Cannadelics

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Cannadelics

@CannatechNews

Clarity, Positioning, and Revenue Systems for Regulated Wellness

가입일 Ocak 2017
1.9K 팔로잉1.5K 팔로워
Brent N. Hunter
Brent N. Hunter@brentnhunter·
What if the quiet giants around us hold the secret to belonging? Beneath the bark of towering forests lies a hidden world—a sprawling underground network connecting trees like an intricate society. This is known as the “Wood Wide Web,” a natural wonder where trees communicate, support, and nourish each other through fungal threads called mycorrhizae. Mother trees, often the oldest and largest, share nutrients with younger saplings struggling to grow. Some trees even send distress signals through this network when under threat, calling their neighbors to activate defenses. Imagine belonging to such a community where no one stands alone. Where support flows invisibly, generously, without expectation. It’s a lesson in empathy and interdependence that humans can embrace. Consider the ancient Douglas firs or the resilient redwoods of California; their survival depends not only on individual strength but on collective care. What if our neighborhoods, workplaces, and online spaces mirrored this invisible web—where collaboration is instinctive and support is constant? Here are powerful lessons trees whisper to us: • Belonging is a two-way street. Giving and receiving support builds stronger bonds. • Strength flourishes in connection, not isolation. • Diversity within a community enriches resilience and creativity. • Communication nurtures trust, even when it’s not visible. Reflect for a moment: How often do we underestimate the power of unseen support in our lives? Who are the “mother trees” in your world? Could acting as one change someone’s path today? This underground forest network invites a profound shift: belonging isn’t about being the tallest or the fastest but about growing together, rooted in empathy. Next time you walk among trees, remember—they are not solitary sentinels but vibrant communities. How can this awareness transform your sense of belonging where you live and work? Please share your thoughts and stories about belonging. Where have you felt part of a living, breathing community? How can we cultivate more “wood-wide webs” in our daily relationships? Join the movement for a world of unity, harmony, and abundance at UnityProject.One For more articles like this one, please check out my Substack at brentnhunter.substack.com #unity #harmony #abundance
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TreeClone
TreeClone@TreeClone2025·
The Wood Wide Web Long before the internet, forests were connected. 🌳 Trees trade food, nutrients, even warnings through fungal “mycorrhizal highways.” It’s nature’s original blockchain, decentralized, resilient, every root a node. TreeClone plants living nodes into this Wood Wide Web, 1 billion trees as Earth’s regenerative network. 👉 Follow @TreeClone2025 = 1 real tree planted. #TreeClone #GreenCrypto #WoodWideWeb
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SA News Channel
SA News Channel@SatlokChannel·
7: Beneath the soil, plants talk through vast fungal networks — the so-called “Wood Wide Web.” They share nutrients, warn neighbours of danger, and maintain balance. They sense chemicals, vibrations, and even faint electromagnetic fields we cannot perceive.
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SA News Channel
SA News Channel@SatlokChannel·
SA News #Thread | The Secret Life Of Plants: How They Memorise, Communicate, Problem Solve And Socialise 1: What if plants are not the passive, silent beings we think they are? Scientists are discovering that plants can remember, communicate, problem-solve, and even socialise. Welcome to The Secret Life of Plants — where intelligence has roots.
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Cannadelics
Cannadelics@CannatechNews·
Could Nose-Picking Habit Be Linked to Alzheimer’s? Mice studies suggest nose-picking might let bacteria sneak into the brain via the nose — potentially triggering Alzheimer’s-type inflammation. Hypothesis = interesting, unproven. #Alzheimers #Neuroscience cannadelics.com/2025/10/15/nos…
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