Sunday, 5 July 2026

This Amazing World

“Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information on it.” - Samuel Johnson

What an amazing world we live in. Our planet is far more complex, adaptive, and mysterious than we give it credit for. Here are some interesting phenomena discovered across the globe – courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘David Attenborough’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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In the fertile rice fields of Indonesia, farmers have developed a clever system that combines growing rice with raising fish, creating a productive and balanced ecosystem.

Instead of using water only for rice, they introduce fish into the flooded fields. These fish become active participants in the system, feeding on insects, weeds, and algae that would otherwise damage the crop.

This method, known as rice-fish farming, naturally protects the plants while reducing the need for chemical pesticides. At the same time, fish waste enriches the soil, acting as an organic fertilizer that supports healthier rice growth.

Farmers benefit in multiple ways: improved crop yields, reduced costs, and an additional food or income source from harvesting fish. By working with nature instead of against it, this approach increases productivity and sustainability in traditional agriculture. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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The ancient Olive Tree of Vouves stands as one of the oldest known olive trees in the world. Located on the island of Crete, its massive trunk — measuring several meters in diameter — reveals centuries of growth and resilience.

Estimated to be at least 2,000 years old, and possibly even older, this remarkable tree has witnessed countless periods of human history. From ancient Greek civilization to the Roman era and beyond, it has endured while continuing to thrive.

Even today, the tree still produces olives, serving as a living symbol of endurance, history, and the deep connection between nature and human culture. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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The world’s largest known beaver dam was never the work of a single animal. It was built piece by piece across generations by tireless engineers covered in wet fur and powered by instinct.

What makes the story even stranger is how long it stayed hidden. Deep inside the wilderness of Wood Buffalo National Park, this enormous half-mile structure was not discovered by hikers or explorers. Scientists first noticed it in 2007 through satellite imagery, stretching across the northern landscape like nature had quietly started its own construction project.

But beavers are not trying to create monuments. They build for survival. A strong dam raises water levels, protects lodge entrances from predators, keeps underwater access open during frozen winters, and creates safe food storage nearby. Mud, branches, bark, stones, and endless repairs slowly become infrastructure.

Over time, the Alberta megadam transformed the surrounding environment into a thriving wetland, slowing water flow, trapping sediment, and creating habitat for fish, birds, amphibians, and insects.

No machines. No blueprint. No project manager. Just instinct, teamwork, and decades of relentless maintenance. A simple wall became a wilderness landmark because its builders never stopped rebuilding it. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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In the crowded streets of Istanbul, stray cats are treated less like animals and more like neighbors.

Among them, one cat became unexpectedly famous, a chunky, relaxed street cat named Tombili. What made him special was not heroism or tricks, but his unbelievably human way of sitting.

He would casually lean back against steps and curbs with one paw resting to the side, looking completely relaxed, like an old man watching the world go by after a long day.

People passing through the Ziverbey neighborhood loved him instantly. Tourists stopped to photograph him, locals greeted him daily, and his laid back posture quietly became an internet sensation.

The photo of Tombili lounging in his iconic pose spread across social media worldwide because it captured something strangely relatable and comforting. He looked completely at peace with life.

When Tombili died in 2016, the reaction in Istanbul was surprisingly emotional. Residents placed signs, flowers, and messages near the spot where he used to sit. But they did not stop there.

A local sculptor created a bronze statue recreating his exact relaxed pose, permanently preserving the moment that made people smile. – A Facebook post by 'Mr. Scientific'

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Horse chestnuts look like pocket-sized autumn ammo, and the tree knows exactly what it is doing.

The real trick is hiding inside the shine. Conkers contain bitter compounds called saponins, which help make them less appealing to hungry pests.

Every fall, the tree drops glossy brown seeds wrapped in spiked green armor, like nature designed a medieval security system and made it seasonal.

The drawer trick has old-school charm too. One conker tucked beside sweaters can feel like mothballs, a tiny moisture guard, and a forest-scented keepsake all at once.

It is not just decoration. It is chemistry wearing a polished brown helmet. Nature rarely wastes a good disguise. – A Facebook post by 'Strangest Facts'

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Saturday, 4 July 2026

The Virtue of Labour

People underestimate the virtue of work. Work is wholesome for the body and good for the mind. It keeps you busy, and your mind active, or idleness which usually comes from nothing to do, may lead you to do what is worse than nothing.

