
Emperor of Ethiopia Yekuno Amlak, (1270 – 1285) Founder of the Solomonic Dynasty
Assorted human interest posts.
October 13, 2025
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical amazon, business, Business News, current-events, Future, Hotels, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation 3 Comments

Click the link below the picture
.
For the nearly three-year-old female bat soaring into the Spanish skies in March 2023, it was just another night of striving to feed herself. But her overnight exploits were about to become the stuff that scientists’ dreams are made of.
The bat—a greater noctule (Nyctalus lasiopterus)—was equipped with a high-tech tag recording its behavior. And from one particular recording, researchers were able to reconstruct a story with both cinematic drama and scientific value. That’s because the tag captured the bat pursuing, killing and eating a migrating European robin (Erithacus rubecula)—all in midair and while echolocating to navigate.
“There was this crazy noise and movement and a lot of echolocation, and I thought, ‘I’ve never heard this before on any recording,’” says Laura Stidsholt, a biologist at Aarhus University in Denmark and co-author of new research about the observation, published on October 9 in Science. “It was quite magical.”
Greater noctules are among the largest and most endangered bats in Europe. Their usual fare is meatier insects—beetles and moths and the like. But in previous work, scientists analyzing the DNA found in bat poop had been surprised to find evidence of greater noctules feasting on songbirds—which are much larger than insects—during spring and fall migrations, when birds are active at night instead of during the day.
The bats are typically difficult to study, but scientists at Doñana Biological Station, an outpost of the Spanish National Research Council, have microchipped the bats that nest locally and can track when they enter and leave a nest box. The researchers paired that system with cutting-edge recording tags that captured an animal’s altitude and movement, as well as the sounds around it. During the springs of 2022 and 2023, the researchers tagged 14 different bats, gathering incredible reports of the furry mammals’ adventures.
It’s like flying with the greater noctule bat,” says Elena Tena, a conservation biologist at Doñana Biological Station and co-author of the new research. “We could interpret everything that the bat was doing.”
And from that recording that startled Stidsholt, the researchers constructed quite an interpretation: The female bat soared to an altitude of three-quarters of a mile, searching for prey, until it apparently locked in on a migrating songbird. Then it engaged with the bird and made a steep dive, during which the bat made its echolocation calls amid the sounds of an ongoing tussle between the two animals. As the bat approached the ground, the bird let out a string of panicked cheeps before ominously falling silent.
Then—for an incredible 23 minutes—the bat’s echolocation squeaks were punctuated by chewing and crunching, even as the animal kept flying. “They’re basically screaming with their mouths full,” Stidsholt says, noting that, proportional to their body size, these bats’ calls are among the loudest noises known to scientists.
Haunted by the incredible recording, the researchers asked some additional questions. First, they compared the bird’s distress calls with existing recordings of songbirds gathered by other scientists whose work requires catching the birds in nearly invisible “mist nets” to handle them. The cries of the bird caught by the bat matched those of the European robin.
The researchers also gathered torn-off bird wings found on the ground of known greater noctule hunting grounds. DNA testing confirmed saliva from these bats on the wings—supporting scientific hypotheses that, just as the bats do with their usual insect prey, the animals bite off and discard songbird wings after making a kill, likely to reduce the weight they carry while snacking.
That makes the finding particularly interesting, says Riley Bernard, a bat biologist at the University of Wyoming, who was not involved in the new research. “Even though these species do eat insects, and that might be their predominant food behavior, they have this behavioral plasticity to be able to tap into resources when they’re available,” she says. Such flexibility could help see the bats through the many challenges they face, she hopes.
Bernard admits to some envy of the European researchers, noting that North America’s bats are all much smaller than the greater noctule—too small to carry the tags used in this experiment.
Danilo Russo, an ecologist at the University of Naples Federico II, who was also not involved in the new research, agrees. “I’d really love to fit a small bat with this kind of technology,” Russo says.
“Now we have this amazing means of penetrating the darkness and their hidden world,” he says. “I think it would be a complete game-changer, just like in this case.”
.

A greater noctule bat caught in a mist net with a passerine feather and blood in its mouth. Jorge Sereno
.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
.
__________________________________________
October 13, 2025
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical amazon, business, Business News, current-events, Future, Hotels, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture
.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi gave a playful response to actress Amy Poehler’s parody of her on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live.”
