FOUR Corduroy Kids

15.6K posts

FOUR Corduroy Kids banner
FOUR Corduroy Kids

FOUR Corduroy Kids

@Michell81918935

Sonic Universe!

Tahoe City CA Katılım Ocak 2022
221 Takip Edilen293 Takipçiler
FOUR Corduroy Kids
FOUR Corduroy Kids@Michell81918935·
Goodnight🌙 All is good....See ya tomorrow!
FOUR Corduroy Kids tweet media
English
0
1
2
15
FOUR Corduroy Kids
FOUR Corduroy Kids@Michell81918935·
Afternoon Saturday 😋 Sorry for our absence...Maaa got a splinter in her finger. Had to go to sports clinic near our house to have taken out. Be back soon.
GIF
English
1
0
3
66
WATCHER of the DAMNED
WATCHER of the DAMNED@WatcherDamned·
TONIGHT's WRITING VIBE: MUSIC: Mussorgsky's "Night on Bald Mountain" FASHION: Crushed Velvet and Black Roses SNACK: Chile Limon Chicharrones and Lime SparkeWater ...WATCHER's in a bad mood, some dude's finna die
WATCHER of the DAMNED tweet media
English
4
3
24
294
Seido verywell🇨🇦
Seido verywell🇨🇦@VerywellSeido·
February 23rd Today's lunch at home Cobs bread and hot coffee 🥐☕ So good 💯 We love Cobs bread 🇨🇦😋🐻🧸👍 #CobsBread
Seido verywell🇨🇦 tweet mediaSeido verywell🇨🇦 tweet mediaSeido verywell🇨🇦 tweet media
English
3
2
20
159
Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
On February 28, 2026, the evening sky will stage a breathtaking planetary parade—a rare alignment of six planets: Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. This cosmic gathering, stretching across the horizon shortly after sunset, offers a fleeting glimpse into the grand architecture of our solar system.Picture this: As twilight deepens, brilliant Venus and Jupiter shine like beacons—the easiest to spot with the naked eye—while Mercury and Saturn join them under clear, dark conditions. Uranus and Neptune, fainter and more elusive, reward those with binoculars or a small telescope, completing the lineup along the ecliptic.It's not a perfect straight line etched in the heavens, but from our vantage point on Earth, these worlds appear to march in quiet harmony, a reminder of the shared orbital dance around the Sun.This isn't a once-in-a-lifetime spectacle in the strictest sense—multi-planet alignments occur periodically—but the convenience of so many visible in one evening view, especially with four naked-eye standouts, makes it genuinely special. NASA and astronomers have flagged it as a highlight of the year, urging skywatchers to step outside in late February.In a world that spins relentlessly forward, these moments invite pause. No tickets required, no schedule to book—just you, a clear view of the western to southern sky, and perhaps a blanket against the chill. Look up as the last light fades, trace the glowing dots, and feel the quiet awe of being part of something vastly larger.The universe doesn't shout its wonders; it simply hangs them there, patient and profound, waiting for anyone willing to notice. On February 28, it offers exactly that: a silent, shimmering invitation to wonder, to feel small in the best possible way, and to remember how extraordinary it is to exist beneath such a sky. Don't let the moment slip by unnoticed—go chase the planets.
Black Hole tweet media
English
12
177
552
18.9K
Black Hole
Black Hole@konstructivizm·
Albert Einstein's life advice in a letter to his son, Eduard: “Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving.”
Black Hole tweet media
English
9
11
68
3.9K
Ruth
Ruth@RuthSagan1·
Back to reading devotional sweet dreams 😴
Ruth tweet media
English
3
2
10
78