GT§uttons

19.8K posts

GT§uttons banner
GT§uttons

GT§uttons

@gtsuttons

✝️🙏👫 🏥✈️🚀🎯 🐶x3 2A preserves 1A! 🇺🇲 Go Jackets!!! 🐝🐝🐝 4🏆 Supporting the warfighter!

Le quatrième état 🥭 Katılım Kasım 2022
2.2K Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
GT§uttons
GT§uttons@gtsuttons·
@ThrillaRilla369 You know, in old books, there qas a 1st sleep and 2nd sleep. People would wake up in the middle of the night after going to bed at 7. They would do house chores, read, pray, fool around, etc. then go back to bed fpr a few hours. Modern times ended that lifestyle.
English
161
388
15.1K
587.7K
GT§uttons retweetledi
Janelle Bolen
Janelle Bolen@jtink86·
💀😅
Janelle Bolen tweet media
QME
0
0
2
159
Sturdy Jenn
Sturdy Jenn@nogooddeed2·
I have a 2022 Honda Pilot. Couple of months ago, a rock cracked my windshield. I just had it replaced. I thought there was an error when my insurance notified me they made a payment of $881.74 to Safelite. I had already paid the deductible, and the quote for repair was just over $1100. I called to inquire to make sure there wasn’t a mistake. Well, it turns out that Safelite only quote the parts to me. They have a contract with my insurance company. The true cost to replace and recalibrate the sensors was almost $1900. Now, I want to return to vinyl floors and crank windows. Fuuuuuuck all the new technology. I turn it all off anyway.
English
33
6
217
4.5K
GT§uttons
GT§uttons@gtsuttons·
1789 Bastille Day events may re-occur tonight. Ooof
English
1
0
1
36
M2
M2@Amer1can_Barbie·
Good morning 😃
M2 tweet media
English
39
106
1.3K
12.1K
Peggi
Peggi@PeggiBosquez·
@mmbrowning17 I only had 1 peach on my trees at home. I had to buy them. It was supporting a local church so it is a win win.
English
2
0
5
131
Peggi
Peggi@PeggiBosquez·
Good morning from Southeast Georgia. This is the down side to having feral chickens. I am pretty sure that it was an owl. Found in my fenced in backyard and my dogs did not alert. For some reason whiter chickens seem to be picked off more often than the black or gray ones. Today is grooming day for Rhea, so we are going to the Island. I still have more peaches to can as well. Have not heard back from our power company. 😆 Do puppies go through sleep regression periods like babies? Pip was awful last night. Son's last day in the Coast Guard is Thursday. Then they are driving home to start civilian life. I will be handing Pip off to them. I am going to enjoy being the grandma to the puppy! 🤣 🤣 I hope everyone has a fantastic day!
Peggi tweet media
English
50
16
348
3.2K
GT§uttons retweetledi
Taylor D. Rhodes
Taylor D. Rhodes@TaylorDRhodes2A·
Every genocide of the 20th century was preceded by weapon registration and confiscation. This is not a slogan. It is a documented sequence: Armenia, Germany, China, Cambodia, Rwanda. Registration precedes confiscation. Confiscation precedes worse.
Taylor D. Rhodes tweet media
English
21
214
1.2K
133.5K
Ginger
Ginger@HandyGingerGal·
FB memory reminding me of this insanity. Remember when they did this to seeds?
Ginger tweet media
English
48
36
357
19.9K
Just T.J. the Army Vet
Just T.J. the Army Vet@thomas_garrard·
How do you know if you have the diarrhea parasite, or if you’re just experiencing a normal Monday? Asking for a friend.
English
142
34
762
12.7K
Alex Farrer
Alex Farrer@AFarrersports·
Georgia Tech finishes up the 2026 MLB Draft with eight total players selected. -Vahn Lackey (Twins, No. 3) -Drew Burress (A's, No. 8) -Jarren Advincula (Angels, No. 45) -Carson Kerce (Diamondbacks, No. 53) -Alex Hernandez (A's, No. 143) -Parker Brosius (Braves, No. 262) -Tate McKee (Rays, No. 293) -Porter Buursema (Marlins, No. 475)
English
4
9
124
15.8K
ConservativeCarolinaGirl
ConservativeCarolinaGirl@RightGoDeacs·
My BFF just reminded me of the way we used to measure wealth growing up in our 2 stoplight town…by whether or not a family had an upstairs. 🤣 Anybody else? When your town doesn’t have much, an upstairs is a lot.😆
English
64
2
196
3.7K
Oilfield Rando
Oilfield Rando@Oilfield_Rando·
The great thing about learning a trade is that it doesn’t have to end there. You can go on to become an engineer, and pay for your own education. And you’ll be a far better engineer than your peers.
Margo@MargoinWNC

The U. S. needs 400,000 welders and electricians. A good welder or electrician can make six figures, easily-if they WORK. Tell your children and grandchildren. There are careers out there that don't require being indoctrinated in a university.

