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Big-X-Baby👼
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The word “bedlam” meaning chaos or madness, comes from a real place in London.
Bethlem Royal Hospital was one of Europe’s earliest mental hospitals.
And its history was disturbing.
In the 1600s, visitors could pay to walk through the wards and watch patients, turning suffering into entertainment.
Inside, conditions were often brutal.
Patients were sometimes:
• chained to walls or beds
• kept in filthy overcrowded rooms
• displayed to crowds as a spectacle
The hospital stood just outside Bishopsgate near today’s Liverpool Street Station.
At its entrance stood two famous statues - Raving Madness and Melancholy Madness - showing patients in extreme mental distress.
Thousands of commuters pass through the area today, unaware the word “bedlam” began with one of London’s darkest institutions.

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Two young princes entered the Tower of London in 1483.
They were never seen again.
The boys were Edward V of England (about 12) and his younger brother Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York (about 9).
Their father had just died - the king, Edward IV of England.
Before Edward V could be crowned, their uncle Richard III of England took control and placed the princes in the Tower - supposedly for protection before the coronation.
Then something strange happened.
The boys were seen less and less.
And by the end of the summer of 1483… they disappeared completely.
Centuries later, two small skeletons were discovered inside the Tower.
But historians still debate whether they were truly the missing princes - and who was responsible for their fate.
Today millions visit the Tower of London every year.
Few realise it may be the site of one of history’s most famous royal disappearances.

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Before the memes… there was respect.
Bruce Lee 🤝 Chuck Norris
They didn’t hate each other. They trained together. Learned from each other.
Norris said:
“Bruce was one of the fastest human beings I’ve ever seen… no one could match his speed and power.”
And Bruce—who rarely praised anyone—saw Norris as a true champion.
Norris brought something unique too: a devastating, precision roundhouse kick that became his signature—fast, efficient, and built on timing over brute force.
He also shared his knowledge beyond sport—training military and law enforcement, helping shape real-world close combat approaches.
And his influence didn’t stop there: he helped push martial arts into the mainstream, encouraging cross-training long before it was common—blending styles instead of staying confined to one.
At the core of it all was his philosophy—discipline, humility, and a strong moral code that shaped both his fighting and his legacy.
Then came Way of the Dragon
That fight wasn’t just cinema.
It was real philosophy on screen:
🥋 Tradition vs evolution
⚡ Power vs speed
🧠 Discipline vs freedom
And every move felt real… because it came from mutual respect.
Today, we remember Chuck Norris not as a meme—
but as a fighter that even Bruce Lee respected.
Rest easy.

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