
  • Utilize the live streaming options when you need to take a break
  • Know that you can catch up on what you missed later with video recordings and podcasts

In this day and age where technology is a cure-all for what ails you, there’s no need to miss out on anything anymore. Event organizers are starting to take notice and adjust accordingly. People want options and event tech gives them those options. Learn more about preventing professional FOMO and networking events from this infographic!

How to Have FOMO - Even at an Event
Source: Evia Events

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Here’s what happened after I decided to write a gratitude journal

You’re reading Here’s what happened after I decided to write a gratitude journal, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

One thing I have learned from some incredibly successful, extremely happy people is to start writing a gratitude journal. A gratitude journal is more than your diary. You don’t write everything that happened to you in your journal. You only write the things that you are grateful for in it.

You can be thinking this right now.

“What on earth does a journal have anything to do with my dream?”

“OK, I will give it a try. But if it is just another mean of positive thinking, I don’t have to write it down, I will remember to remind myself and that should be enough.”

I used to have the same thought, and I didn’t take it seriously.

I started writing my journal many times, and yet I quit after couple days. Unsurprisingly it never works.

But it has to be something so good that so many people recommend, right?

I decided to stick with it this time, as an experiment, to find out the reason why it is so important.

After 30 days, I’m a new person and never think of going back where I was ever again. Here’s what a gratitude journal has helped me.

Focus on the positive side

We tend to linger on the negative feeling because it annoys us. But when you only write about things that you enjoy, you will forget about your pain and focus only on the positivity.

I used to get mad, upset or sad about some certain things. Even though when the reasons that caused those bad feelings were gone, I was still in the bad mood. By writing the good things happen in my life, I can let go such negative feeling.

There are things I wrote about on the first day of gratitude journal that I entirely forgot, but just by looking at the things I wrote, the exact happy feeling came back to me. It eased my pain and motivated me.

Regain calm and inner peace

Just by simply writing down what I feel good about, I let go a lot of chaos in my life. If you think about it, your chaos is because of all the wild thoughts and crazy feelings you have in your mind.

When I focus on the positivity in life, I feel calm and peaceful.

And when I feel calm and peaceful, I am very more grateful for life, appreciate it more and end up writing about that in my gratitude journal.

It is the start of the happiness and calmness loop, where you feel good about your life, you write about it and it makes you feel good again.

Feel happier

I become happier. Even though that is something I feel and tell myself every day, people around me feel the same too.

Who do you prefer to be around: someone who is depressed and always complains, or someone who is full of laughter and energy? Such an easy choice.

I become the happiness magnet, people want to be around me, want to get me into their conversation because I spread the joy over them.

Gain confidence

You might think confidence has nothing to do with gratitude, but it does. It reduces the urge to compare myself with others, it motivates me to do things that I was once afraid of, because it will be ok.

I hated my body for some layers of fat I have in my stomach. But when I shifted my perspective and appreciate my body for being healthy, being strong and allows me to follow my passion, those layers of fat don’t bother me anymore.

Respect yourself

I used to set very high expectation of myself, leading me to work until exhaustion and beating myself up when I failed, which was more than often.

All the self-judging and nagging are not good for my self-esteem. I fell into the loop of setting unrealistic goals, failing, beating myself up even more and trying to make up by setting even higher goals.

All of those stopped ever since I wrote my gratitude journal.

I become more self-aware. I respect my body and myself. I spend time to cherish and take care of myself. I create a positive aura in me and it increases my productivity.

A gratitude journal can change your life

I used to let my negative thoughts control my life. I left my thoughts and my mind go wild without any attempt to control them. Unsurprisingly, I wasn’t a ball of joy.

Now with my gratitude journal in life, I started to see things from different perspectives.

Every day I wake up, and I am grateful for another day that life gives me to live. And I am determined to live to enjoy every single minute of it.

Imagine one day you wake up, before even walking out of your bed, you smile because of all the sweet things happened the day before, and you are grateful for everything in your life. A day starts with a smile can never go wrong.

You decide to have a wonderful day today. Because it is up to you now. And you know it.

Your new life awaits. Start writing.