Work is beneficial for us. It organises life. It gives structure and discipline to life. Work gives you a sense of usefulness and accomplishment. Most importantly, having something to do keeps boredom at bay.

The trick is to find something you enjoy doing. They say find something you enjoy doing and you don’t have to work another day in your life. It wouldn’t be work if you enjoy what you do.

It is well researched that unemployment is connected with negative health consequences. People who are unemployed can suffer psychological and social distress. Unemployment leads to stress-related illnesses and a lowered self-esteem and also uncertainty about the future, financial instability, and loss of vocational identity.

It is through strife, through labour that we advance in life, and move on to better things. By persistent labour man may attain excellence. There is no better pride, and sense of accomplishment than enjoying the fruits of our own labour.

Labour is the root of riches.

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Friday, 3 July 2026

The Deep Sea

“You live and learn. Or you don't live long.” - Robert A. Heinlein

There is so much in the deep sea that we are unaware of. Here are some trivia, fun facts on the creatures of the sea, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Amazing World’, ‘Wild Wonders’, ‘David Attenborough’ etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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Orcas, often called killer whales, can copy sounds they hear around them. They do not only make the calls they are born with; they can imitate other animals and even noises that sound a bit like humans. Scientists have recorded orcas copying whistles, clicks, and strange squeaks, and sometimes mimicking sounds from boats or other sea animals. This talent makes them seem playful, curious, and very smart.

This copying skill comes from something called vocal learning, which is rare in the animal world. Vocal learning means an animal can listen to new sounds and learn to repeat them instead of relying only on fixed calls given at birth. Only a few kinds of animals, like some birds, dolphins, and humans, can do this. For orcas, vocal learning lets them pick up local calls and accents from other members of their group.

Vocal learning helps orcas in many ways. It makes their communication more flexible, so they can share information about food and keep strong social bonds. It also shows they can adapt to new noises in their home, but it means human noise can change their sound world too. Studying their sound copying helps people understand orcas better and can guide efforts to protect them. – A Facebook post by ‘Amazing World’

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The lionfish is the most successful invasive predator in Atlantic history. Not because it's the biggest. Not because it's the fastest. Because it weaponized its own offspring. A single female releases 2 million eggs every year. That number sounds fake. It's not.

She spawns every 4 days, year-round, in warm waters. While native fish breed once or twice annually, the lionfish breeds like a factory. But the numbers alone aren't the nightmare. The nightmare is the chemical shield.

Each egg sac is coated in a noxious deterrent. Fish that try to eat it immediately spit it out. It tastes so foul that predators learn to avoid egg sacs entirely after a single attempt. No native predator has developed a taste for them. After millions of years of evolution, nothing eats lionfish eggs except other lionfish.

The eggs drift for 25 days before hatching. During those three and a half weeks, they are completely untouchable. A floating, invisible army dispersing across the Atlantic, carried by currents, settling on reefs that have never seen anything like them.

Native groupers don't stand a chance. Snappers don't stand a chance. The lionfish has no predators in the Atlantic because nothing evolved alongside it. The local fish don't recognize it as a threat. By the time they figure it out, it's too late. The reef is already theirs.

The lionfish isn't winning because it's stronger. It's winning because it turned its own eggs into biological weapons. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Boxer crab, often called the pom-pom crab, is a tiny reef-dwelling crustacean found in warm Indo-Pacific waters. Despite its small size, it has developed an unusual survival strategy that makes it far more intimidating to predators.

Instead of relying only on claws for defense, boxer crabs carry small sea anemone in each claw. The anemones contain stinging cells that help the crab capture food and discourage predators from attacking.

When threatened, the crab waves the anemones like defensive weapons, using the stinging tentacles to protect itself. Researchers have also observed that if one anemone is lost, the crab may split the remaining one into two pieces and continue carrying them while the anemones regenerate.

This remarkable partnership between crab and anemone is considered an example of symbiosis, where both organisms benefit from living together. Although tiny and delicate in appearance, the boxer crab survives by turning borrowed defenses into an effective survival tool. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Gliding silently beneath the frozen waters of Antarctica, the leopard seal moves with incredible speed, precision, and power through drifting ice.