Poehler, who hosted Saturday’s episode, appeared in the cold open as Bondi during her testimony at a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight hearing last week.
“My name is Pam Bondi. I spell it with an ‘i,’ because I ain’t gonna answer any of your questions,” Poehler said. “My time is valuable. The DOJ has many ongoing operations, and we’re moving like Kash Patel’s eyeballs—very quickly in multiple directions at once.”
Snl Says Trump’s Been In Office ‘100 Years’ While Mocking Papal Ambitions And Executive Order Frenzy
During the skit, Poehler was later joined by her fellow former “SNL” cast member Tina Fey, who played Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem carrying an AR-15 rifle.
“That’s right. It’s me, Kristi Noem,” Fey said. “I spell my name with an ‘i’ because that’s how I thought it was spelled. And I’m the rarest type of person in Washington, D.C.: a brunette that Donald Trump listens to.”
Though the show took many jabs at Bondi’s demeanor during the hearing, Bondi appeared to enjoy the parody on Sunday morning and invited Noem to respond on X.
Amy Poehler Says ‘We All Played People We Should Not Have’ As She Reflects On Controversial SNL Skits
“@Sec_Noem, should we recreate this picture in Chicago? Loving Amy Poehler!” Bondi wrote.
In a comment to Fox News Digital, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin simply responded, “SNL is absolutely right—the Democrats’ shutdown does need to end!”
The long-running sketch comedy series has often mocked President Donald Trump and his administration, usually with some backlash from Trump himself. However, the show’s 51st season premiere went largely unremarked on by the president despite another parody of him by cast member James Austin Johnson.
Snl Compares Trump To Jesus In Easter Sketch Mocking Economy And Faith: ‘Donald Jesus Trump’
In a comment after the premiere, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson dismissed the show, saying she has “more entertaining” things to do with her time.
“Reacting to this would require me to waste my time watching it,” Jackson said. “And like the millions of Americans who have tuned out from SNL, I have more entertaining things to do — like watch paint dry.”
.
Tina Fey (left) as Kristi Noem and host Amy Poehler (right) as Pam Bondi during the “Bondi Hearing” Cold Open on Saturday, October 11, 2025.
.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
.
__________________________________________
October 13, 2025
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical amazon, business, Business News, current-events, Future, Hotels, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture
.
Many of them had become household names, their faces familiar from posters all over the country: Israelis snatched two years ago from their homes in pastoral border villages, from a music festival rave and from army bases and then secreted into Hamas’s tunnels deep under Gaza.
When they finally emerged on Monday as part of a cease-fire deal reached between Israel and Hamas, they were thinner, wan, but alive and on their feet. And Israelis basked in a joyous moment of unifying national redemption after months of agonizing, polarizing war.
The 20 living hostages who had remained in Gaza, along with the remains of 28 deceased ones, remained an open wound, with the fate of the hostages tearing at the country’s soul.
A majority of Israelis had long wanted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to prioritize their release with a deal to end the war, polls showed. But Mr. Netanyahu accused protesters of “hardening Hamas’s stance” while critics of the prime minister accused him, in turn, of prolonging the war to appease his far-right political allies on whose support he relies to stay in power.
Now, many Israelis said, with an open-ended cease-fire in place and all the living hostages back home, it was time for the country to heal.
“This is a momentous day, a day of great joy,” Mr. Netanyahu said in an address in the Knesset, or Israeli Parliament, on Monday alongside President Trump.
Quoting from the biblical Book of Ecclesiastes, which Jews traditionally read this week, Mr. Netanyahu said there was a time for war and a time for peace.
“The last two years have been a time of war,” he added. “The coming years will hopefully be a time for peace — peace inside Israel and peace outside Israel.”
People began packing Hostages Square in Tel Aviv early Monday morning to watch the release unfold on giant screens. They lined the road, waving Israeli flags outside the Re’im military base in southern Israel, the first stop for the returnees after they crossed into Israeli territory. And they ran onto balconies and rooftops to cheer as helicopters brought the former captives to hospitals.
The military released footage of emotional reunions between the hostages and their family members, as well as extraordinary encounters among the former captives themselves.
Gali and Ziv Berman, 28, twins who were kidnapped on Oct. 7, 2023, together with their neighbor, Emily Damari, from Kfar Aza, a rural community, were separated by their captors on their first day in Gaza, according to Ms. Damari, who was released during a brief cease-fire in January.