English
54
73
1.2K
35.3K
Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
MUST WATCH: Investigation by @AccuracyInMedia reveals that MULTIPLE cities in Georgia COVERTLY pushing DEI initiatives despite Trump's EO banning it. Athens-Clarke County Official: "DEI is under a lot of scrutiny right now... and so how do we reframe that?" Decatur, GA, Official: "We kinda set the standard of what we want to do (relating to DEI)." Any city pushing DEI needs to be investigated and defunded
English
132
1.8K
5.5K
227.8K
Owen Gregorian
Owen Gregorian@OwenGregorian·
Leg day at the gym? Sniffing CHOCOLATE before your workout could make it easier, study claims | Xantha Leatham, Daily Mail Forget pre–workout shakes – all you might need to smash your next gym session is a whiff of chocolate. Scientists have discovered that simply smelling dark chocolate before lifting weights can help people squeeze out significantly more repetitions without making the workout feel any harder. In the study, volunteers who sniffed dark chocolate before tackling leg extensions completed around 18 extra repetitions than those who smelled nothing at all. Researchers believe the aroma tricks the brain into feeling fuller, allowing people to focus more on exercise and less on hunger. The effect was so pronounced that even milk chocolate provided a performance boost, although not as much as its darker counterpart. Experts say the findings highlight the surprising power of smell to influence both body and mind. Senior author Dr Mohamed Nashrudin bin Naharudin, from the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur, said: 'Exposing moderately trained men to chocolate odours right before and between sets of resistance exercise significantly increased their overall training volume without increasing their perceived exertion. 'Seeing a substantial increase in repetitions without the athletes feeling like they were exerting themselves any harder is a fascinating psychobiological outcome.' For their study, published in the journal Frontiers in Physiology, the researchers recruited 23 healthy men in their early to mid–20s and divided them into three groups. Each group sniffed one of three odour samples – liquified dark chocolate containing 90 per cent cocoa, liquified milk chocolate containing 60 per cent cocoa, or a water sample that acted as a control for the study. None of the gym–goers had eaten for the previous 10 hours. For the research, they all performed leg extensions – which involves sitting down and extending the lower legs to lift a weight – in sets of 10 with 3.5 minute rest intervals. 'Sniffing a 90 per cent dark chocolate odour added about 18 more repetitions to participants' leg extensions,' Dr Nashrudin bin Naharudin said. 'A 60 per cent milk chocolate odour added about nine repetitions compared to the water control.' Levels of hunger, fullness, desire to eat, and plans to eat in the near future were assessed before the study and 30 seconds after the odour sample had been sniffed. Overall, sniffing dark chocolate consistently led to people reporting less hunger, reduced desire and intention to eat and greater fullness before exercise. Across both types of chocolate, people also did not feel as though they were training harder but managed more exercise repetitions. The researchers suggested the changes in appetite perception could be related to what people learn about smells from a young age. Anticipating a food might have similar effects to when it is actually eaten, they suggested. 'The dark chocolate scent serves as a learned cue for a rich, bitter and highly satiating food, which essentially tricks the system into an anticipatory state of fullness,' Dr Nashrudin bin Naharudin added. 'Conversely, the sweeter milk chocolate scent acts more like a hedonic reward cue, enhancing training volume by creating a highly pleasant sensory environment rather than by shifting basic metabolic hunger signals.' Although it has not been tested yet, other appealing foods could also have an effect, the team believes. 'We don't think chocolate is entirely unique, though it is a food cue with incredibly strong, universally recognized reward associations,' Dr Nashrudin bin Naharudin concluded. 'Although this hasn't been tested yet, other foods strongly linked to satiety could show similar effects. A person likely needs to find the odour familiar and appealing – or at least not repulsive – to trigger the psychological shift in appetite that's needed to see a performance boost.' Last month, scientists finally put an end to the 'cupboard or fridge' chocolate debate. According to Professor Charles Spence, Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford, chocolate tastes better from the fridge. Chilling chocolate not only boosts its flavour but also its texture, according to the expert. 'We like foods when they make some noise. One of the benefits of putting chocolate in the fridge is that you get a better snap when you break a fridge–cold bar,' he explained. dailymail.com/sciencetech/ar…
Owen Gregorian tweet mediaOwen Gregorian tweet media
English
10
5
34
4.5K