petrified egg 🥚

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petrified egg 🥚

petrified egg 🥚

@petrifiedegg

Undeserved blessings

Katılım Temmuz 2017
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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
You have 10 followers You have 1000 followers You have 100000 followers This account has been permanently suspended
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Olimarist Mustasaar
Olimarist Mustasaar@HrMustasaar·
@chribreuer They named it Air Baltic because Latvians have always had an ambition to unite and represent the three Baltic nations. And I suspect also because during the era of Czarism when the term Latvia was prohibited they used the name of Baltics as a synonym for Latvia.
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Christoph Breuer
Christoph Breuer@chribreuer·
It's funny that they were named "Air Baltic" cause it sounds better than "Air Latvia". Air Baltic makes you think, that maybe this refers to the Baltic sea, so a Swedish airline perhaps. Or if actual Baltic at least Estonian. Like a Romanian airline named "Air central europe"
Chay Bowes@BowesChay

Latvian airline, "Air Baltic" is on the verge of collapse. Back In 2024, they issued bonds worth 380 million euros to resolve their funding crisis. Now, they have no funds to pay the next coupon to investors, and the company needs 27.5 million euros. Currently, they're trying to obtain another tranche from its main owner the Latvian government.

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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
People talk about having the Sitzfleisch for Wagner but real ones have the Standknie
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Robert is thirty-six years old. In 1247, this is not young. Robert knows this. His knees know this. His back has known this since approximately 1239. Robert lives in a village in Worcestershire with his wife Agnes, three surviving children, and two chickens he is not allowed to eat because the chickens produce eggs and the eggs matter more than the chickens. Today is a Tuesday in March. Robert will describe it as a Tuesday in March. The concept of a 'week' as a unit of leisure is not yet something Robert has access to. 5:00am - Up. Pottage on the fire. The pottage is oats, leeks, and some dried parsnip from the autumn store. There is a small piece of salted pork in it, approximately the size of Robert's thumb. It is mostly flavouring. Robert eats around it for as long as possible, then eats it, then thinks about it for the rest of the morning. 6:00am - Field. Robert works the lord's strip first, then his own. The ground is still cold. His boots have a hole. He has had the hole since October. He has packed it with rags. The rags are wet. They will remain wet until June. Robert is technically eating a plant-based diet. He is not doing this by choice. He is doing this because meat belongs to the lord, the deer belong to the king's forest, and the last man in this village who was caught with an unlicensed rabbit spent a period in the stocks that his family still doesn't fully discuss. 10:00am - Brief rest. Rye bread, hard. A small onion. Robert thinks about the pig that was slaughtered in November. He thinks about this often. The memory of fat is a specific and enduring thing when you don't have much of it. 1:00pm - Back to the field. Robert's average daily calorie intake is somewhere between 1,500 and 2,000 calories, the majority from grain. He is doing agricultural labour that modern exercise scientists would classify as extremely high intensity. He is, measurably, running on insufficient fuel. He is aware of this in the way that you are aware of things that cannot be changed: completely, and without drama. 4:00pm - Home. Agnes has made more pottage. It is similar to this morning's pottage. Robert eats it. Robert's teeth hurt. They have hurt for two years. There is no dentist. There is a barber-surgeon in the market town seven miles away. Robert cannot afford the barber-surgeon and cannot take the day from the fields. His teeth continue to hurt. 7:00pm - Sleep. Robert will be awake again at five. He is thirty-six. He will probably not see forty. The leading cause of death for men in his position is a combination of infection, injury, and the slow arithmetic of malnutrition across a lifetime. Somewhere, eight hundred years from now, someone will describe Robert's diet as "ancestral," "plant-forward," and "aligned with the earth." Robert would have a great deal to say about this. Robert does not have the energy.
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Napoléonos I Tritharsaléos
"Most men don't see forty" is one of those bullshit Enlightenment Era propaganda talking points that always gets thrown around by uneducated idiots. Life expectancy was cut in half because of infant mortality. If you survived childhood, even a lowly peasant was likely to make it into his mid to late sixties. The description of diet here is mostly accurate, for a particular season not year round. Also, most peasants had the right to hunt small game on the Lord's land to supplement their diet. Nobody was getting thrown in the stocks for poaching a rabbit; they were unlikely to catch a rabbit because of over hunting.
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole

Robert is thirty-six years old. In 1247, this is not young. Robert knows this. His knees know this. His back has known this since approximately 1239. Robert lives in a village in Worcestershire with his wife Agnes, three surviving children, and two chickens he is not allowed to eat because the chickens produce eggs and the eggs matter more than the chickens. Today is a Tuesday in March. Robert will describe it as a Tuesday in March. The concept of a 'week' as a unit of leisure is not yet something Robert has access to. 5:00am - Up. Pottage on the fire. The pottage is oats, leeks, and some dried parsnip from the autumn store. There is a small piece of salted pork in it, approximately the size of Robert's thumb. It is mostly flavouring. Robert eats around it for as long as possible, then eats it, then thinks about it for the rest of the morning. 6:00am - Field. Robert works the lord's strip first, then his own. The ground is still cold. His boots have a hole. He has had the hole since October. He has packed it with rags. The rags are wet. They will remain wet until June. Robert is technically eating a plant-based diet. He is not doing this by choice. He is doing this because meat belongs to the lord, the deer belong to the king's forest, and the last man in this village who was caught with an unlicensed rabbit spent a period in the stocks that his family still doesn't fully discuss. 10:00am - Brief rest. Rye bread, hard. A small onion. Robert thinks about the pig that was slaughtered in November. He thinks about this often. The memory of fat is a specific and enduring thing when you don't have much of it. 1:00pm - Back to the field. Robert's average daily calorie intake is somewhere between 1,500 and 2,000 calories, the majority from grain. He is doing agricultural labour that modern exercise scientists would classify as extremely high intensity. He is, measurably, running on insufficient fuel. He is aware of this in the way that you are aware of things that cannot be changed: completely, and without drama. 4:00pm - Home. Agnes has made more pottage. It is similar to this morning's pottage. Robert eats it. Robert's teeth hurt. They have hurt for two years. There is no dentist. There is a barber-surgeon in the market town seven miles away. Robert cannot afford the barber-surgeon and cannot take the day from the fields. His teeth continue to hurt. 7:00pm - Sleep. Robert will be awake again at five. He is thirty-six. He will probably not see forty. The leading cause of death for men in his position is a combination of infection, injury, and the slow arithmetic of malnutrition across a lifetime. Somewhere, eight hundred years from now, someone will describe Robert's diet as "ancestral," "plant-forward," and "aligned with the earth." Robert would have a great deal to say about this. Robert does not have the energy.

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auto@autocronus·
@SamaHoole You're a dumbass, life expectancy was 36 because of high mortality, if you lived to 36 you were very likely to make it to your 60's. They also had 60 holy days a year where work was forbidden and up to one third of the year was filled with religious festivals, feasts etc.
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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
@JaycelAdkins Kipling generally has a couplet, a quatrain or even a long poem at the beginning or end of a chapter. They’re rarely incorporated directly as in the Tale of Genji though
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Jaycel Adkins 鍾書
Jaycel Adkins 鍾書@JaycelAdkins·
Trying not to get in the best novel business, but what are the Western “Great Book” Novels that best incorporate high level poetry as part of the text?
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Swann Marcus
Swann Marcus@SwannMarcus89·
The first Sherlock Holmes story has to be the most unintentionally funny classic novel You sit down to read it thinking you know what Sherlock Holmes stories are like and then halfway through it turns into violently bigoted anti-Mormon propaganda where Utah is portrayed like a cross between Nazi Germany and Saudi Arabia and the Mormons have an advanced surveillance state with secret police and roaming Mormon death squads chase families across 50 miles of wilderness because for some reason they really wanted to turn one specific woman into a sex slave It’s the best thing ever written. 15/10
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Sebastian
Sebastian@Seb__flyte1·
Trad who opposes “The Spirit of Vatican I.”
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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
Possible market opening for “how to review ‘how to review academic books’” books
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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
“Mormonism was a better fit but, for a future politician, I saw it’d be a headache down the road” Vance reads as religiously Eisenhowerian. For social reasons he became a tradcath (which brings its own problems when he feuds with the popes/has to support the abortion pill, etc)
The Associated Press@AP

Vice President JD Vance has a new book that will explore his religious faith and his conversion to Catholicism as an adult. “Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith” will be out June 16. apnews.com/article/jd-van…

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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
Imagine having let such a bad egg write your foreword
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petrified egg 🥚
petrified egg 🥚@petrifiedegg·
John Cairncross? The Molière expert, scholar of polygamy and minor poet?
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Lyman Stone 石來民 🦬🦬🦬
there are a lot of studies of poor children adopted into well-off families to see what role environment plays has anybody looked into cases of elite children adopted into poor families/high crime environments/etc? obviously rarer, but surely there is some case somewhere
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