On Monday, they hugged. The twins, who had lived close by and worked together before their abduction, were transferred to a hospital wearing matching yellow shirts of their favorite soccer team, Maccabi Tel Aviv. They were flown over the Bloomfield Stadium in Tel Aviv, where fans had gathered to cheer them.
Another pair of brothers, Ariel Cunio, 28, and David Cunio, 35, were released and reunited with their partners in Israel, both former captives themselves. Ariel Cunio had been kidnapped with his partner, Arbel Yehud, from their home in Nir Oz, a small community near the Gaza border that was ravaged in the Hamas assault. Ms. Yehud was released in January.
“My Ariel is home, and I am overwhelmed with emotion and joy,” Ms. Yehud said in a statement.
“From the moment of my release, I devoted everything I had to the struggle to bring my Ariel home, to bring David home, and to bring all the hostages back,” she added. “Now that Ariel and David are home, we can focus on our long journey of healing and recovery together as a couple and as a family.”
David Cunio was kidnapped from Nir Oz with his wife, Sharon Cunio, and their twin daughters, Yuli and Emma, 5, who were returned in November 2023.
And the brothers Eitan Horn and Iair Horn let out cries of joy as they embraced. Taken from Nir Oz, they spent time in the tunnels together until Iair was released in February, with Eitan left behind.
The 20 living hostages released on Monday were exchanged for nearly 2,000 Palestinians imprisoned in Israel. There are no more living captives in Gaza, but Israel was still waiting for Hamas to return the remains of 28 deceased ones. The Israeli military said it had received four coffins later Monday and that the authorities would work to identify the remains.
The government has said that locating some of the bodies might take some time.
“We do not forget them for a moment,” Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin, the Israeli military’s chief spokesman, said.
Israeli officials said about 1,200 people were killed in Israel and 251 others were abducted to Gaza during the Hamas-led attack on Israel in October 2023 that ignited the war. Hamas had already been holding two Israeli civilians for almost a decade and the remains of two soldiers killed in ambushes in Gaza in 2014.
Four women were released early on in October 2023, and a female soldier was rescued in a military operation that month. During two temporary cease-fires, in November 2023 and early this year, a total of 135 hostages were freed, according to government data. The Trump administration negotiated the release of an Israeli-American soldier in May. Seven more hostages were rescued alive by the Israeli military.
The remains of 59 captives who did not survive were returned to Israel for burial before Monday’s exchange, according to the Israeli government.
.

Alon Ohel’s friends speaking with his family in a video call after receiving the news of his return to Israel from Gaza on Monday.Credit…Amit Elkayam for The New York Times
Alon Ohel was kidnapped by Hamas after fleeing the Nova music festival in October 2023. More than two years later, Hamas freed Mr. Ohel as part of a cease-fire deal with Israel.CreditCredit…David Guttenfelder/The New York Times
.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
.
__________________________________________
October 13, 2025

Don’t freeze food in their original packaging from the grocery store. With the food prices soaring, why waste your food because of freezer burn. If you want your meat, fish, or poultry to last as long as possible in the freezer, read what is the best way to freeze them below. Those plastic wrapped trays […]
Did You Know – Freezing Food
October 12, 2025
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical amazon, business, Business News, current-events, Future, Hotels, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture
.
A time crystal is a form of matter that shows continuous, repeating patterns over time, much like how atoms in a normal crystal repeat in space. Examples once existed in only complex, quantum matter, but now physicists have found a way to make a time crystal that can be seen, under certain conditions, with the naked eye.
The feat, accomplished by physicists at the University of Colorado Boulder, and published in Nature Materials on 4 September, involved liquid crystals — bar-shaped molecules with properties between those of a liquid and those of a solid. Simply by shining a light on the liquid crystals, the team created ripples of twisting molecules through them. The ripples kept moving for hours, undulating with a distinct beat, even when the researchers changed the conditions. The rhythm was also out of sync with any incoming force — fulfilling the two defining criteria for a time crystal.
Although some of this behaviour of liquid crystals was already known, no one had previously considered whether it could be harnessed to make a time crystal, says Young-Ki Kim, a materials scientist at the Pohang University of Science and Technology in South Korea.