Mai Pham believes we can create our own happiness. She helps overwhelmed and frustrated people to ditch their stress and enjoy their lives again. Grab her free actionable cheatsheet: 5 Simple Tips to Release Stress and Bring You Calm in Under 5 Minutes and join her free 7 Joyful Days Challenge email course. Find her on Facebook and Twitter.

You’ve read Here’s what happened after I decided to write a gratitude journal, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

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10 Easy Instagram Tips to Help Grow Your Creative Career

Instagram Tips for Artists

Photo: Ben Kolde
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It’s no exaggeration that social media has changed the way we live. This is especially true if you’re a creative small business or an artist wanting to sell your work. With the right online strategy, you can gain attention from millions of people who are not only fans but potential customers. Instagram is one of the most powerful tools you have to market yourself and your work. If you need proof, consider this—actor Leonardo DiCaprio famously bought an artwork that he first spotted on Instagram.

Whether you’re looking to ramp up your Instagram presence or start an entirely new account, it’s never too late to start growing your business this way. It can seem daunting, especially at first—the company (now owned by Facebook) has made many improvements and features since it began in 2010. But the app is a lot of fun and we encourage you to stick with it. To assuage any fears, we’ve compiled a list of 10 Instagram tips to help you in your creative career.

Do you use Instagram to market your creative business? Check out 10 Instagram tips that will help you grow your influence.

Instagram Tips for Artists

Photo: Rawpixel.com

1. Everyone starts with zero followers.

One of the most important things to remember is that everyone starts from zero. Even Kim Kardashian once had an account with no one following it—and now look at her! It can feel discouraging to send posts out and feel like no one is seeing them, but if you can push through the low follower rates, the first six months will prove worth your while. Once you start steadily gaining followers, the rate in which you gain them will increase exponentially.

2. Use hashtags.

Hashtags are the key to others finding your content. They are valuable (and powerful) search tools, and so it’s best to use at least seven hashtags in your post. There are some hashtags, however, (like #art) which have millions upon millions of posts. Super popular hashtags like that will push your content down the timeline almost immediately since people are constantly posting to it. So, add some hashtags that have fewer posts to ensure that your content has a chance at being seen.

3. Engage with your audience.

Instagram is a social media platform for a reason—it encourages you to interact with others online. Engaging with your audience will also help gain more followers. You can do this in two ways. One is to like your follower’s posts; they will notice and do the same. The other way is to leave comments that show that you’re interested in the content that this person is posting. Don’t say things, however, like, “Nice pic! Check out my shop.” It sounds spammy and disingenuous—you won’t win any new fans that way.

4. Convert your account from personal to business.

A business account sounds serious, but it’s essential to make the conversion. One of the biggest perks is that you’ll get to add links to your stories (once you have 10,000+ followers)—it’s perfect for when you have a new product launch or are advertising an exhibition. Additionally, a business account also gives you access to analytics that will show you peak times for your posts; study the stats to see when your followers are most engaged, and post at that time.

5. Plan ahead.

A great social media strategy takes planning. Apps like Tailwind and Planoly allow you to schedule posts ahead of time on Instagram, but they both come with a caveat; Instagram won’t let them automatically post on your behalf. So when it’s time for you to post, they will send you an alert letting you know it’s time. You still hit the “share” button yourself. Despite this fact, they are great for if you’re on the go but still want to remain active on Instagram—it’s one less thing to remember.

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Photographer Captures Softer Side of Elusive and Feared Leopard Sleeping Peacefully

George Turner leopard in the Ruaha National Park, Tanzania

For months, wildlife photographer George Turner had heard tales of Ghost, a large male leopard that had gained quite a reputation at the Ruaha National Park in Tanzania. And he had just one week, after careful planning, to get a shot of the elusive animal. Fueled by his love of the natural world, Turner patiently waited day after day before finally capturing this magical image of Ghost asleep in his favorite acacia tree.

Turner first heard about Ghost during the planning phase of his trip to Tanzania. At almost 8,000 square miles, Ruaha is Tanzania’s largest national park and filled with interesting animals. “Most big national parks tend to have their big characters and I knew Ruaha would be no different,” Turner tells My Modern Met via email. “Upon hearing about Ghost, I was transfixed!”

