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SARADA

@nurrowang

Ebullience at one end, melancholy at the other. Secretly in love with Xiao Chiye and Mo Ran.

Out Of Nowhere Katılım Mart 2020
23 Takip Edilen81 Takipçiler
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Latest in Cosmos
Latest in Cosmos@latestincosmos·
NASA releases insane new image of Helix Nebula. 700 light-years away from us. It's the closest nebula to Earth. Constantly watching us.
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
SCARY🚨: The moment when the Artemis 2 astronauts heard freaky knocking in space due to re-entry thrusters kicking on. Remember in 'INTERSTELLAR' as they went through the black hole!😱
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
UNUSUAL🚨: Scientists discover that silence regenerates the brain─ being in complete silence for at least 2 hours a day can stimulate the creation of new brain cells, especially in regions linked to memory and learning.
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No Cats No Life
No Cats No Life@NoCatsNoLife_m·
Breaking news 🚨🇹🇭 In Thailand, a cat that repeatedly bit police officers was taken to the station, photographed for a mugshot, had its paw prints taken, and was officially declared a “repeat offender.”
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For all Curious
For all Curious@fascinatingonX·
🚨BREAKING: Science confirms that brain cells are influenced by our self-talk.
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FranceNews24
FranceNews24@FranceNews24·
📹 VIDÉO - #Insolite : Pendant la coupe des griffes, une marmotte semble avoir déjà accepté son destin… tandis que l’autre panique à chaque coup de coupe. Une scène aussi drôle que totalement théâtrale.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
The research behind this is wild. Your face as a kid shaped how teachers treated you, how many friends you made, how much practice you got being social, and even how much money you earn right now. It starts before you can crawl. Babies just hours old already prefer attractive faces. Researchers at the University of Exeter showed newborns (average age: 2 days) pairs of faces and tracked which ones they stared at longer. The babies consistently picked the faces adults rated as good-looking. The sorting starts on day one. Teachers do it too. In a 1973 study, they were given identical student profiles with different photos attached. The teachers rated the good-looking kids as having more academic potential, paid them more attention in class, and gave more detailed help when they struggled. Same kid on paper, different face, completely different treatment. This creates a loop that psychologists have studied for decades. When people expect you to be friendly and capable, they act warmer toward you, and because they're warm, you actually become more social in return. Researchers at the University of Minnesota proved this in 1977 with a phone experiment. Men were shown a fake photo before a call (not the actual woman on the line). The ones who thought she was attractive were friendlier. And the women on the other end, who knew nothing about any photo, became more outgoing in response. The expectation changed real behavior in real time. Now picture this running on repeat for an entire childhood. The good-looking kid gets picked for group projects, invited to birthday parties, gets smiles from strangers at the grocery store. Each of those is a rep. Social skills work like a muscle, and you get better by doing them over and over. The kid who got fewer invitations and fewer smiles fell behind for a simple reason: less practice. The University of Texas pulled together 919 studies on attractiveness and found the same four things every time: people across cultures agree on who is good-looking, those kids get judged more favorably, they get treated better by the adults around them, and they end up with stronger social skills. Once the loop starts, it feeds itself. It carries into your paycheck. Economists at UT Austin found that workers rated below average in looks earn 5 to 10% less per hour than average-looking coworkers, even when education and experience are the same. Over a 40-year career, that penalty alone runs into six figures. A 2026 study in Personality and Individual Differences tracked kids rated for their looks at ages 7 and 11, then checked back at age 50. The ones rated attractive in childhood still had better social skills four decades later. So yeah, this tweet is more right than wrong. But the real driver is practice. Being less attractive as a kid meant fewer people reaching out to you, fewer good interactions, fewer chances to build the muscle. You didn't lack a social gene. You got fewer at-bats.
323@Ggod323

the reason you're socially awkward is because you were ugly as a child

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ずっと忘れたくない
シャイニングの名シーンを猫で再現した動画😭
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BFM News
BFM News@NewsBFM·
Several animals were killed and others injured after a van carrying pets from a Melaka animal shelter was hit by a lorry while en route to a pet expo at Mid Valley Exhibition Centre yesterday. The van, carrying 20 cats and five dogs, had earlier stopped in the emergency lane along the North-South Expressway due to engine issues when it was allegedly struck from behind, said the Star Animal Shelter. 📸: Star animal shelter malacca/Instagram 🧵1
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tokcin
tokcin@tokcin70·
Survey kata 70% pekerja Malaysia “happy at work”, tapi Gen Z paling tertekan. Aku syak ramai orang jawab “ok” bukan sebab tempat kerja mereka sihat, tapi sebab zaman sekarang, masih ada kerja pun sudah terasa macam nikmat. Gen Z pula masuk dunia kerja ketika gaji tak setanding hidup, fresh grad diminta datang dengan pengalaman, dan burnout dijual sebagai “learning curve”. Jadi jangan cepat tuding pada generasi. Yang makin rosak itu budaya kerja, bukan orang muda.
BFM News@NewsBFM