With its sleek spotted coat, massive jaws, and razor-sharp teeth, this extraordinary marine predator is perfectly adapted for life in one of the harshest environments on Earth.

Hunting beneath floating ice sheets, the leopard seal uses stealth and agility to ambush fish, penguins, and other prey in the icy Southern Ocean.

Both graceful and intimidating, it stands among the most skilled hunters of Antarctica’s frozen wilderness. – A Facebook post by David Attenborough

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Deep beneath the ocean's surface, where sunlight never reaches, lives a creature that evolution designed to hunt in absolute darkness.

The giant squid's eye is the size of a dinner plate — up to 35 centimeters across. It has no iris, no eyelid. It simply exists, open and unblinking, scanning for the faintest flicker of bioluminescence. It can spot a sperm whale from hundreds of meters away. It can see in conditions where humans would be blind.

But the eye is not the nightmare. Each tentacle is covered in rows of chitinous hooks. Not suckers, not pads — hooks. Curved, serrated, designed to dig into flesh and anchor there like a harpoon. The prey thrashes. The hooks sink deeper. The tentacles retract, dragging the victim toward a beak that can snap through bone.

There is no escape.

The glass squid is transparent. Its body contains no pigment, no hiding place. What you see is what you get — a floating digestive system wrapped in a few millimeters of tissue.

When it eats, you can watch.

The prey enters the beak. It travels down the esophagus. It arrives in the digestive gland, a cigar‑shaped organ visible through the translucent mantle. You can see the meal break down in real time. You can see the squid process its food as it drifts through the abyss, digesting in plain sight.

A hunter that cannot hide. A predator that does not need to.

This creature has been in our oceans for millions of years. It has no natural predators at its adult size — because nothing is large enough to eat it. The only animal that challenges it is the sperm whale, locked in an evolutionary arms race that gave the squid its giant, all‑seeing eye.

And you've probably never seen one. Because it lives 3,000 feet down, in a world where humans cannot follow. But it knows you're up there. – A Facebook post by ‘Wild Wonders’

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Thursday, 2 July 2026

Earth

Earth has lost about half its wildlife populations in the past forty years, a decline tracked across thousands of species worldwide.

Monitoring of thousands of species shows average wildlife populations have fallen about fifty percent since the 1970s, meaning fewer individuals not total loss. Habitat change from farming and development is the main reason, with freshwater groups down over eighty percent. These shifts affect pollination and water quality, a pace scientists note is far faster than past natural changes.

Images are from Facebook pages.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Lupinus

Lupinus, commonly known as lupin, lupine, or regionally bluebonnet, is a genus of plants in the legume family Fabaceae. The genus includes over 199 species. - Wikipedia

I saw these lovely lupine flowers in the Flower Dome during my recent visit. Their colourful blooms on spikes caught my attention.

According to information on the signboards, Lupines are generally easy to grow. Once they are established, they are fast growing and require very little maintenance. They are classic, hardy cottage-garden plants. Hence, caring for them requires minimal effort:

They thrive in cool, sunny spots with well-drained soil that stays slightly moist. They don’t mind a bit of sun as long as not too much. Their lifespan is typically 2 to 6 years, as they are considered short-lived perennials.

They are widely cultivated both as a food source and as ornamental plants. The flowers are produced in dense or open whorls on an erect spike. Blooms open gradually from the bottom of the stalk to the top. The whole spike lasts for about 3 to 5 weeks before fading.

Lupine flowers primarily symbolize imagination, creativity, and transformation. They are also powerful emblems of renewal, inner strength, and overcoming adversity. 

The pea-like flowers have an upper standard, or banner, two lateral wings, and two lower petals fused into a keel. The flower shape has inspired common names such as bluebonnets and quaker bonnets.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Development In Science

“In essence, science is a perpetual search for an intelligent and integrated comprehension of the world we live in.” - Cornelius Bernardus Van Neil

Interesting developments on the Science front – courtesy of Facebook pages, ‘Dr Erikson’, ‘Daily Insider’, ‘Today I Learned’, ‘Science and Facts’, etc… Although trials, experiments and studies show promise, I guess it will be some time yet before they are a reality.

