Culture
Five-Year-Old Indian Child Sets Record as the Youngest Yoga Teacher in the World
India’s Pratyaksh Vijay set a Guinness World Record as the youngest yoga instructor, achieving the title at five years and 337 days old after completing a 200-hour yoga teacher training course.
India’s Pratyaksh Vijay set a Guinness World Record as the youngest yoga instructor, achieving the title at five years and 337 days old after completing a 200-hour yoga teacher training course.
Inspired by his certified yoga teacher mother, he began practicing at four and dreams of sharing yoga globally for healthier, stress-free lives.
Now six years old, he trains people of all ages and has mastered over 30 yoga poses, including Surya Namaskar and Garbhasana.
Watch his feature video below.
Culture
This 3-Year-Old Writes Like a Master Calligrapher – And He Can’t Even Read Yet
A 3-year-old boy in Guangdong province, China has gone viral for his impressive calligraphy skills.
Known as Langlang, he was filmed calmly using an ink brush to write on red scroll paper. Surprisingly, he doesn’t recognize most of the characters, yet his smooth strokes and focus have amazed people.
Langlang’s mother shared his love for calligraphy started naturally. He often watched family members practice, and the quiet influence sparked his curiosity.
Early this year, he asked to try it himself and surprised everyone with his ability to copy strokes with impressive accuracy despite never having lessons.
Currently, Langlang enjoys writing Spring Festival couplets, a red scrolls of good wishes for Lunar New Year.
He can already copy different styles, from neat script to flowing cursive. For someone so young, his skill feels like a natural gift, hinting at the bright future of a little artist.
Culture
A 9-Year-Old Lost Her Diary in New Zealand – Now It’s Become a Tourist Attraction
A little girl’s lost diary has gone viral after turning into a global guestbook at New Zealand’s Lake Tekapo.
In January 2025, nine-year-old Zi Handong from China visited the lake with her family and wrote about her day in a small blue notebook, only to accidentally leave it behind. What happened next is history.
If you’re curious about what the little author first wrote, the opening page reads:
“Today, my mum, dad, brother and grandma went on a jet boat. I thought it was one of those shark-shaped jets, but it was a boat with many people on board, moving very slowly.”
Not long after, a traveler from China found the diary and wrote, “I hope you can come back and retrieve it.” On February 3, another replied, “I do not think she can.” From then on, more visitors joined in, some traveling to Lake Tekapo just to spend hours searching for it.
By March, the lost diary was filled with heartfelt notes from strangers. Months later, a Chinese woman in New Zealand returned it to Zi’s family in China. Opening its pages, her mother Li Meng called it a “shooting star,” carrying the wishes and kindness of everyone who found it.
After Zi’s diary went viral, travelers began leaving new notebooks around Lake Tekapo. Each was sealed in a waterproof bag and hidden under rocks, waiting to be found.
Visitors wrote messages before hiding them again, keeping alive the chain of connection sparked by one little girl’s forgotten journal.
Today, eight notebooks lie hidden along Lake Tekapo’s rocky shore, waiting like treasures for curious visitors. Each discovery brings new messages from strangers around the world.
What began as one lost diary has grown into a living tradition, filled with stories, kindness, and the joy of connection.
Culture
70-Year-Old Grandma Goes Viral Overcoming Arthritis By Lifting Heavy Weights
70-year-old Roshni Devi Sangwan from India is going viral after overcoming arthritis through weightlifting.
Once limited by painful knees, she now lifts weights heavier than many young gym-goers. Her transformation from pain to strength has inspired thousands, proving arthritis doesn’t always mean slowing down.

Her journey began at 68, when Sangwan was diagnosed with arthritis in her knees, making walking and even standing unbearable.
Encouraged by her son, she stepped into a gym for the first time. “I was skeptical at first because I’d never heard of anyone joining the gym at my age,” Sangwan said.

Her son, Ajay Sangwan, was in his forties running an export business when his love for fitness pushed him to become a certified trainer in 2019.
By 2023, he quit business entirely to train his mother full-time. “Mum was miserable after her arthritis diagnosis, and I felt helpless,” he said.
In 2024, Roshni took part in a deadlift competition organized by a local gym and won the gold medal.
She has also been invited to compete in the World Championships for Strongman, hosted by the World Strength Games in the US next May, and is now training for the event.

For Roshni, the real victory is living pain-free. She can walk without fear, sit cross-legged, and move with ease.
“Now I have so much energy. My joints don’t hurt, my posture is better, and I feel more confident. Even heavy chores no longer leave me tired,” she said.

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