70% of Malaysian workers were happy at work, but Gen Z employees felt significantly more pressure than older generations, according to a Jobstreet survey. The findings showed that younger workers faced early-career pressures such as adapting to new environments and proving themselves, increasing their risk of burnout. 🧵1

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𝕐o̴g̴
𝕐o̴g̴@Yoda4ever·
Therapist; “There is a tiger in you” The tiger in me:
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Hizwani Hassan
Hizwani Hassan@hizwani·
“Lebih baik kerusi itu kosong, daripada diisi orang yang salah" It is ok if kita belum jumpa si dia, dan decide utk belum berpasangan Tapi if dah terjumpa si dia, walaupun kita belum plan utk berpasangan, mungkin kena consider balik perjalanan hidup Rezeki Allah tentukan
kamaghul deghaman@kamaghul

"An empty chair is better than a chair with the wrong person" - Hafizul Faiz, Podcast Habis Cerita Kita boleh pilih siapa pasangan hidup kita tetapi anak-anak kita tak boleh pilih siapa parents mereka. So guys, don't rush untuk kahwin 😄

Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur 🇲🇾 Indonesia
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No Context Cats
No Context Cats@nocontextscats·
👁👅👁
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MOON
MOON@DailyMoonX·
Myself… in breathtaking detail. Thousands of frames… one Moon 🌕😌
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‏ً
‏ً@itsnwts·
Maturing is realizing that La La Land is actually a happy ending. It is not about two people staying together forever, it is about two people meeting at the right time, changing each other's lives, and leaving with more than they came with. Mia became the woman she dreamed of because Seb believed in her, and Seb built the club he always wanted because Mia reminded him not to give up. Their love was not wasted. It was a bridge, carrying each of them to the lives they were destined for, proof that not every love is forever but every love can mean something. And sometimes the most honest ending is not holding on, but walking forward with gratitude for what was given.
‏ً@omgsidewalks

Maturing is realising that?

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MUSTAPHA
MUSTAPHA@angry_ustaaz·
Surah Luqman (31:29) “Do you not see that Allah causes the night to enter the day and the day to enter the night, and has subjected the sun and the moon, each running [its course] for a specified term…” Surah Ya-Sin (36:40) “It is not for the sun to overtake the moon, nor does the night outstrip the day. Each is swimming along in its orbit.” Surah Al-Anbiya (21:33) “And He is the One Who created the night and the day, and the sun and the moon; each floating in an orbit.”
NASA Solar System@NASASolarSystem

POV: You're flying by the Moon. This visualization is designed to show you what exactly the Artemis II astronauts will see outside their window during their lunar flyby. Here, the seven-hour visualization is compressed into 28 seconds. ⬇ (1/4)

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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Your eyes can only see the moon in gray. It's actually covered in color, blues and oranges and pinks, all from different metals sitting in the rock. You just need a camera and some patience to pull them out. These photos are called "mineral moons." A photographer points a telescope at the moon, takes hundreds or thousands of pictures, stacks them on top of each other to clean up the image, then slowly turns up the color intensity in editing software. The colors that show up were always there. Too faint for your eyes to catch on their own. Each color is a different metal. The blue areas have a lot of titanium in them. The orange and brown zones have more iron. The pinkish-red patches around the edges are the oldest parts of the moon's crust, full of aluminum and calcium. That deep blue region on the left side is called the Sea of Tranquility. Apollo 11 landed right there in July 1969. When Armstrong and Aldrin brought back 47 pounds of rock from that blue titanium zone, scientists cracked the samples open and found three minerals that had never been seen on Earth before. They named one "armalcolite" after the three astronauts (Arm-Al-Col: Armstrong, Aldrin, Collins). They named another "tranquillityite" after the landing site itself. For 40 years, tranquillityite was known as "the moon's own mineral" because nobody could find it here. Then in 2011, a geologist in Western Australia spotted a speck of it inside a billion-year-old rock. Andrew McCarthy, a photographer in Sacramento, once stacked 150,000 separate pictures of the moon to build one color map. Each splash of blue or orange in these images is a real metal deposit on a surface that's been getting hit by space rocks for 3.5 billion years. The moon was never gray. We just couldn't see it.
freckxi ⋆˚࿔@freckxi

i’m sick she is so beautiful

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