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A pioneering clinical trial has shown that adult stem cell transplants can safely restore vision in people with advanced dry age‑related macular degeneration (AMD). Researchers used retinal pigment epithelial stem cells derived from adult postmortem eye tissue and transplanted them into the eyes of participants. In the initial low‑dose group, patients experienced measurable improvements in the treated eye, gaining the ability to read additional letters on standard vision tests, while the untreated eye showed no change.

The study focused on dry AMD, which occurs when retinal pigment epithelial cells malfunction and die, leading to progressive loss of central vision. Transplanted stem cells were limited to maturing into these critical retinal cells, helping replenish damaged tissue in the macula. Safety was confirmed, with no serious inflammation or tumor formation reported. The early success demonstrates that even in severely affected patients, replacing lost retinal cells can improve visual function.

Researchers are now monitoring participants who received higher doses and plan to expand the trial into later stages if no safety concerns arise. This work highlights the potential of regenerative medicine to not only slow degeneration but also restore sight in conditions where existing therapies only prevent further decline. – A Facebook post

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A study published in Oncotarget examined the effect of an aqueous dandelion root extract on colon cancer cells. Researchers found that the extract triggered programmed cell death in more than 95 percent of colon cancer cells within 48 hours, and notably did so regardless of the cancer cells' p53 status, a gene often involved in cancer resistance. Just as importantly, the extract did not harm normal, non-cancerous colon cells exposed to the same doses, suggesting it acted selectively. By comparison, a standard chemotherapy combination tested alongside it affected both cancerous and healthy cells.

The researchers also tested the extract in mouse models carrying human colon cancer tissue. Oral administration of the extract slowed tumor growth by more than 90 percent in these models. Analysis suggested the extract worked by activating several different cell death pathways at once, which the researchers attributed to its complex mixture of natural compounds including alpha-amyrin, beta-amyrin, lupeol, and taraxasterol. Interestingly, the individual compounds were less effective on their own than the whole extract, pointing to a combined effect.

It is essential to be clear about what this research does and does not show. These results come from cancer cells studied in the laboratory and from mice, not from human patients. Dandelion root extract has not been shown to treat or cure cancer in people, and it is not a substitute for conventional cancer treatment. Anyone facing a cancer diagnosis should always work with their medical team, as delaying proven treatment can be dangerous.

What the study does offer is a promising direction for future research. The hope among the researchers is that natural compounds like these could one day be developed into non-toxic options that complement existing therapies, but confirming that will require much more study, including clinical trials in humans. - A Facebook post by Dr Erikson

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Scientists have created what they call a "ghost heart" — and it may be the most important medical breakthrough of our lifetime.

Here is how it works. They take a pig heart, wash it gently with a mild detergent until every single cell dissolves away. The blood drains out. The color fades. What is left behind is a ghostly white protein scaffold — the architectural skeleton of a heart, perfectly intact, right down to the tiniest blood vessel channels.

Then they inject it with the patient's own stem cells.

The cells find their way into the scaffold, settle in, and begin to grow. Scientists have already watched these hybrid hearts start beating in the lab.

The reason this changes everything is rejection. Every year, thousands of transplant patients die not because they did not get an organ — but because their body attacked it. With a ghost heart rebuilt from your own stem cells, there is nothing foreign for your immune system to fight. No rejection. No lifelong anti-rejection drugs.

Right now, over 103,000 Americans are on the transplant waiting list. 13 people die every day waiting for an organ that never comes. One in three heart patients dies before a donor heart even becomes available.

And here is the part that should be on the front page of every newspaper. In June 2025, this technology was used on a real human patient for the first time — not the heart yet, but a bioengineered liver built using the exact same method. It worked. The organ performed all the functions of a healthy liver in a patient who had no other options.

The heart is next. Researchers say a fully transplantable ghost heart could be ready within the next 6 to 7 years. We may be the last generation that dies waiting for a donor organ. – A Facebook post

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The effort to utilize induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to treat Parkinson's disease has advanced from experimental research into a historic clinical reality.

In March 2026, Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare made history by granting the world's first conditional marketing approval for an iPSC-derived treatment for Parkinson's disease, brand-named Amchepry.

Developed by Sumitomo Pharma in collaboration with Dr. Jun Takahashi at Kyoto University, this milestone represents a monumental shift from chemically managing symptoms to actively rebuilding the brain's cellular infrastructure.

The standard treatment pathway relies on the landmark physician-led clinical trial framework conducted at Kyoto University Hospital.

