M e l . J

11.1K posts

M e l . J banner
M e l . J

M e l . J

@MjG8484

London, England Katılım Haziran 2012
4K Takip Edilen603 Takipçiler
M e l . J retweetledi
Jon Trickett MP
Jon Trickett MP@jon_trickett·
Unacceptable: Wealth of Britain’s 157 billionaires now equal to 22% of country’s GDP (guardian)
English
1
6
25
412
M e l . J retweetledi
Save Our Lands and River
Save Our Lands and River@savehamlands·
This is what we’re fighting for 💙 London’s first official river bathing water site deserves protection – not more sewage infrastructure on its doorstep. Please support our campaign to Stop the Thames Sewage Pump and sign the petition via the link below.
English
1
15
25
413
M e l . J
M e l . J@MjG8484·
@tessera_puzzle Access to previous days puzzles please IMHO no need for apps when it works well in existing browsers
English
0
0
0
5
Tessera Daily Puzzle
Tessera Daily Puzzle@tessera_puzzle·
A few ideas from our community for the roadmap: 📱 iOS and Android app ⚡️ Log-in for cross-device streaks 🏆 Daily Leaderboard 📆 (Fixed) daily reminders ⏱️ Timer What do you think we should release next?
English
3
1
3
64
Sammy
Sammy@sammy_rufared·
@b8eak What time did the Pubs shut ? Is it different now ? When we were in UK the one time I looked it was midnight but maybe just for that place ? Maybe not remembering correctly?
English
2
0
2
124
Lottie Woad
Lottie Woad@LottieWoad·
Win number 2 on the @LPGA was extra sweet! 🍬 Thank you to everyone who came out this week!!
Lottie Woad tweet media
English
73
48
1K
37.3K
M e l . J retweetledi
Andrew Weinstein
Andrew Weinstein@Weinsteinlaw·
If you logged on today just to point out that Paul McCartney doesn’t sing like he did decades ago, maybe take a moment to rethink how you’re spending your energy. The man is nearly 84, a living Beatle, and still out there bringing joy to millions. That alone is worth celebrating.
English
495
1.5K
19K
493.2K
M e l . J retweetledi
Led By Donkeys
Led By Donkeys@ByDonkeys·
Immigration makes Britain brilliant.
English
3.8K
16.1K
107.3K
3.8M
M e l . J retweetledi
Save Our Lands and River
Save Our Lands and River@savehamlands·
London’s first official Thames swimming spot has now received Bathing Water Status 💧🏊 So why are there still plans for a sewage pump right next to it? Protect our rivers. Protect our waterways. Sign the petition.
Save Our Lands and River tweet media
English
1
10
17
836
M e l . J retweetledi
Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
*IMPORTANT* Please read & share, it could save you or a loved one from a lifetime of chronic system-wide illness. 🙏❤️ Today I was diagnosed with Lyme Disease.😔 I was bitten by 4 ticks 30 days ago & had a red rash come up around one of the bites, that soon started spreading. As there was no 'bullseye', I didn't think it was Lyme, I assumed it was just a reaction, especially as the rash wasn't painful or itchy..(see photo) It WAS Lyme! Any rash around a tick bite is diagnostic. I didn't know this. 