maiphay
5.8K posts

maiphay
@maiphay
Trying to get my shit together whilst dealing with the daily grind. Researcher. Writer. Editor. Anglo-Burmese & living with invisible disabilities.
London Katılım Temmuz 2009
616 Takip Edilen526 Takipçiler
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I knew Myo Myint. 20 years ago my mother bought him a prosthetic leg.
May he rest in peace.
#SaveMyanmar #WhatsHappeningInMyanmar
‘An incredible human being’: Remembering Myo Myint | Frontier Myanmar frontiermyanmar.net/en/an-incredib…
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Reporting here on how reliant the junta has become on Russia, with insights from analysts and a former #Myanmar military officer trained in St Petersburg.
aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/24…
#whatshappeninginMyanmar
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This poignant footage underscores the profound sacrifices made by brave young people in their fight against the junta regime, which unlawfully seized power on 01 February 2021, igniting a wave of civil unrest across the nation.
The video captures the cemetery of #Battalion1006 of #PekhonPeopleDefense Force from #KayahState, Myanmar, serving as a powerful testament to their courage and commitment.
Across the country, thousands of young people have sacrificed in the fight against the junta regime.
#WhatsHappeningInMyanmar
#Glock #HeinZ 🎥🎥
#UrbanOperationColumn
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Draconian action against someone who likely wanted to support a pro-democracy force against a brutal dictatorship.
#Myanmar’s people more alone than ever when even those trying to help are punished by Western governments.
abc.net.au/news/2026-03-2…
#whatshappeninginMyanmar
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@B33n3y4 As a single mother of two daughters, I hear ya… Been times I’ve had to call in a few favours and times when all I could do is help build them up. Step back to gain clarity & plan how best to support your girl. Never lead with anger; lead with strategy. Here if you want to chat.
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Despite the poverty in the area, not everything in the East End was dour and gloomy - look at this exquisite antique ring from Thomas Parker of Chrisp Street in Poplar…
#eastend #history #jewellery


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Sixteen years ago, one man stood alone on a grassy hill at a music festival in Washington State, USA, and started dancing by himself. People glanced over and looked away. Some laughed. His roommate leaned in and warned him people were filming him.
He did not stop.
Then one stranger got up and joined him.
Then another.
Then the hillside tipped. Within minutes, hundreds of people were sprinting from across the field to be part of something that, thirty seconds earlier, had been one man being laughed at in a field.
Someone filming from higher up the hill said quietly: "See what one man can do. One man can change the world."
The clip spread across the internet in 2009. Entrepreneur Derek Sivers played it at a TED conference to explain how movements actually begin. Not with the first person brave enough to start, he argued, but with the first person willing to join them.
Collin Wynter, the man dancing alone, later said he had no idea he had done anything special. He was just tired of watching everyone sit still.
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Chuck Norris held a 183-10-2 record and was a 6x world champion in full contact bare knuckle karate.
On top of that, he beat heavyweight kickboxing world champion Joe Lewis 3 consecutive times and also had a brutal sparring match with undefeated kickboxing world champion, Bill Superfoot Wallace, that lasted an hour and a half. According to Wallace, they practically stalemated and "beat the crap out of each other".
Chuck was trained in kickboxing/boxing by Benny The Jet Urquidez and was also trained in BJJ by the Gracies and Machados for 20 years. Even being able to submit Carlos Machado himself on occasion.
Chuck had a 315 Ibs bench press at 180 lbs bodyweight and was said to have a grip back in the day that nobody could escape from because he was so strong. Even Jean Claude Van Damme said he'd never fight Chuck Norris, despite being a kickboxing world champion himself.
Chuck held a 10th degree black belt in Chun Kuk Do, a 9th degree black belt in Tang Soo Do, an 8th degree black belt in Taekwondo, a 5th degree black belt in Karate, a 3rd degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a black belt in Judo.
Rest in peace, Chuck!
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@OfficerofEngin1 You have an indomitable spirit. Keep on keeping on. It’s the only way, as you well know. 🫂
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A life moment today. Time to make some impossible decisions.
I moved to Japan just before Covid struck with my wife, dog, cat, and life savings in tow. We were fleeing a life that had been turned upside down by seven miscarriages, and Japan was our fresh start. Our big plan was to open an English-style garden center. We had set plans in motion and spent a lot of money, but then Covid arrived. The plans stopped, the money disappeared, and we were forced to rethink.
My background was in oil and gas and, of course, the British Army. I had contacts, but I was out of the loop and my salary would reflect that. Nevertheless, that was the plan: buy a cheap rural property and live the good life growing our own vegetables and rearing chickens and bees.
The cat died just as Covid was waning, and the dog passed soon after. I think the miscarriages had made me somewhat numb to loss, but I mourned Polly the cat and Chatham the dog, and on we went. And then Yuki died one morning on her way to the train station. I wasn't with her; there had been no warning. The world ended.
I didn't know what to do. I was 50, in a foreign country, family gone, friends gone, purpose gone. I dug in. I bought a house that guaranteed seclusion, and I thought about Yuki and stood guard over the memory of "us," determined that it still had some meaning and that someone remembered how special it was. I tend her grave, and that is the only time I ever feel like I have purpose.
That’s been my role for four years now—living a future that I don't want and have no interest in. I can't move on, so I wait and the months pass. It's no way to live.
Yesterday morning, I went to the office and was handed a long list of site visits and office trips throughout Asia. It would mean hotel rooms and being away for most of the remainder of the year. I left the paper on someone's desk and walked out, effectively giving notice.
On the drive home, I stopped by a river at the base of the mountain where my house is located and sat by it for a couple of hours. I tried to imagine a path forward, tried to feel some purpose or drive to do anything but go back to the house and waste away. I considered briefly throwing myself in, but that's not me; I have far too many romantic notions to throw my life away. Much better to go down swinging, spitting in the face of the foe. I looked around, but there weren't any incoming hordes of orcs to facilitate a last stand, so I went back to the car and found that I had a puncture.
Oddly, that snapped me out of it. It was just my luck to be in a place so low that I was a hair's breadth from giving up, and now the car had a puncture. If it had started raining, it would have been perfect.
I changed the wheel and drove home.
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