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⛈Seven🪽
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⛈Seven🪽
@lightpathseven
Give thanks everyday. ★ The truth shall set you free。* ・゚꩜⭒⋆🐊🔱🤍🧜🏻♀️🌊🪄 | ♃Mercury lady₁₁₁ ☽ *.・゚ #GG33Silver 🍊✨7LP ⛓️💥🐍☆ ⊹ .* ⁷¹👸🏻🦌🪷🫧
Heavenly Realms Katılım Ocak 2021
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@belaburrito Oo yeah I remember watching it all the way back then!!! I found it so cool. I remember him dying really confused & upset me. & other certain things confused me, like him changing skin colors lol. I understand the diff perspective+as a kid , he got confusion outta me more than 👻
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@lightpathseven I knew him only when he died and I was in grade school and I saw so many frenzied news reports grieving him. So he was definitely a beguiling figure initially. But that’s also when I saw Thriller for the first time and I loved it
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Growing up with this being the most famous person in the world was so confusing. Terrifying looking, genderless, speaking voice is unlike anything you’ve ever heard, no discernible ethnicity, clearly white skinned but everyone says he’s black. ?????
𝘾𝙈@charlesmore25
Evolution of Micheal Jackson Ever Changing Face over the years 🤯
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Went down the rabbit hole on this. In 2018, scientists at Newcastle University in England glued tiny 3D glasses onto a praying mantis. They wanted to prove it could see in three dimensions, the same way you can. They were right.
Praying mantises are the only insects on Earth that can pull this off. Each eye picks up a slightly different angle, and the brain stitches the two images together to judge distance. Cats, owls, and humans all do this. No other bug on the planet does.
The scientists tested it by building a tiny movie theater for the mantises. They projected fake flying insects on a screen and watched what happened. Whenever the "prey" looked like it was about an inch away, the mantis lunged at the screen. When the scientists scrambled the colors so each eye saw a different pattern, the mantises still found the target. Humans can't do that. The bugs beat us.
The one in this photo is a Conehead Praying Mantis (Empusa pennata). It lives across the Mediterranean, from Portugal to Egypt. A Swedish naturalist named Carl Peter Thunberg first wrote about it in 1815. Females grow to about 4 inches long. Males are smaller and have feathery antennae that work like a sensitive nose. The female finds a spot at night, bends her belly forward, and releases a scent into the air. The male picks up the trail from a long way off using those feathered antennae. After they mate, she often eats him. The extra protein helps her eggs grow.
In 2024, engineers at the University of Virginia built a camera modeled on the mantis eye. It tracked moving objects in 3D using 400 times less power than a normal camera. That same idea is now showing up in self-driving cars and drones. The bug figured it out millions of years before we did.
That pose in the first photo is a hunting stance. With the front legs raised and the body tilted up to look like part of the plant, the mantis is mid-stalk. It's just waiting for something nearby to move.
Earth@earthcurated
The Conehead Praying Mantis probably the craziest insect you have seen all day! | photo by Marta Albareda
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venus and uranus are BOTH in gemini. the vibes are unhinged, but in a fun + quirky way. switch it up. start a new hobby. buy $200 worth of supplies for a craft you'll never touch again. get a duo-lingo streak going. learn something. go out. take a class or workshop. have an over-caffeinated gossip session with your bestie (or a stranger). TALK to people. rethink your social media. open 96 tabs. write ideas down. use your hands.
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@lightpathseven i got two phones one for the plug one for the load heheh
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If you’ve followed me long enough you’ll know how much I revere Dill as medicine. One of the most underrated, readily available medicinal herbs there is, and growing further away from its long running relationship with humans as anything other than a garnish.
Let me revive your interest ~
Dill is warming in temp,
It’s pungent & aromatic, with a tiny bit of sweetness. As an action it’s light & dispersing & penetrating in our body, acting directly on our digestive systems/stomach region to move Qi and relieve general stagnation issues.
It’s carminative (reduces gas and pressure) and also anti spasmodic, making it often helpful in easing cramping or tension or any kind of spasming.
Also very good at gently stimulating our digestion without irritation.
Dill supports downward movement of digestion in the body, something we keep in mind in Eastern medicine - does it rise up or descend down?
It’s mildly (not overwhelmingly) calming to the nervous system, pretty fast acting and diffusive. Often very useful in cold and damp digestive patterns etc.
It’ll move gas and abdominal pressure without a lot of kickback.
We also like that while it warms the middle of the body, it’s not overly drying and won’t harm the fluids.
Can be used for any of the following :
Nausea
Mild colds
Stomach & diaphragmatic tension
Nervous system calming
Bloating
Stagnation, as mentioned, of the gut
Cold digestive patterns
And in digesting / processing fats
Other forms of its medicine are in its seeds. Dill *seed* provides an even deeper warming and digestive action while the fresh dill plant is lighter.
Historically it was used for colic and digestive issues but also the seed was used for parasite purging inside of water. Just dill water.
Though it’s powerful, it’s gentle and I think of it as an herb that acts ‘smoothly’ in the body vs aggressively, so the body is less shaken by it. It’s also great because its gentleness and subtle action make it very ideal for regular, daily/weekly, use.
Drink whatever you can, even just dill water, or dill seed water. I use it a lot in creamy soups and broths. Even on sandwiches and especially in salads. Can also have a little of its juice in a fresh pressed OJ or beet/apple/lemon/ginger juice.
Milk 𖤓@TheRawSol
It turned out very well.
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