😕 I was bitten at Shapwick Heath on the Somerset Levels. I've since learnt some areas of the UK have a higher risk of Lyme, and the Somerset Levels is one of them. If you go out in the countryside, take care... stick to paths and try to avoid brushing up against vegetation, that's how the ticks get on you. Always check yourself over for ticks when you get home. The longer a tick is attached to you, the higher the chance of infection. If you find a tick, don't panic, remove it carefully with a tick removal tool or tweezers, being careful not to squeeze the tick. Keep an eye on the bite for the next month... if a rash starts to develop at the site of the bite in that time, go to your doctor ASAP! Explain that you were bitten by the tick, and have now developed a rash at the site... they will prescribe antibiotics, usually Doxycycline, for at least 3 weeks. You may be asked to have a blood test too, but these aren't reliable in the early stages of Lyme, insist on starting the antibiotics immediately. Sometimes, you don't even get a rash. In these cases, if you get flu-like symptoms in the 30 days after a tick bite, go and see a doctor, it's probably Lyme Disease and you'll need antibiotics. Many people with debilitating advanced Lyme Disease didn't see the signs, or they just ignored them. Lyme Disease is usually curable in the early stages, but can become a chronic lifelong illness affecting every system in your body, if left untreated! 😔 I'm not posting this to scare anybody, but because I was ignorant to the rash, and if it hadn't been for my youngest daughter badgering me to get it checked out, I'd not be sat here taking antibiotics for Lyme Disease... I wouldn't even know I had it, and many of the later symptoms are confused with other illnesses! A case in point is the fabulous musician @Renmakesmusic, who was only diagnosed with Lyme Disease 6 years after being infected! 😯 He really suffered in those years, spending much of it in bed, too ill to get up, but not having a clue what he was suffering with. I'm obviously no medical expert, all I've written here has come from my own research & experience, so in case there are some inaccuracies, learn more from @UKLyme 🙏 However, you get the picture... if this post prevents just one person getting advanced Lyme Disease, I'd be delighted! Prevention is better than cure, so please be careful out there! Don't be ignorant to the dangers of ticks, rashes and Lyme Disease.. don't be like me! 🙏❤️
Carl Bovis tweet mediaCarl Bovis tweet media
English
282
1.5K
3.2K
168.1K
M e l . J retweetledi
Trussell
Trussell@TrussellUK·
🚨 BREAKING: half of people in the UK have lost access to community spaces - with families in the most deprived areas losing them fastest. Parks, libraries, leisure centres are essential for our mental and physical health. We all need places to connect. Especially when life is tough.
English
12
414
767
16K
M e l . J retweetledi
stellacreasy
stellacreasy@stellacreasy·
The theft of copper cables from Maynard Path put a surge of electricity into 300 properties- blowing up fridges, tvs, boilers,medical equipment and plunging everyone into darkness. Help us catch those responsible by sharing this to find witnesses. UK Power Networks on site all weekend to help and email me or Steph Talbut your local councillor with any issues for help.
English
6
54
107
7.9K
Carl Bovis
Carl Bovis@CarlBovisNature·
I was just looking for some chocolate WITHOUT palm oil in, in my local Tesco... I couldn't find any! Cadbury, Nestle etc etc all contained bloody palm oil! 😒 Anyone have an idea of chocolate brands that don't use palm oil? 🤔 🍫
English
1.2K
340
3K
407.8K
M e l . J retweetledi
Carole Cadwalladr
Carole Cadwalladr@carolecadwalla·
So listen. @thenerve_news has the receipts. A comprehensive timeline of Nathan Gill & Nigel Farage’s pro-Kremlin influencing activities & 2 other MEPs, David Cobourn & Jonathan Arnott. Please read & share.
Carole Cadwalladr tweet media
THE NERVE@thenerve_news

