@td_nash Well if you look at Kurt Warner is passing numbers in Super Bowls… he owns the three top passing yardage records of Super Bowls… that’s pretty freaking impressive
25 Carolina Reapers with no cuts 🤯 the aftermath looks painful 😖 I can see the pain in your eyes Spice Jesus 😳 I’ve eaten a reaper before and it’s so painful once it hits your intestines, drink plenty of milk 🥛
That is something I have been struggling with the last few weeks with information online. I don’t really interact with people so I don’t have to worry about what’s real in the real world cause I don’t engage too much with too many people but a lot of my time is trying to figure out what is real and what isn’t online because there’s a real sense of a lot of information lately has been manipulated.
First, we should ask ourselves what “real” truly means.
Sometimes a dream lived with intensity can feel more real than reality itself.
Perhaps everything depends on the point of view from which we observe the world… and on how deeply we feel it within us.
Don’t you think? ✨🌙
@Kimberl75663012@Kekius_Sage The only thing? Really? I guess you’re not really interested in having an intelligent discussion about this. Glad you love God. I hope you thank him every day for every good thing in your life and for his grace mercy and forgiveness.
Jay-Z says "I would die" if he settled last year's sexual assault lawsuit: "I can’t take a settlement — it ain’t in my DNA."
"It was hard. Really hard. I was heartbroken. Like I was really heartbroken by everything that occurred," the rapper told GQ. "We’re in a space now where it’s almost like consequence is not thought about enough. Because everything is so instant, you know what I’m saying? That whole [lawsuit thing], that shit took a lot out of me. I was angry. I haven’t been that angry in a long time, uncontrollable anger. You don’t put that on someone—that’s a thing that you better be super sure. It used to be like that. You had to be super sure before you put those kind of things on a person. Especially a person like me. Even when we were doing the worst things, we had those kind of rules. There was a line: no women, no kids. You hear those sayings, but those are the things that I took from the street. We lived and died by that. So it’s strict for me, like it meant a lot to me."
variety.com/2026/music/new…
Jim Carrey on the difference between acquiring things and actually being happy:
For the first half of your life, Carrey says, you spend your time adding and acquiring. A cool car. Nice clothes. Accomplishments that make people admire you.
"It looks great. I mean, it looks great when you've got a cool car and you've got nice clothes and you've done something that people admire. But it can never fulfill you. You can never be happy."
He knows this personally. He dealt with depression. And he noticed something: people still look at him and assume he must be depressed. He corrects that assumption directly:
"It's not. I have no depression in my life whatsoever. Literally none."
What he has instead is something different. Not the absence of feeling, but feeling without weight:
"I have sadness and joy and elation and satisfaction and gratitude beyond belief. But all of it is weather. It just spins around the planet. It doesn't sit on me long enough to kill."
That distinction between having emotions and being crushed by them is the whole point.
The ego's program is to accumulate. More things, more status, more admiration. And it looks like it's working, right up until it doesn't. What Carrey found on the other side of that pursuit isn't numbness. It's presence. Emotions move through him without claiming him.
Most people spend the first half of their lives adding. Very few ever learn to stop letting what they've added define them.