The macroscopic scale of the time crystal — at millimetres to centimetres across — creates opportunities “to provide deeper understanding” of the phenomena, he says. The distinctive patterns in the crystals could also allow them to be used in anti-counterfeit devices, say the authors.
Impossible machines
Nobel-prizewinning physicist Frank Wilczek first proposed the idea of a time crystal in 2012. Wilczek’s version was almost like a perpetual-motion machine; something that cycled endlessly while in its natural resting state. A team later published a paper that mathematically proved this concept was impossible, but researchers soon found that other kinds of time crystal were possible. Ordered time crystals could exist, for example, in bizarre systems that were perpetually in flux, rather than at rest.
Time crystals have since been made in a variety of ways, using interacting nanoscale defects in diamonds, trapped ions, and simulated on Google’s Sycamore quantum computer. But most examples have been at the microscopic scale.
The latest system involves shining a light, even that from a normal light bulb, on a liquid-crystal film trapped between two glass plates. When the light hits photosensitive dye molecules on the glass plates, they switch their orientation, which triggers molecules in the liquid crystal to begin twisting.
Intermolecular forces between rod-like liquid crystal molecules mean that they usually all point in the same direction. If some begin twisting, this sets off a domino effect: the molecules reorient themselves in a complex interaction that moves across the sample like a Mexican wave.
From this soup of molecules arise stable twisted formations that behave like particles. These particles interact with each other to create observable ripples. “We were surprised and excited to see that such time-crystalline order can be readily observed in soft matter systems,” says Ivan Smalyukh, a physicist at the University of Colorado Boulder, who led the work.
To observe the molecular dance in detail, the authors looked at the time-crystal system using a kind of microscope that transmits only polarized light. The amount of light that passes through depends on a molecule’s alignment, revealing the time crystal’s ripples as a series of dark and bright stripes.
The time crystal maintained its distinctive rhythm for hours, even when the researchers varied its temperature and the light intensity. Because the set-up can be tweaked to create patterns that are centimetres across, the effect can be seen by the naked eye, albeit with less contrast and resolution than with the microscope, says Smalyukh.
Because the pattern changes across both space and time, the system is technically a space-time crystal, say the authors. It unquestionably fits the definition of a time crystal, adds Smalyukh, but it does pose the question of whether other periodic effects also fit the bill.
The authors say that these time crystals are not just a curiosity. The thin layers of crystal could be embedded in bank notes as a way to verify their authenticity. Light passing through stacks of different crystals, each with a different characteristic pattern, would create not just a ripple in one direction, but a changing 2D barcode that would be extremely difficult to counterfeit and could also be used to store information, they say.
“We don’t want to put a limit on the applications right now,” added Smalyukh, in a statement. “I think there are opportunities to push this technology in all sorts of directions.”
.

A time crystal as seen under a microscope. Zhao & Smalyukh, 2025, Nature Materials (CC BY-NC-ND)
.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
.
__________________________________________
October 12, 2025
Business, Food For Thought, Human Interest, Political, Science, Technical amazon, business, Business News, current-events, Future, Hotels, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation Leave a comment

Click the link below the picture
.
Diane Keaton, the vibrant, sometimes unconventional, always charmingly self-deprecating actress who won an Oscar for Woody Allen’s comedy “Annie Hall” and appeared in some 100 movie and television roles, an almost equal balance of them in comedies like “Sleeper” and “The First Wives Club” and dramas like “The Godfather” and “Marvin’s Room,” has died. She was 79.
Her death was confirmed by Dori Rath, who produced a number of Ms. Keaton’s most recent films. She did not say where or when Ms. Keaton died or cite a cause.
Ms. Keaton was 31 and a veteran of eight films, most of them comedies, when she starred as the title character in “Annie Hall” (1977), a single woman in New York City with ambitions, insecurities, and definite style. Annie is known for cheerful psychiatric breakthroughs, fashions that look like men’s wear, questionable driving skills, and lingering hints of an all-too-wholesome Midwestern upbringing.
She accepted her Oscar wearing a linen jacket, two full linen skirts, a scarf over a white shirt and black string tie, and high heels with socks. In her 2014 memoir, “Then Again,” she looked back on the moment, with some regret, as “my ‘la-de-da’ layered get-up.”
