


jnc
776 posts





ロエベの最新ファッションショー、ドット絵柄の服、ゲームのバグみたいで欲しくなる

Watch me ratio this slop with Fin, the fish I drew

this is one of the best posters i’ve seen in a very long time btw






Lulu (露露) is one the cutest cat you can ever see. Lulu has the most giant eyes and Lulu loves getting his chin scratched Lulu has 2 million likes on single video in last 3 days, account has over 150k followers It has never migrated on Pumpfun even though Lulu is one of the most Famous Chinese Cat, creating it with Fees + telegram to bring back tradition. insta: instagram.com/p/DWeNhxJitaC/ Tg: t.me/luluonpump Memes: t.me/luluonpumpmemes

$3 million from whale vomit. A 60-year-old poor fisherman just became an overnight millionaire. Naris Suwannasang was taking a casual stroll along Laem Thalumphuk beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat, southern Thailand, when he noticed several pale, rock-like lumps washed up on the shore. He almost walked past them. Instead, he called his cousins to help haul the mysterious chunks home. What he had found was ambergris, known as "floating gold," a rare secretion produced in the digestive system of sperm whales. At roughly 100 kilograms (220 lbs), it is believed to be one of the largest ambergris discoveries ever recorded in history. To verify his find, Naris held a lighter to the mass. It melted like a candle and released a distinct musky smell, a telltale sign of genuine ambergris. Word spread fast. A businessman from Phuket immediately made contact, offering 960,000 Thai baht per kilogram if the substance is confirmed as Grade A quality. That would total over $3.2 million, an almost unimaginable sum for a man who was previously earning just $625 a month. Ambergris is one of the most prized ingredients in luxury perfume production, used in iconic fragrances to make scents last significantly longer. Naris also told reporters he planned to register his discovery with police, fearing it could be stolen from his home. Experts have been called in to confirm the quality. The final payout is still pending, but one beach walk may have changed this man's life forever.


Coin used as bus fare turns out to be 2,000-year-old relic trib.al/FDTLtIk




12,000-year-old dice hint at gambling habits as early as the last Ice Age trib.al/x1aeFFu

I just signed the solana mandate with myself: 200ms blocks 2 slots per leader 300m CUs per second MCP

A HARVARD psychologist says: “if you’ve achieved nothing by 25, you’ve avoided the most destructive illusion of youth” > In 2021, a Harvard psychologist surprised a lecture hall with an unexpected statement: “If you haven’t accomplished much by 25, you may have escaped one of youth’s biggest illusions.” At first, the room laughed. She wasn’t kidding. > The illusion of early success. In your early 20s, the brain seeks quick proof of worth ~status, attention, rapid achievements. But psychologists warn that chasing recognition too soon can lock people into roles or paths they never consciously chose. They decide too early… and spend years trying to undo it. > The exploration phase. Research on career development suggests that people who explore more before 30 often build stronger long-term directions. Testing ideas. Making mistakes in public. Changing course. At 25 it looks like confusion ….but by 35 it often turns into clarity. People who feel “behind” in their mid-20s frequently gain something others miss: Perspective. Patience. And a clearer sense of what truly matters to them. That foundation often leads to better decisions later on. At the end of the lecture, the psychologist left the students with one final thought: “You’re not meant to have life fully figured out at 25.” “You’re meant to discover who you’re not.”

Watch me ratio this slop with Fin, the fish I drew


A HARVARD psychologist says: “if you’ve achieved nothing by 25, you’ve avoided the most destructive illusion of youth” > In 2021, a Harvard psychologist surprised a lecture hall with an unexpected statement: “If you haven’t accomplished much by 25, you may have escaped one of youth’s biggest illusions.” At first, the room laughed. She wasn’t kidding. > The illusion of early success. In your early 20s, the brain seeks quick proof of worth ~status, attention, rapid achievements. But psychologists warn that chasing recognition too soon can lock people into roles or paths they never consciously chose. They decide too early… and spend years trying to undo it. > The exploration phase. Research on career development suggests that people who explore more before 30 often build stronger long-term directions. Testing ideas. Making mistakes in public. Changing course. At 25 it looks like confusion ….but by 35 it often turns into clarity. People who feel “behind” in their mid-20s frequently gain something others miss: Perspective. Patience. And a clearer sense of what truly matters to them. That foundation often leads to better decisions later on. At the end of the lecture, the psychologist left the students with one final thought: “You’re not meant to have life fully figured out at 25.” “You’re meant to discover who you’re not.”

Watch me ratio this slop with Fin, the fish I drew