This therapeutic strategy utilizes high-grade iPS cells sourced from healthy donors, which are meticulously reprogrammed and guided to mature into specialized dopamine-producing neural progenitor cells.

Using highly precise neurosurgical stereotactic navigation, surgeons implant between 5 million and 10 million of these lab-grown cells directly into the bilateral putamen—the central region of the brain where natural dopamine neurons have been destroyed by the disease.

Data from the two-year clinical monitoring period confirmed the profound efficacy and baseline safety of this regenerative approach. Out of the patients evaluated, the majority experienced significant, measurable motor function improvements on standard clinical scales while off their traditional medications.

High-resolution PET imaging confirmed that the transplanted cells not only successfully survived without abnormal cell proliferation or tumor formation, but aggressively increased dopamine synthesis by up to 63.5% in high-dose recipients.

Under Japan's specialized conditional approval pathway, the medicine is now available to eligible patients while researchers continue to monitor long-term safety and tracking data over the next seven years, offering a transformative blueprint for the future of regenerative medicine. – A Facebook post by ‘Daily Insider’

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Researchers in South Korea have achieved a massive breakthrough in eye health by 3D-printing artificial corneas.

Using a unique "bioink" made from natural eye tissue and stem cells, they can replicate the delicate, complex layers of a human eye.

A key part of their success was using a technique called "shear stress" during the printing process. This ensures that tiny fibers line up perfectly, matching the structure of a real cornea. Older artificial eyes were often made of plastic, which the body frequently rejected. Because this new version uses natural materials, it is clear, flexible, and much safer for patients.

This discovery is a game-changer for millions of people suffering from vision loss.

Right now, there is a severe shortage of human eye donors, leaving many on long waiting lists. By growing these parts in a lab, doctors can provide life-changing transplants to anyone in need without waiting for a donor.

This blend of technology and medicine offers a bright future for those seeking to regain their sight. It is a powerful example of how science can solve ancient problems with modern tools. One day soon, everyone may see more clearly. – A Facebook post by ‘Daily Insider’

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Monday, 29 June 2026

Humorous Quips

Quips – a witty or funny observation or response, usually made on the spur of the moment, or it could be a clever, usually taunting remark.

The following quips are funny, and at the same time, there is truth in them. Maybe that is why they make us laugh – because we are able to see the humour, and relate to what’s being said. Sometimes, we find it funny because we are caught out, the quip took us by surprise.

I hope there will be at least a few in this collection that bring on a smile. Remember the ones you like, and go make your friends laugh.

May your days be filled with laughter.

Image created on Canva
You know you’re an alcoholic when you misplace things for like a decade. - Paul Williams

To err is human, but to really foul things up you need a computer. - Paul Ehrlich

It is easier to get older than it is to get wiser. - Unknown

Exercise is quite majestic when seen from a distance. - Bauvard

A man falls in love through his eyes, a woman through her ears. - Woodrow Wyatt

Of all the things I’ve lost, it’s my mind I miss the most. - Ozzy Osbourne

Change is not a four letter word … but often your reaction to it is! - Jeffrey Gitomer

You know it’s love when you want to keep holding hands even after you’re sweaty. - Unknown

Getting struck by lightning is like winning the lottery, except of course, not as lucky. - Jarod Kintz

I am a friend of the working man, and I would rather be his friend, than be one. - Clarence Darrow

Few men are admired by their servants. - Michel de Montaigne

The world has grown suspicious of anything that looks like a happily married life! - Oscar Wilde

Image created on Canva

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Sunday, 28 June 2026

Quantum Physics

Quantum physics is a branch of science that studies the smallest things in the universe. You might think that the smallest things are atoms, which are the building blocks of everything around us. But quantum physics goes even smaller than atoms and explores the tiny particles and waves that make up atoms.

The following information are courtesy of Facebook pages - ‘Quantum Science’, ‘Mind's Canvas’, ‘Hashem AI-Ghaili’, ‘Science and Facts’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

Quantum physics reveals that reality isn’t as fixed as it seems. On the tiniest scales, the simple act of observation can influence how particles behave a phenomenon known as the observer effect. Some researchers and psychologists draw an inspiring parallel to daily life, suggesting our focus, beliefs, and expectations may subtly influence how we experience reality.

