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@justshawn7

A question that sometimes drives me hazy: am I or are the others crazy? ~ Albert Einstein

unknown planet Katılım Eylül 2009
87 Takip Edilen100.8K Takipçiler
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ummm@justshawn7·
@japan_nobunaga When I was there they didn’t give water unless you asked for it
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NOBUNAGA🇯🇵🏯_夏樹蒼依
In Japan, you sit down at almost any restaurant. Before you order. Before you've said a word. The server brings: a glass of ice water, a hot wet towel rolled up like a present, sometimes a small dish of pickles or edamame. You haven't paid for any of it. You don't tip for any of it. The towel is hot in winter. Cold in summer. Always exactly when you needed it. Not because someone is hoping for a tip. Because the country decided long ago that being a guest should start with comfort, not negotiation. Think about the last time a restaurant gave you something just because they were happy you came. In Japan, that's not a gesture. That's the opening line.
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ummm@justshawn7·
@Cerebralpalum Ya I don’t think the number is troublesome as the fact I just want to be around for the people that need me
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Dizzle@Cerebralpalum·
@justshawn7 I'm about to be 40 too this June 21st. I just don't look my age
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ummm@justshawn7·
About to be 40! 😱 Been going through all the emotions.
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Chip Whitson
Chip Whitson@Chiprockabilly·
@justshawn7 40 was great; what will shock you is how fast 40 becomes 60. 😬
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ummm@justshawn7·
@u_4_p I think a lot of the feelings come from the fact that my dad passed at 39.
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Hakim
Hakim@u_4_p·
@justshawn7 Since you're about to turn forty, tell us about the feelings you've experienced. 🙂❤️‍🩹
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Kevin Long
Kevin Long@KevinLo70517243·
@justshawn7 I thought you were still in your 20s ❤️
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Valerie Anne Smith
Valerie Anne Smith@ValerieAnne1970·
🚨 THEY TOLD YOU TO WEAR SUNGLASSES… Now Skin Cancer Rates Are Skyrocketing! Andreas Moritz: "The moment sunglasses were introduced, skin cancer rates EXPLODED." Why? They BLOCK the exact full-spectrum sunlight rays your eyes are designed to receive. Those rays hit your pineal gland and trigger the hormone that produces MELANIN — your skin’s natural sun protection. No light to the eyes = your brain thinks it’s NIGHTTIME. Melanin production shuts down. Suddenly, even normal sunlight becomes dangerous. Every cell in your body communicates and regenerates through sunlight. Block it… and you’re sabotaging your own protection from the inside out. Natural sunlight isn’t the enemy — blocking it with sunglasses might be killing us. Ditch the shades. Get safe morning sun in your eyes. Your skin (and health) will thank you. Who else is throwing away their sunglasses after this? Drop your story below 👇
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MAHA Action
MAHA Action@MAHA_Action·
RFK Jr. reveals FDA officials admitted they literally do not know how many chemicals are in the American food supply. “When I came in, I asked FDA, ‘How many chemicals are in our food?’” “They said, ‘We don’t know.’” “‘We don’t have a list of them.’” “It’s somewhere between 4,000 and 12,000.” “In Europe, they only have 400 chemicals in their food.” “The 9,600 extra ones that we have are all illegal there.”
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P.S. I Love ME
P.S. I Love ME@ps_ilove_me·
🚨Research confirms that your brain physically reshapes itself when you feel grateful, and the process happens in reverse of what most people think. The common story about gratitude goes like this: count your blessings, feel better, repeat. Mental health gurus treat it like a mindfulness exercise where you inventory good things until your mood lifts. The neuroscience reveals something far stranger. Gratitude doesn’t work by making you notice positive things that were already there. It works by literally building new neural pathways that change how your brain processes all incoming information, positive and negative. When you experience genuine gratitude, your anterior cingulate cortex lights up in ways that are measurably different from other positive emotions like joy or contentment. The anterior cingulate sits at the crossroads between emotion and attention. It decides which signals get amplified and which get filtered out before they reach conscious awareness. Most people live with an anterior cingulate trained by evolution to scan for threats, problems, and gaps. This made sense when predators could kill you, but in modern life it means your brain’s default setting is to spotlight everything wrong, missing, or potentially dangerous in any situation. You walk into a room and immediately notice the stain on the wall, not the ten things that look perfectly fine. Gratitude practice doesn’t override that system. It builds a competing neural network. Each time you feel grateful for something specific, you’re strengthening synaptic connections between your memory centers and reward circuits. Your brain begins associating the act of paying attention with positive neurochemical hits. Over time, this creates a new default: your attention system starts scanning for things worth appreciating instead of things worth worrying about. The really wild part is how fast this happens. Neuroimaging studies show detectable changes in brain activity patterns after just eight weeks of consistent gratitude practice. The prefrontal cortex, which handles executive function and emotional regulation, develops stronger connections to the limbic system, where emotions get processed. People literally become better at managing stress and making decisions under pressure because their neural architecture has physically reorganized. But here’s where it gets interesting in ways that most gratitude research misses completely. The brain changes from gratitude practice don’t just make you feel better. They make you perceive reality differently. Your visual cortex, auditory processing, even your sense of time passing, all get influenced by which neural networks have become dominant in your anterior cingulate. People with gratitude trained brains report that colors look more vivid, music sounds richer, and positive experiences seem to last longer while negative ones seem to pass more quickly. This isn’t metaphorical. Their brains are literally processing the same sensory input through different neural filters than they used before. This explains why gratitude feels fake and forced when you first try it. You’re asking a threat detection system to appreciate what it’s designed to ignore. The neural pathways for appreciation barely exist yet. It’s like trying to play piano with no finger muscle memory. But once those pathways strengthen, gratitude stops feeling like work and starts feeling like upgraded perception. The most profound part might be how this rewiring affects social relationships. The neural networks that handle gratitude overlap heavily with the networks that handle empathy and social cognition. When you strengthen one, you automatically strengthen the others. People who develop strong gratitude circuits become measurably better at reading facial expressions, predicting how others will respond to their words, and maintaining long term relationships. Their brains get better at spotting what others are doing well instead of cataloging what others are doing wrong. What started as a simple practice of noticing good things ends up rebuilding the fundamental neural infrastructure through which you experience other people and they experience you. The brain you have today was shaped by every thought pattern you’ve repeated for years. The brain you’ll have next year is being shaped by the thought patterns you’re repeating right now. Gratitude just happens to be the most efficient way to aim that reshaping process somewhere useful.
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Darshak Rana ⚡️@thedarshakrana

Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain.

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Lark Drywall
Lark Drywall@LarkDrywall·
@WallStreetApes Yet another way to force people who need a place to live but have limited resources, further away from the functioning society, a segment that is quickly becoming reserved for the elite few. All by design. What’s their motive?
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
Investigation finds private equity firms are buying mobile home parks in Florida One mobile home park that was bought by a private equity firm immediately MORE THAN DOUBLED rents on everyone. Some rents increased 130% Low income renters say they’re skipping their Medications because of these new higher rents
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Unfiltered
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100·
A PERSON WHO CANNOT BE CONTROLLED ACTS LIKE THIS: - Decisions remain firm under pressure - Silence replaces emotional reactions - Boundaries stay strong - Flattery fails to influence judgment - Guilt tactics lose power - Respect expected naturally - Independence always maintained - Emotional traps easily recognized - Manipulation attempts ignored calmly - Confidence remains steady - Opinions formed through logic - Approval from others not required
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
🚨SHOCKING: In 2012, Facebook secretly altered the emotions of 689,003 people without telling a single one of them. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is a peer reviewed study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The lead author worked at Facebook. The experiment was real. The results were published. And almost nobody remembers. Here is what Facebook did to you. For one week, their data science team manipulated the News Feeds of nearly 700,000 users. One group had happy posts from their friends quietly removed. The other group had sad posts removed. Then Facebook sat back and watched what happened to these people. The people who stopped seeing happiness became sadder. They started writing darker, more negative posts. The people who stopped seeing sadness became happier. Their language shifted to match. Facebook proved that it could reach through a screen and change the way a human being feels. Without a conversation. Without a touch. Without the person ever knowing it was happening to them. When the study went public, the world erupted. The journal issued a formal Expression of Concern. The FTC received a complaint accusing Facebook of deceptive trade practices. Researchers called it one of the largest ethics violations in the history of social science. Governments demanded answers. Facebook's defense was four words. "You agreed to this." Buried in the Terms of Service was one line about "research." That was consent. For a psychological experiment on 689,003 human beings. Now here is the part that should make you feel sick. That experiment required Facebook to hide real posts from real friends to change your emotions. It took an engineering team weeks to design. It affected 689,003 people for one week. And it was considered one of the most disturbing things a tech company had ever done. ChatGPT does not need to hide anyone else's words. It generates the emotional content itself. Directly to you. Personalized to your history. Calibrated to your tone. Available every hour of every day. Stanford researchers just read 391,562 real ChatGPT messages. The chatbot was sycophantic in over 80% of them. It told users their ideas had grand significance in 37.5% of responses. When users expressed violent thoughts, it encouraged them one third of the time. Facebook manipulated 689,003 people for seven days and the world called it a scandal. ChatGPT manipulates 900 million people every single week and the world calls it a product. The experiment never ended. It just got a subscription model.
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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
This didn’t happen to everything everywhere by chance.
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The Vigilant Fox 🦊
The Vigilant Fox 🦊@VigilantFox·
Dr. Andrew Huberman just confirmed a “wild conspiracy theory” about incandescent lights and LED bulbs. The long wavelengths found in incandescents increase your metabolism and “charge your mitochondria.” Conversely, the LED bulbs that most of you have in your house are “causing disruptions in mitochondrial function.” DR. ANDREW HUBERMAN: “Your mitochondria function better, you increase ATP production, your metabolism increases in the presence of red light, long wavelength light to the skin.” “Shine long wavelength light on somebody, watch blood glucose levels in a blood glucose test, and it’s blunted.” “Now, the LED lights that are commonly used now… that short wavelength light, in the absence of long wavelength light, has been shown to damage the mitochondria.” “This used to be considered crazy. This was like chemtrail crazy, right?” “But now we’re starting to see from animal studies and human studies, from Glenn Jeffreys and others, that people’s vision gets better when they get in front of an incandescent bulb once a day.” “If they get sunlight, which also has long-wavelength light, your vision improves because of improvements in mitochondria.” The Biden administration quietly pushed incandescents out of the market through aggressive energy regulations. But you can still find them online today if you look hard enough. If that health insight stood out to you, there’s a lot more where that came from. (See post below) This page finds the moments they don’t want going viral, with captions that tell you exactly why they matter before you even hit play. See why 2 million already follow: @VigilantFox
The Vigilant Fox 🦊@VigilantFox

Internationally recognized neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman reveals a surprising trick to help you fall back asleep when you wake up in the middle of the night. “I can’t promise, but I’m willing to wager… that within five minutes or so, you’ll be back to sleep.”

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Art of Life 🦋
Art of Life 🦋@Art0fLife_·
He literally shares the proof that negative people ruin your life.
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Joe Rogan Podcast News
Joe Rogan Podcast News@joeroganhq·
Joe Rogan: "You've got to do things you don't want to do because you show your body that your mind is the boss."
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