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Inanna
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𝘐𝘮𝘢𝘨𝘪𝘯𝘦, 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘨𝘪𝘳𝘭𝘴 𝘢𝘳𝘰𝘶𝘯𝘥 𝘵𝘰𝘸𝘯 𝘢𝘴𝘴𝘦𝘮𝘣𝘭𝘦
𝘐𝘵'𝘴 𝘢𝘯 𝘪𝘯𝘥𝘪𝘨𝘰 𝘯𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘵, 𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦'𝘴 𝘢 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘭
🎨@oilcanvasvibes
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@shorensen ??!! Haven't I told you before I was locked in a stranger's bathroom?! It was allegedly digawi oleh hantu/penunggu rumahnya tuh! 😫
Indonesia

@shorensen you are weird indeed
ijan ☆˚✦@lubangperi
lo ke kamar mandi bawa hp aja udah aneh ajg😭
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Inanna retweetet

son demasiado jóvenes para haber vivido la época dorada de twitter

Sakur@sakurzito
Debería haber un close friends para los tuits
Español

I can't skip this hahahahaha @shorensen
실눈이@sillnuunee
일본어선생님이 트위터계정 3개 이상인 사람이랑 친구하지 말라는 말을 하심
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Inanna retweetet
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@minuitdhiver I see lots of people despise it and it kinda hurts me bc I really love it 😔 I think you'd love pineapple tarts, it's pineapple filling, Indonesian called it nastar. I think in Malaysia & Singapore they called it pineapple tarts.
English

@umberbeige never tried it! but i admit im curious because i LOVE pineapple, especially grilled, but it has to be fresh and not canned 🙅🏻♀️
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NASA is sending to the moon while SEA is ascending to the sun
Totoy@TotoyGamingYT
we are cooked
English

He wasn't masturbating. What actually happened to his body is significantly worse than any joke.
When the fourth pyroclastic surge hit Pompeii, it arrived at 300°C. That's 572°F. The thermal human survival threshold is 200°C. This man died in a fraction of a second. His brain stopped before a single pain signal completed its circuit.
What you're looking at is cadaveric spasm. It's a rare form of instant muscular stiffening that only occurs during sudden violent death by extreme heat. The 300°C surge cooked the proteins in his muscle fibers so fast that his body locked into whatever position it was in at the exact moment of impact. Arms, legs, fingers, toes all contracted simultaneously. 73% of Pompeii's victims were found frozen in "life-like" stances mid-action. Running. Crawling. Shielding children. This man was probably just lying down.
The flexed limb position you're laughing at appears in nearly every Pompeii body. It's called the pugilistic attitude. Heat shrinks tendons faster than bone, curling arms and legs inward. Boxers after a fire look the same way. The position has zero connection to what the person was doing. Pure thermodynamics.
For centuries, archaeologists assumed these people suffocated on ash. A 2010 study proved they were wrong. Researchers heated modern human bone samples to various temperatures, compared them to Pompeii victims, and found the color and cracking patterns matched exposure to 250-300°C. Death was instantaneous. There was "no time to suffocate."
This isn't even his body. It's a plaster cast of the void he left behind. His flesh decomposed inside the hardened volcanic ash. In 1863, Giuseppe Fiorelli poured liquid plaster into the hollow cavity. What you see is the shape of absence.
9.4 million people looked at a man who was incinerated alive in a quarter-second and the main reaction was a punchline. The science of how he actually died is one of the most disturbing findings in modern archaeology.
En Júpiter@En_jupiter_
El masturbador de Pompeya, 79 d.c. La erupción del volcán Vesubio lo halló desprevenido, permaneciendo en ésta postura por la eternidad. Manera de morir 557: "La paja mortal".
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