Guides at Jabali Ridge first alerted him to Ghost, telling him about the large leopard’s ability to appear seemingly out of nowhere—and disappear just as fast. “Leopards are elusive cats but Ghost was extra special; he was massive. I was sent a few snaps beforehand and he’s (almost) the same size as an average lioness… that’s big!” Turner was determined to show a softer side to the animal, in contrast with the leopard’s reputation as a fearsome animal.

With the help of local guide Sebastian, Turner was able to understand Ghost’s territory, carefully taking in his environment and selecting the perfect location for his photograph. Ghost didn’t make it easy, as Turner wanted to capture the image during the “blue hour” at dusk. It seemed as though they always spotted Ghost lounging in his favorite tree right during the mid-day sun, but never during twilight.

All that changed one day, when they did a quick check of Ghost’s tree after an evening drive. And there he was, fast asleep on a branch. Turner grabbed his shots and then simply watched the leopard for about 30 minutes, soaking in this rare opportunity. “Ghost looks so calm and serene in the image and that’s exactly how it should be and indeed, continue to be.”

Leopards like Ghost are at risk due to local poachers who kill the animals for their skin. Organizations such as the Ruaha Carnivore Project help develop conservation strategies for large carnivores that reside in Ruaha. Aside from leopards, 10% of the world’s remaining lions and one of the largest cheetah populations in East Africa are located in the national park, making their efforts vital to maintaining the ecosystem.

See more of George Turner’s stunning wildlife photography and stay tuned for new work, as he’s just returned from a trip to Namibia and plans to visit more African countries—as well as the Arctic—in the next year.

Photograph of a Cheetah in the Rain by George Turner
George Turner lion photograph
George Turner Wildlife Photographer
George Turner Wildlife Photography
George Turner Wildlife Photographer

George Turner: Website | Facebook | Instagram

My Modern Met granted permission to use photos by George Turner.

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Interview: Up and Coming Wildlife Photographer Captures the Spirit of the Natural World

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Striking Photos Showcase the Elegant Beauty of Big Cats

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Daughter Is Surprised with Letter Every Birthday From Her Father Who Died 4 Years Ago

Dying Father Sends Daughter Flowers and Letters on Her Birthday

Four years ago, just a month before her 17th birthday, Bailey Sellers’ father Michael passed away from pancreatic cancer. But before he died, Michael found a way to be with his daughter every year on her birthday, even after he was gone. Facing a future where he wouldn’t be able to physically be there for his teenage daughter, he arranged for her to receive a bouquet of flowers and a card every year up until her 21st birthday. Last week, Bailey turned 21 and received one last bouquet from her dad, along with a love letter, as a final goodbye and a reminder that one day, they will meet again.

This year—being the last one that she would receive her father’s gift—was particularly emotional for Bailey. “When I opened this card, I especially felt him with me. It’s a cold feeling, then a happy feeling at the same time.” she said. She tweeted images of the beautiful flowers, the touching letter, and a childhood photo of the pair, together at the beach. This year’s heartfelt message read: “This is my last letter to you until we meet again” and “I will still be with you with every milestone, just look around and there I will be.”

As of today, Bailey’s tweet has received well over one million likes, 350,000 retweets, and over a thousand replies with kind words from strangers. Bailey has even appeared on the British breakfast show, Good Morning Britain, live from her native Knoxville, Tennessee, where she talked to Piers Morgan and Susanna Reid about her late dad’s gifts.

When she was just 16, Bailey Seller’s father died of cancer, but before passing away, he made final arrangements for her to receive flowers and a letter from him on each birthday.

Dying Father Sends Daughter Flowers and Letters on Her Birthday
Dying Father Sends Daughter Flowers and Letters on Her Birthday

Bailey tweeted the 5th and final heartwarming letter on her 21st birthday.

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She received over a thousand replies with kind words from strangers.

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Bailey Sellers: Twitter
h/t: [Neatorama, Reddit]

All images via Bailey Sellers.

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