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Fatima

@batulaa_

from river to the sea🇵🇸.

가입일 Eylül 2020
341 팔로잉1.2K 팔로워
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Sevda
Sevda@sevdaloji·
Kocamın arabama aldığı Tom ve Jerry'lere bakın
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Fatima@batulaa_·
@Fareeida I see alot of it around. Mostly in residential areas! The orange ones and dark pink are my favorites
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juːˈniːk@Fareeida·
@batulaa_ Oh wow, growing up I used to see it here but not anymore.
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AMARA💕
AMARA💕@simbyii·
Incoming video call…
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Uncle K Esq
Uncle K Esq@Supheey·
Yan Arewa need to understand this! The mediocrity is too much!
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Jake Lundahl
Jake Lundahl@LundahlHorses·
Civilization was built by people like this, and there is a stunning lack of gratitude in our culture for their work. In this specific case, at least half of the apple varieties in Brown’s collection were considered “lost” until he personally tracked them down and saved them. He literally went on quests where he did things like, tracking a lost variety back to a stump of a long-ago-cut-down tree near an abandoned homestead in remote Appalachia, took cuttings from the green shoots coming out of the stump, brought them back and planted them. Absolute legend.
Undiscovered History@HistoryUnd

Tom Brown, a retired engineer, dedicated 25 years to preserving approximately 1,200 apple varieties from extinction.

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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The science behind why those 52 seconds feel better than the 7 hours before them is genuinely wild. Your brain tracks your alarm time after about 3 days of consistency. Roughly 60-90 minutes before it goes off, your body starts tapering melatonin and ramping cortisol to prepare you for waking. The moment you become conscious before the alarm, you're in the final stage of that hormonal transition. Going back to sleep interrupts the transition mid-sequence. Your brain reads the return to unconsciousness as "false alarm, stand down," dumps a fresh micro-dose of melatonin, and drops your body temperature slightly. When the alarm hits 52 seconds later, you're now fighting both the original wake-up process AND the new sleep signal layered on top of it. Those 52 seconds feel incredible because your brain just gave you the neurochemical equivalent of a weighted blanket while simultaneously knowing the deadline is real. Scarcity plus comfort plus defiance. Three reward signals from one terrible decision.
hehelena :)@hehelenaa

Eu voltando a dormir porque ainda faltam 52 segundos para o meu alarme tocar:

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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Your odds of getting into Harvard are about 50 times better than your odds of becoming a NASA astronaut. In 2020, 12,000 people applied to be astronauts. NASA picked 10. A 0.08% acceptance rate. Harvard, the school everyone treats as shorthand for "impossible to get into," accepts about 4% of applicants. And you can't even apply without a master's degree in science or engineering, three years of work experience after that degree, and U.S. citizenship. A bachelor's won't cut it, period. NASA raised the minimum from bachelor's to master's in 2020, and that one change locked out thousands of people who would've been eligible the year before. The people who actually get picked are way beyond even those minimums. Average age at selection is 34. Most hold a PhD or medical degree on top of their master's. If you went the pilot route instead of the science route, you need 1,000 hours flying jets as the lead pilot, which is about two full years of flight time. Get selected and you're still not an astronaut yet. Two years of training come next: military water survival, SCUBA certification, learning Russian, and a swimming test you take in a full flight suit and shoes. Not everyone passes. I looked up the salary expecting it to match the difficulty. It does and it doesn't. Astronauts make $152,258 a year. But a fresh college grad at SpaceX with just a four-year degree starts at $95,000 to $115,000. NASA starts that same engineer at $54,557. If you spent eight-plus years earning a PhD, your NASA starting salary tops out at $73,038. A 22-year-old out of college at SpaceX earns more than a 30-year-old with a doctorate at NASA. In 65 years of spaceflight, NASA has selected a total of 370 astronaut candidates. More people have stood on top of Mount Everest than have ever worn a NASA flight suit.
beck@billieroan

went to nasa’s career page. let out the loudest laugh known to man. closed the tab. very humbling.

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Momodou Jallo
Momodou Jallo@aqxczv·
you go finish the kanuribalism, still go buy fuel 1600 tomorrow👍🏾
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Mareeya
Mareeya@Mareeyah_·
Very poor country with useless classism.
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Fatima@batulaa_·
@ibrah_shuwa This is the second sensible reply I’ve seen on that tweet. I dunno why everyone is getting all worked up over it!
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aisha(mrs)🇵🇸
aisha(mrs)🇵🇸@intaa_0·
Arewa Tribalismo in big 2026????? Bamu da ko sisi fah jama’a, da mai wagambari da mai bulla da mai shadda duk da bamu da ko sisi 😭😭😭😭
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Janhavi Jain
Janhavi Jain@janwhyy·
The lip balm on the right with 17g written is made in India and the one on left is from UK The ingredients of these are very different UK: petrolatum, almond oil, a bit of rose oil India: petrolatum + fragrance + linalool + colour same brand, different products, and the one made in India itched and wasn’t moisturising enough a lot of “global” products are quietly different depending on where you buy them
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Chanyyy🫶🏾🩷
Chanyyy🫶🏾🩷@channnnnyyyyy·
Science and technology might actually be one of the best things humans have ever done.
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Physics & Astronomy Zone
Physics & Astronomy Zone@zone_astronomy·
It’s done. They’re home. 🚀🌍 After 10 days around the Moon, Artemis II has safely returned to Earth. At 8:07 PM EDT, the Orion capsule splashed down in the Pacific Ocean — slowing from nearly 40,000 km/h using just parachutes and precision engineering. This moment looks calm… but minutes before, it was surrounded by fire during re-entry. From deep space… back to Earth. A new era of human exploration has officially begun. Would you go to the Moon if given the chance? 👀👇 #ArtemisII #NASA #Space #Splashdown #MoonMission
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