AL

7.1K posts

AL

AL

@AL08849417

I don't post much but I will always support others in the things that they do ❤

Katılım Haziran 2020
193 Takip Edilen140 Takipçiler
AL retweetledi
삼식
삼식@Hazz1ing·
이렇게까지 원작스러울 필요 없다고 제발
한국어
2
4K
52K
2.1M
AL retweetledi
interesting videos
interesting videos@IntVideos_x·
Mind-blowing finding from Boston University: During deep sleep, your brain performs a powerful "cleansing flush" that forcefully removes waste and toxins.
English
8
162
923
35.2K
AL retweetledi
Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
I also read that he did this so consistently that the wild animals actually learned to recognize the sound of his engine. Elephants and buffalo would hear his specific truck coming from miles away and gather at the dry water holes to wait for him before he even arrived.
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

This man dedicated his life to hauling thousands of gallons of water to wildlife dying of thirst — and continued directing the mission from his hospital bed until his final days. He was only 54 when he died. In 2016, a devastating drought turned Kenya’s Tsavo West National Park into a parched wasteland. Horrified by the sight of a buffalo collapsing from thirst, local pea farmer Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua sold his possessions, bought a secondhand truck, and began delivering up to 3,000 gallons of water every day to desperate elephants, zebras, and antelope across the rugged terrain. His selfless work, captured in viral videos of thirsty animals rushing toward his truck, turned him into an international symbol of compassion. People from Vermont to Utah rallied behind the man known as the “Water Man of Tsavo,” donating generously to keep the lifeline flowing when rains failed. Even as kidney failure took a heavy toll on his health, Mwalua refused to stop. From his hospital bed, he continued managing operations, coordinating daily deliveries, and developing new solutions such as solar-powered pumps and beehive fences to protect both wildlife and local communities. Though he ultimately lost his battle with illness, his wife Rachel and the Mwalua Wildlife Trust carry on his work today. Patrick Kilonzo Mwalua’s legacy is a powerful reminder that while we cannot prevent every tragedy, there is deep dignity and meaning in choosing kindness and action in the face of suffering.

English
27
2.6K
15K
295.9K
AL retweetledi
silly lily
silly lily@sillylilylmaoo·
“whats this?” “infinite love and kindness sir” “no thats not right im unlovable, a coward and selfish. i could never learn to love others, let alone myself” “thats not true sir everyone is capable of self love and compassion towards others, i have faith you will be able to”
silly lily tweet mediasilly lily tweet media
English
48
2.3K
9.7K
68.5K
AL retweetledi
Karla M. Redfield
Karla M. Redfield@ForgottenJasmin·
Aloy Horizon Forbidden West
Karla M. Redfield tweet media
English
3
14
99
543
AL retweetledi
CHOVE
CHOVE@chovwenofuru·
Tarzan facing that leopard wasn't just a tight it was the moment the jungle stopped seeing him as a lost child and started recognizing him as one of its own. Tarzan (1999 film)
English
48
689
7.9K
218.7K
AL retweetledi
No filter Skin
No filter Skin@NoFilterSkin·
Women are out here sharing live locations, checking the backseats of cars, and holding their hands over their drinks. Men are doing 3 hour podcasts about how unfair it is that we don't smile at them. The disconnect is fatal.
English
334
36.7K
170.8K
1.4M
AL retweetledi
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭@tanpukunokami·
A sad thing happened in Japan An 11-year-old boy named Yuki was reported missing in Kyoto. His stepfather was out on the streets, handing flyers to neighbors, asking for help finding him. This week, that same stepfather was arrested. He has reportedly told police he “lost his temper and strangled” Yuki, then dumped the body in a mountain forest. The boy’s mother, by every account, believed him until the end. This is where most people will stop reading, and this is exactly where the harder conversation should start. Japan has a quiet, persistent problem that rarely makes it into the English-language conversation about this country: children living with stepfathers or their mother’s new partners are overrepresented in serious child abuse cases. In Japan, when child abuse crosses into criminal prosecution, around 72% of offenders are “father figures” — and within that group, over a third are stepfathers, adoptive fathers, or the mother’s live-in boyfriend. Given that stepfamilies make up only around 7% of marriages in Japan, that share is not small. Child welfare data tells a similar story, case after case — sustained beatings, torture, sexual abuse, disposal of bodies. It is not that stepfathers are monsters. Most are not. It is that a country that treats family as a private black box — where divorce still carries stigma, where mothers are often financially cornered into remarrying, where schools and neighbors are trained not to intrude — systematically fails to see the children inside those homes until it is far too late. Yuki’s mother handed out flyers next to the man who now says he killed her son. Japan just began allowing joint custody this month, after decades of delay. But the harder reforms — mandatory home visits, real authority for child welfare workers, serious screening around non-biological caregivers — are still stuck. This is not an abstract policy argument. It is the difference between an 11-year-old going to school next week, and an 11-year-old becoming a headline. Rest in peace, Yuki.
NyanChuu🔮🇯🇵🍭 tweet media
English
318
3.9K
30.6K
2.2M
AL retweetledi
Juliet🧚🏻‍♀️
Juliet🧚🏻‍♀️@Little_darlinn·
A day in life without inventions by women
English
263
6K
26.8K
369.9K
AL
AL@AL08849417·
@LukeminoO I am curious on stadium
English
0
0
0
46
Lukemino
Lukemino@LukeminoO·
2026 Season 2 Overwatch ranked tier list
Lukemino tweet media
English
150
413
7.4K
1.4M