Grundel Buster
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@EndWokeness This is one I will happily take the blame for.
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Huge win for states rights and MAHA!
The special provisions for pesticides (and herbicides like glyphosate) was just stripped from the farm bill by an overwhelming majority!
Republican Cloakroom@RepCloakroom
The Rep. Luna (R-FL) Amendment No. 28 Adopted - 280 Yeas, 142 Nays
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Your brain is wired to quit at the exact moment you're about to break through.
Most people think they quit because they lack discipline or motivation. They blame their willpower. They assume successful people have some genetic advantage or superior mental toughness.
The real reason runs much deeper.
Neuroscientists at UC San Diego studied brain scans of people learning complex motor skills over several months. They discovered something counterintuitive: during the weeks when learners felt most frustrated and considered quitting, their brains were undergoing the most dramatic structural changes. New neural pathways were forming at accelerated rates. Myelin sheathing around neurons was thickening rapidly. The very period that felt like stagnation was actually when the most profound rewiring was happening.
The participants had no conscious awareness of this transformation. Subjectively, they felt stuck. Objectively, their brains were rebuilding themselves.
Your nervous system interprets sustained incompetence as a survival threat. When you attempt something new and fail repeatedly, ancient circuits fire that once kept your ancestors alive by making them avoid dangerous situations. The same neural pathways that prevented early humans from repeatedly approaching predators now prevent modern humans from repeatedly approaching challenges.
Competence feels safe. Incompetence feels like death.
Every time you miss the shot, fumble the presentation, or write garbage, your amygdala sends distress signals. Your brain floods with cortisol. Your body creates the same physiological experience it would create if you were being chased by something that wanted to kill you. After days or weeks of this neurochemical assault, quitting feels like escape from genuine danger.
But what the UC San Diego researchers revealed changes everything about how we should interpret that discomfort. The biochemical chaos you feel during extended periods of failure is actually evidence that deep learning is occurring. Your brain consumes massive amounts of energy to build new neural architecture. The exhaustion, frustration, and sense of being overwhelmed are byproducts of construction, not signs of inadequacy.
People who master difficult skills have accidentally discovered something profound: they've learned to interpret the discomfort of incompetence as evidence they're in exactly the right place. They've trained themselves to recognize the specific feeling of neural restructuring and chase it instead of avoiding it.
The shift is so subtle most people never notice it happening. But once it clicks, the entire relationship with difficulty inverts.
Watch someone who genuinely enjoys the learning process. They don't celebrate successes the way normal people do. They celebrate failures that teach them something. They get excited by obstacles that reveal gaps in their understanding. They treat confusion as information, not as evidence they should quit.
They've rewired their internal reward system to crave precisely the experiences most people avoid.
What makes this psychological rewiring possible is understanding that competence emerges from chaos, not from clarity. Your first attempts will be embarrassingly bad because your brain is literally constructing the neural infrastructure required for skill. The timeline for moving from "terrible" to "decent" is always longer than you expect because biological change operates on its own schedule.
Most people never reach competence because they interpret the gap between where they are and where they want to be as evidence they're not cut out for it. They quit during the exact window when their brain is doing the rewiring that would eventually make them good.
The secret is learning to love that window. The period that feels like failure is actually the period when your brain is working hardest on your behalf. The discomfort you're avoiding is the discomfort of becoming someone new.

DAN KOE@thedankoe
Most people quit because they forget that you have to be bad at something before you can be good at it. It's so obvious. You suck. Of course you're not going to win in 2 weeks. But if you can learn to enjoy extended periods of failure, you will make it very, very far in life.
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I've been trying to tell everyone Women look better 15-30 lbs overweight than 15-30 lbs under weight.
Retard Finder@IfindRetards
What the hell is going on in Hollywood at the moment?
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There is no way you are prepared for this video. Sound ALL the way up.
Braxton McCoy@braxton_mccoy
Tarzan'd him. Dang.
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Rick Rubin has low heart rate variability.
So he looked up everything that raises it, picked one technique, and started doing it every day.
It worked.
The technique: coherence breathing. 10 to 20 minutes a day, at least once, sometimes twice.
Now he and @hubermanlab do it together on camera so you can follow along:
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The rise of white supremacy was a media generated narrative. This is observable:

The Drunk Republican@DrunkRepub
The left quickly realized that if the boogeyman of white supremacy disappeared, so did their power. So they literally funded it. If I had to guess there are plenty more boogeymen where that came from.
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🚨Ron Johnson drops the HAMMER at RFK's Senate Hearing:
“They HID the myocarditis signal…
They HID the stroke signal…
They MASKED adverse events in VAERS.”
“There are a BUNCH of people involved in this COVER-UP who still work within HHS, CDC, and FDA.”
Subpoenas are coming.
@SenRonJohnson
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He literally explained how to get unstuck in 30 seconds
by@beyoumf
who saved you at your lowest?
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Those Wayne's World dudes got really preachy.
ForAmerica@ForAmerica
Man, that’s crazy. No wonder the Mets keep losing.
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🚨 Here is 10 minutes of me confronting the California politicians who authored the "Stop Nick Shirley Act"...
When confronted about AB 2624:
- Lied about authoring the bill
- Couldn't justify the bill
- Acted like they didn't know about the bill
This bill will CRIMINALIZE exposing fraud, violates the 1st Amendment, protects NGOs from disclosing taxpayer dollars, and these politicians see no problem with it. The fraud is now exposed and they need new laws to hide it.
EXPOSE ALL THE FRAUD.
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