NEW There's no overstating how significant the Nathan Gill case is. On Friday, the ex-Ukip/Reform politician and close associate of Nigel Farage was jailed for over ten years for taking multiple bribes via a handler from a friend of Putin. It's a complex, detail-heavy story..🧵⬇️

English
174
7.4K
10K
470K
Helen Day
Helen Day@LBFlyawayhome·
I had to buy this when I saw it. Do you remember this game? My brother and I played it all the time. It was brutal
Helen Day tweet media
English
116
79
1.4K
27.9K
M e l . J retweetledi
BBC London
BBC London@BBCLondonNews·
The app's creator says it's for "everyone who wants to feel more confident when they walk around" ➡️ bbc.in/4ucER7K
BBC London tweet media
English
6
4
12
4.4K
M e l . J
M e l . J@MjG8484·
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005

To get a license to drive a black cab in London, you have to memorize 25,000 streets, 20,000 landmarks, and the fastest route between any two points in a six-mile radius of Charing Cross. It takes most people three to four years. A British neuroscientist asked the obvious question nobody had thought to ask. What does that actually do to a human brain? Her name was Eleanor Maguire. The study changed neuroscience forever. The exam is called The Knowledge. It was introduced in 1865, and the format has barely changed since. Applicants ride a moped around London for years with a clipboard strapped to the handlebars, tracing every possible route between every possible pair of points in the city. They get tested in person by an examiner who can ask them, on the spot, for the shortest legal route between any two addresses in a database of tens of thousands. Half the people who attempt it fail. The ones who pass have spent an average of four years studying full time and have taken the test 12 times before getting through. Maguire was watching a TV movie about it in 1995 when she had the idea. These were not ordinary people. They were people running one of the most extreme spatial memory training programs that exists anywhere on Earth. If the human brain could be reshaped by experience, this was the cleanest natural experiment anyone was ever going to find. She put 16 of them in an MRI machine. Their posterior hippocampi were significantly larger than the brains of matched controls. The longer a driver had been working, the bigger the difference got. A 40-year veteran had a measurably more developed hippocampus than a 5-year veteran, and both had more than someone who had never driven a cab. Here is why that finding broke a century of consensus. Until 2000, every neuroscience textbook in the world taught a version of the same idea. The adult brain is essentially fixed. You are born with a set number of neurons. Childhood is the window where the wiring gets laid down. After puberty, the structure freezes, and the rest of your life is just slow decline. Maguire's study was one of the first pieces of human evidence that this was simply wrong. Adult brains physically remodel themselves in response to what you ask them to do. Not metaphorically. Structurally. With grey matter you can measure on a scan. The skeptics had an obvious objection. Maybe people with bigger hippocampi were just more likely to become taxi drivers in the first place. The brains were not changing. The job was selecting for brains that already looked that way. So Maguire ran the experiment again. Properly this time. She recruited 79 trainees who were just starting to study for The Knowledge and 31 controls who were not. She scanned all of them at the start. Then she waited four years. Of the 79 trainees, 39 eventually passed the exam and 20 failed. She scanned them again. The trainees who passed had grown larger posterior hippocampi over those four years. The trainees who failed had not. The controls who never studied had not. The brain change was not selection. It was construction. The act of memorizing the city had physically rebuilt the part of the brain responsible for spatial memory, and the rebuild only happened in the people who actually did the work. There is a quieter finding from this research that almost nobody quotes, and it is the one I cannot stop thinking about. The drivers had a bigger posterior hippocampus, but they had a smaller anterior hippocampus. The brain had not magically expanded. It had reallocated. Tissue that was being used for one type of memory had been compressed to make room for another. When Maguire ran follow-up cognitive tests, the cabbies were measurably worse than controls at certain visual memory tasks unrelated to navigation. They had paid for The Knowledge with something else. The trade was real. She also ran a second control experiment that is the part of the story most people never hear. She scanned London bus drivers. Same hours behind the wheel. Same city. Same traffic. Same stress. The only difference was that bus drivers follow fixed routes. They do not have to navigate. Their hippocampi looked completely normal. The cab drivers had not grown bigger hippocampi from driving. They had grown them from the constant, active, effortful retrieval of spatial information from memory. That distinction is the entire study. Then in 2020, McGill researchers ran the inverse experiment. They tracked 50 regular drivers and measured how often they used GPS. The participants who relied most heavily on turn-by-turn navigation had measurably weaker spatial memory. When the researchers retested a subset of them three years later, the heavier GPS users had declined fastest. The hippocampus, the same region the cabbies had built up by ignoring shortcuts, was being slowly hollowed out in everyone else by accepting them. The mechanism Maguire spent 25 years documenting works in both directions. Brains grow what you make them grow. They lose what you stop asking them to do. The taxi drivers were running the most intense spatial memory training program on Earth. Most of the rest of us are running the opposite program without realizing it. Maguire died in early 2025. UCL's tribute described the cabbie study as a stroke of creative genius. She had spent her entire career on a single question. What does it physically take to remember something, and what changes inside a person who remembers a lot of it. The answer is the part that should change how you live.

QME
0
0
0
12