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Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario

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  • Why Being A Good Neighbor Is Your New Full Time Job
  • Motivation Matters!

Why Being A Good Neighbor Is Your New Full Time Job

Being a good neighbor is a skill you master by showing up for others consistently.
Jamie Bell Feb 17, 2026
Why Being A Good Neighbor Is Your New Full Time Job

Redefining community support and civic duty for National Kindness Week 2026 and beyond.

We talk a lot about main character energy, but honestly, some of you are acting like everyone else is just an NPC. That mindset is a one-way ticket to Loneliness Town. The reality is that your survival and your happiness are deeply tied to the people living on your floor, on your street, and in your city. National Kindness Week is the perfect time to snap out of that individualist fog and remember that being a good neighbor is actually a skill you need to master. It’s about being present.

Senator Jim Munson and Rabbi Bulka didn’t push for Bill S-223 just to give us a reason to post heart emojis. They did it to institutionalize the idea that we owe each other something. In 2021, Canada became the first country to make this official, recognizing that volunteerism and charitable giving are the literal glue of a functioning country. When you give your time to a local shelter or help a neighbor with their groceries, you aren’t just being a saint. You are investing in a safety net that might catch you one day, too.

Let’s get practical for National Kindness Week 2026. Look at your local community centers. They are usually underfunded and overwhelmed. Instead of scrolling for three hours this Saturday, go offer two hours of your time. If you have a car, drive someone to an appointment. If you’re good with tech, help a senior navigate the nightmare of modern digital bureaucracy. These aren’t just chores; they are acts of resistance against a world that wants us to stay isolated and angry.

Kindness is the highest form of maturity. It requires you to step outside your own head and realize that everyone is fighting a battle you know nothing about. When you make someone else’s day 10% easier, you’re creating a ripple effect that genuinely changes the temperature of your community. Don’t do it because you want a gold star. Do it because a society where people look out for each other is the only kind of society worth living in.

This week is National Kindness Week

Passed as a private member’s bill by Senator Jim Munson, Bill S-223, the Kindness Week Act, received Royal Assent on June 3, 2021, becoming law in Canada and officially designating the third week of February as National Kindness Week. The inspiration for this bill, the late Rabbi Reuven Bulka, founder of Kind Canada, launched the very first Kindness Week in Ottawa 18 years ago—making Canada the first country in the world to pass such legislation.

This annual, week-long celebration encourages Canadians from coast to coast to coast to celebrate acts of kindness, volunteerism, and charitable giving for the benefit of all Canadians. It also connects individuals and organizations to share resources, information, and tools to foster even more acts of kindness.

Let’s make note of this special week, and share ways to support Kindness in our workplaces, schools and communities.

Find more of these motivational short stories from Art Borups Corners

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Jamie Bell is a Winnipeg-based interdisciplinary artist and strategist working at the intersection of media arts, community engagement, and public affairs. Among others, his work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, with a focus on participatory media, strategic communications, and arts-based collaboration across northern and urban contexts.

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Recent Posts

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The Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project (MINIAP) is a community-driven research and policy initiative examining the environmental, social, cultural, economic, and long-term safety impacts of the proposed Deep Geological Repository (DGR) for Canada’s used nuclear fuel in Melgund, Ontario. Aligned with the federal impact assessment process led by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, and focused on the proposal advanced by the Nuclear Waste Management Organization, this integrated project analyzes groundwater protection, nuclear waste storage safety, Indigenous rights and treaty interests, environmental monitoring, long-term radioactive waste containment, emergency preparedness, regulatory oversight, community health, regional economic impacts, and intergenerational stewardship. Designed to enhance public participation, transparency, and evidence-based decision-making, the Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project provides accessible analysis, technical review, and community engagement resources to support informed input into Canada’s nuclear waste management strategy and the federal impact assessment process.
Discover a growing collection of inspirational and motivational short stories from Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario, created to inspire hope, resilience, courage, and personal growth. These uplifting short stories and daily motivational reads are rooted in strong community values, dignity, integrity, perseverance, and leadership—reflecting life across the Prairies and Northern Ontario.

Each inspirational story delivers powerful life lessons, positive mindset reminders, and encouragement for self-improvement, mental strength, and purposeful living. Whether you’re searching for motivational stories for tough times, short stories about resilience and overcoming challenges, or inspirational reflections grounded in rural, northern, and Indigenous-informed community perspectives, this collection is designed to fuel optimism, confidence, and long-term success.

Through storytelling that highlights community leadership, youth empowerment, kindness, and values-based living, these inspirational short stories help readers in Manitoba, Northwestern Ontario, and beyond stay grounded, build inner strength, and move forward with clarity, hope, and possibility.
Welcome to the definitive digital archive of Winter Stories, a collaborative collection of short stories to read, flash fiction, and experimental narratives produced through community-based arts and digital literacy workshops in Winnipeg, Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario.
A growing short story library and digital literacy initiative that explores storytelling through unfinished tales and experimental fiction. These open-ended narratives encourage critical thinking, creative reading, and modern digital storytelling skills.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator and Art Borups Corners Collective was seeded with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse and the Local Services Board of Melgund. We thank them for their investment, support and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program

SUPPORTING ARTS AND RECREATION

Borups Corners Arts and Recreation supports arts and recreation in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario as volunteer-driven Arts Collective.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
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