“Annie Hall,” which won three other Oscars, including best picture, brought Ms. Keaton a shower of additional honors, including acting awards from the National Board of Review, National Society of Film Critics, New York Film Critics Circle and the British Academy of Film and Television Artists.
The Hollywood Reporter’s review of the movie called Ms. Keaton “the consummate actress of our generation” and observed that she “adds the charm and warmth and spontaneity” that make “Annie Hall” plausible.
Ms. Keaton received three other Oscar nominations. One was for the sweeping Oscar-winning drama “Reds” (1981), in which she played Louise Bryant, an intense 1910s writer hanging out with Greenwich Village socialists and Bolshevik revolutionaries, notably the activist journalist Jack Reed (Warren Beatty, who directed).
Another was for “Marvin’s Room” (1996), in which she played the selfless daughter who is taking care of her slowly dying father and her scatterbrained aunt when she receives a diagnosis of leukemia and needs a bone-marrow transplant. Her co-stars included Meryl Streep, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Hume Cronyn.
The third was for “Something’s Gotta Give” (2003), a comedy about a successful playwright who turns an extremely tearful breakup into a new hit comedy. She attracts the attentions of a handsome, much younger doctor (Keanu Reeves) and inspires a sexist man in his 60s (Jack Nicholson) to fall in love with a woman his own age.
Ms. Keaton was also a director. Her first film was “Heaven” (1987), a documentary on beliefs about the afterlife. In her last, she directed herself, Meg Ryan, and Lisa Kudrow in the comic drama “Hanging Up” (2000), based on a novel by Delia Ephron.
“Unstrung Heroes” (1995), her first foray into fictional filmmaking, starred Andie MacDowell, John Turturro and Michael Richards. The story of a teenage boy’s idiosyncratic uncles was selected for Un Certain Regard, the prestigious sidebar at the Cannes Film Festival. The Rolling Stone review said, “The movie works like a charm.” The Washington Post called it “sweet madness,” a “sensitive coming-of-age story.
A film career was always Ms. Keaton’s goal. She explained her aversion to theater as a lifelong pursuit on “CBS Sunday Morning” in 2010. “Night after night? Doing a play?” she said, putting an imaginary gun to her head. “That’s my idea of hell.”
Diane Hall was born on Jan. 5, 1946, in Los Angeles. She was the eldest of four children of John Newton Ignatius Hall, known as Jack, a civil engineer, and Dorothy Deanne (Keaton) Hall, an amateur photographer who was also crowned Mrs. Los Angeles in a beauty pageant for homemakers.
Diane’s father gave her the nickname Perkins and often addressed her as “Di-annie,” Ms. Keaton wrote in her memoir.
She grew up in Santa Ana, Calif., near Los Angeles, and briefly attended community colleges, first Santa Ana and then Orange Coast. At 19, she dropped out and moved to New York to study acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse.
She made her Broadway debut in the hit musical “Hair,” first as a member of the ensemble and then as Sheila, the female lead. (She turned down the $50 bonus offered to actors who were willing to appear nude in one scene.)
Her Broadway career continued, and her partnership with Mr. Allen began with “Play It Again, Sam” (1969), in which she played a romantically desirable married woman opposite Mr. Allen as a nebbishy divorced friend. That performance earned her a Tony Award nomination for best featured actress in a play.
Her film debut came the next year, when she played an unhappy young wife at a suburban wedding in “Lovers and Other Strangers” (1970). Then, after a handful of television appearances, she played Kay Adams, the clearly non-Sicilian girlfriend turned trusting wife of Michael Corleone (played by Al Pacino), in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather” (1972). (She and Mr. Pacino began dating in 1974, the year “The Godfather, Part II” was released.)
For all the acclaim that “The Godfather” drew, Ms. Keaton, ever self-effacing, hardly raved about her own performance in it. “Right from the beginning I thought I wasn’t right for the part,” she told The Times after the movie was released. “I haven’t seen the film. I just decided I would save myself the pain. I had to see a few scenes because I had to loop — dub in some dialogue — and I couldn’t stand looking at myself. I thought I looked so terrible, just like a stick in those ’40s clothes!”
