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Executives with Heart: A Movement Where Leadership Meets Lifesaving


Executives with Heart unites top local leaders around one goal: ensuring one person in every household is ready to save a life with CPR. While 61% of people are unsure of what to do in a cardiac emergency, these leaders are working to change that. They’re leading by example through donating, rallying their networks to do the same, and spreading lifesaving CPR education, all leading up to a celebration at the Heart Walk.

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My Little Monster (2018) [ TOP ]

The 2018 live-action adaptation of ( Tonari no Kaibutsu-kun ) is a vibrant, if slightly frantic, exploration of what happens when two social outcasts collide. While many fans come for the shoujo tropes , the film offers a deeper look at the emotional literacy required to move from isolation to connection. The Architecture of Isolation

The "monster" in the title isn't just Haru’s unpredictable temper; it refers to the and fear of vulnerability that both characters harbor. Shizuku’s "monster" is her coldness—a defensive shell built to ensure she never gets hurt or distracted. Haru’s "monster" is his intensity—a desperate reach for connection that often ends in chaos. Learning the Language of "Others" My Little Monster (2018)

At its core, the story follows , a girl who has mechanized her life to avoid the unpredictability of human emotion, and Haru Yoshida , a boy whose raw, unfiltered emotions make him a social pariah. The 2018 live-action adaptation of ( Tonari no

Understanding that a disagreement isn't the end of a relationship. Understanding that a disagreement isn't the end of

(Haru) and Nana Komatsu (Shizuku) bring a necessary groundedness to the whimsical plot. Suda captures the "stray dog" energy of Haru—alternating between frightening and heartbreakingly fragile—while Komatsu excels at showing the slow "thawing" of Shizuku’s heart. Their chemistry highlights the film's main thesis: love is messy , and trying to solve it like a math equation (as Shizuku attempts) is a recipe for failure. Final Thoughts

Choosing someone else’s happiness over your own rigid schedule. The Performance of Growth