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Kallen
27.1K posts

Kallen
@SlappedHam
Dropping the spookiest unexplained clips on Earth daily | Ghosts • UFOs • Cryptids • True paranormal
Australia Sumali Haziran 2014
1.1K Sinusundan26.2K Mga Tagasunod

@Rainmaker1973 There’s something eerie about a figure that old still managing to feel imposing thousands of years later.
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@Rainmaker1973 Chernobyl somehow keeps finding new ways to sound like the opening scene of a horror film.
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A black fungus feeds on radiation in Chernobyl.
In the radioactive ruins of Chernobyl’s Reactor 4, scientists found an extraordinary black fungus, Cladosporium sphaerospermum, thriving in one of Earth’s most toxic environments.
Rather than merely enduring radiation, this fungus seems to harness it through radiosynthesis—a process akin to photosynthesis but driven by gamma radiation, converting it into chemical energy. It’s among the rare organisms capable of this feat.
Even more remarkable, when tested on the International Space Station, the fungus flourished, forming a biofilm that blocked up to 84% of cosmic radiation, hinting at its potential as a living radiation shield for astronauts. With radiation posing a major hurdle for deep-space missions to Mars and beyond, this self-regenerating biological layer could revolutionize spacecraft design by replacing heavy, bulky shielding.
On Earth, researchers are exploring its use in bioremediation to detoxify radioactive sites too hazardous for humans, potentially transforming nuclear disaster recovery. As one scientist put it, “It’s like nature crafted a biological radiation shield.” From Chernobyl’s ruins to space, this humble fungus could help humanity thrive in the universe’s harshest environments.

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@creepydotorg That might be one of the most awkwardly unsettling ways to deal with an obsessed fan imaginable.
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@sciencegirl The kind that looks cute right up until it starts staring into a corner of the room for no reason.
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@sciencegirl Something about a sculpture “breathing” is immediately unsettling, even when you know exactly what it is.
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@thecurioustales A lot of people treat the “this feels wrong” stage like failure, when it’s usually the point where something is actually starting to rewire.
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Most people don't quit because they lack discipline.
They quit because the biology of real change was never explained to them. And in the absence of that map, the brain does what it always does with unexplained discomfort: it labels it as a sign to stop.
Your brain doesn't reward you for changing. It punishes you.
Every legitimate rewiring effort triggers a period where the old way feels faster, smarter, and more natural than the new one — because it genuinely is, at that moment. The old pathway is myelinated, efficient, running on deep hardware. The new one is a dirt track asking you to slow down, stumble, and embarrass yourself daily with no visible return on that embarrassment.
And the deeper the change you're attempting, the longer the punishment phase lasts. Surface habits — when to drink coffee, which route you drive to work — shift relatively fast. But identity-level rewiring, the kind that actually changes how you see yourself and what feels possible? That runs through a biological process most people will interpret as failure at least three separate times before it completes.
The feeling of "this isn't working" is not feedback. It's a phase. A predictable, well-documented, neurologically inevitable phase that every person who has ever changed permanently has moved through without knowing it had a name.
What separates people who transform from people who cycle through the same attempts for years isn't willpower, environment design, or finding the right system. It's almost entirely whether they possessed an accurate model of what real change feels like from the inside — accurate enough to stay in the room when every sensation in their body is telling them to leave.
We've built an entire self-improvement industrial complex on motivation as the primary engine. Morning routines, accountability partners, vision boards, identity statements. All of it operating at the conscious level. All of it aimed at a process that unfolds almost entirely below conscious experience — in slow-wave sleep, in cellular chemistry, in subconscious pattern competition that no amount of inspiration can directly touch or accelerate.
You cannot feel your way to a rewired brain. The rewiring happens in the silence between your efforts, not during them. The days you show up and feel nothing, accomplish nothing, feel like you've slipped backward — those are the days the construction is heaviest. The absence of feedback is not absence of progress. It's what progress actually feels like at the biological level.
The study points at something most productivity culture refuses to say out loud: the people who change permanently are not more driven than the ones who don't. They're more accurate. They had a map that told them the territory was supposed to look like this — uncomfortable, unrewarding, disorienting — and that kept them walking through it instead of turning around.
Give someone a why and they'll start. Give someone an accurate picture of what the middle looks like and they'll finish.
Almost nobody gives people the middle.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious
🚨: Study finds neuroplasticity happens in 4 stages and most people quit before stage one ends
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@SlappedHam I suddenly feel the need to wash my bedding. I hated this 🤣🤣
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@SlappedHam He's still looking for that ball that he shanked into the rough in 1963... 😂
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@SlappedHam I think it's a littel bit creepy.
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@SlappedHam I hope this is a clip for a movie or AI or something because that's too weird.
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