Three years later, the same year “Annie Hall” was released, she starred in the wrenching drama “Looking for Mr. Goodbar” as a young teacher who prowls singles bars almost every night. Molly Haskell’s review in New York magazine called Ms. Keaton’s “the performance of a lifetime” and the movie itself “harrowing, powerful, appalling.” Some observed that although she won the Oscar for “Annie Hall,” many voters had been influenced by “Mr. Goodbar,” which they considered brilliant but too hard to take.
She appeared regularly in Mr. Allen’s films, starting with the movie version of “Play It Again, Sam” (1972); “Sleeper” (1973), a comedy set in a dystopian future; and “Love and Death” (1975), set in czarist Russia. She also starred in two of Mr. Allen’s more serious contemporary films, “Interiors” (1978) and the multiple-award-winning “Manhattan” (1979).
Although she dismissed her early singing ambitions as foolish, she sang two numbers in “Annie Hall” and made a cameo appearance as a 1940s nightclub singer in Mr. Allen’s “Radio Days” (1987). Their last film together was “Manhattan Murder Mystery” (1993).
In addition to “Reds,” “Marvin’s Room” and the sequels to “The Godfather” (1974 and 1990), she starred in several other dramas, some with satirical undertones. They included “Shoot the Moon” (1982), in which she co-starred with Albert Finney, the story of an unhappy California couple and their divorce; Beth Henley’s Southern Gothic “Crimes of the Heart” (1986), playing the spinster sister of Jessica Lange and Sissy Spacek; and the mini-series “The Young Pope” (2016), as a nun who is personal secretary and confidante to the pope, played by Jude Law.
But her talent for sophisticated farce didn’t go to waste. Before “Something’s Gotta Give,” she appeared in three other comedies directed by Nancy Meyers: “Baby Boom” (1987), opposite Sam Shepard, as a big-city executive who inherits a baby and moves to Vermont; and “Father of the Bride” (1991) and its 1995 sequel, opposite Steve Martin.
.

.
.
Click the link below for the complete article:
.
__________________________________________
¡Bienvenido de vuelta viajero!
so looking to the sky ¡ will sing and from my heart to YOU ¡ bring...
CEO and Founder of Nsight Health
https://www.tangietwoods
Catholic News, Prayers, HD Images, Rosary, Music, Videos, Holy Mass, Homily, Saints, Lyrics, Novenas, Retreats, Talks, Devotionals and Many More
Decoding Power. Defying Narratives.
A creative collaboration introducing the art of nature and nature's art.
The Home Of Entertainment News, Reviews and Reactions
Hollow Earth Society
•Whenever you are confronted with an opponent, conquer him with love.(Gandhi)
Algotrader at TRADING-CLUBS.COM
Film and Writing Festival for Comedy. Showcasing best of comedy short films at the FEEDBACK Film Festival. Plus, showcasing best of comedy novels, short stories, poems, screenplays (TV, short, feature) at the festival performed by professional actors.
Peace. Tranquility. Insanity.
Take a ride on the wild side
Découvre des musiques prometteuses (principalement) dans la sphère musicale française.
No tiene que Ser una Pesadilla.
Life in Kana-text (er... CONtext)
Tracking money, power, and meaning across borders.
Where feelings meet metaphors and make questionable choices.
Finding hope and peace through writing, art, photography, and faith in Jesus.
Eyasu
The Community for Wounded Healers: Former Medical Students, Disabled Nurses, and Faith-Fueled Pivots
love each other like you're the lyric to their music
Comprendere il mondo per cambiarlo.
Mid-Life Ponderings
Travel,Tourism, Life style "Now in hundreds of languages for you."
I speak the honest truth. I share my honest opinions. I share my thoughts. A platform to grow and get surprised.
User-generated ratings for ethical consumerism
Travel and Lifestyle Blog
Questo è un piccolo angolo di poesie, canzoni, immagini, video che raccontano le nostre emozioni
“Log your journey to success.” “Where goals turn into progress.”
scrivo per dare forma ai silenzi e anima alle storie che il mondo dimentica.
“Dream deeper. Believe bolder. Live transformed.”
Vichar, Motivation, Kadwi Baat ( विचार दर्शनम्)
Traum zur Realität
Savor. Style. See the world.
معا نحو النجاح
Best Forex Broker Ratings & Reviews
art, writing and music by James McFarlane and other musicians
living life in conscious reality
Freelance poetry writing
Peace 🕊️ | Spiritual 🌠 | 📚 Non-fiction | Motivation🔥 | Self-Love💕