In this view, thoughts are more than passing ideas, they’re forms of energy that interact with the world around us. When you focus on growth instead of fear, or potential instead of limitation, your mindset may align with outcomes that reflect those frequencies.

Therapeutic approaches like Matrix Reimprinting explore this link between mind and matter by helping people reframe emotional memories and release stored stress. It’s a space where science, psychology, and energy awareness meet showing that how we perceive the world might just help shape what we live. – A Facebook post by ‘Quantum Science’

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Brain may be far more extraordinary than we ever imagined. Recent research suggests that neurons don’t just communicate through electrical and chemical signals — they may also interact via the fabric of space-time.

This discovery positions the brain as a “quantum antenna,” capable of receiving and transmitting information in ways that transcend traditional neural pathways. Quantum-level interactions could help explain consciousness, intuition, and complex cognitive processes that conventional models struggle to describe.

If neurons operate through space-time, it could reshape neuroscience, providing new insights into memory storage, decision-making, and the mind-body connection. The findings open exciting possibilities for understanding consciousness and developing advanced neurotechnology.

While still theoretical and requiring further research, this work challenges conventional views of the brain and emphasizes the deep mysteries of human cognition. The quantum nature of the mind may be the next frontier in science.

Sources: Nature Communications; Frontiers in Neuroscience; Journal of Cognitive Science; Harvard Medical School Brain Research

- A Facebook post by ‘Mind’s Canvas’

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What you perceive as the outer world is but a projection of the inner order — what Bohm called the Implicate. Within this deeper order, there are no isolated events or independent forms. Every atom, every breath, every thought is a holographic reflection of the whole. The movement of a single photon whispers the pattern of galaxies; the rhythm of your heartbeat mirrors the pulse of the cosmos.

In this view, separation is illusion. The fabric of reality is an unbroken continuum, folding and unfolding within itself. The seen arises from the unseen like ripples emerging from a hidden ocean of potential. What we call “matter” is simply the dance of the invisible geometry of consciousness made visible for a moment.

To live with awareness of the implicate order is to remember that everything you touch, think, or love is already part of you. Every act of kindness ripples through the totality. Every intention alters the symmetry of the whole.

The key, then, is coherence — to attune your inner field so that what you unfold into the world resonates with harmony, truth, and beauty. For in the deeper structure of reality, nothing is lost; all is enfolded into everything. – A Facebook post

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Teleportation just moved closer to reality…

The dream of 'Star Trek' style travel moves closer to reality, but it comes with a terrifying existential catch.

Scientists at the University of Rochester and Purdue University have reached a major milestone in quantum mechanics, demonstrating that teleportation may be possible between electrons. Building on decades of research that successfully teleported photons, this National Science Foundation - funded breakthrough utilizes quantum entanglement — a phenomenon where particles remain connected across vast distances. Unlike science fiction transporters that move physical objects, this process transmits the precise quantum information of a state to a new location, effectively reconstructing the subject using the building blocks available at the destination.

While the potential for instant space travel is tantalizing, the human element introduces profound ethical and philosophical dilemmas. Because the process requires scanning every atom and reconstructing that data elsewhere, the original version of the subject is destroyed.

This raises a haunting question: would a teleported human truly be the same individual, or merely a perfect biological copy?

As physicists like John Clauser warn that such technology might equate to personal 'death' followed by replication, society must eventually decide if the convenience of the stars is worth the risk of losing our fundamental selves. – A Facebook post by Hashem AI-Ghaili

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Scientists just captured evidence that matter is literally birthed from the "nothingness" of empty space.

For decades, physicists have theorized that the vacuum of space is not truly empty, but rather a restless sea of energy where 'virtual particles' flicker in and out of existence. Now, researchers at Brookhaven National Laboratory have provided the first direct evidence of this phenomenon. Using the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), the team smashed protons together at nearly the speed of light. This extreme collision provided the raw energy necessary to 'spark' these fleeting quantum fluctuations, transforming them from invisible background noise into real, detectable matter.

The breakthrough came when scientists analyzed the spin — a quantum magnetic property — of newly formed particles called lambda hyperons. They discovered that when these particles emerged in pairs, their spins were perfectly aligned, exactly matching the behavior of the virtual pairs that inhabit the quantum vacuum.

This 'quantum twin' signature proves that the matter didn't just appear by chance; it was pulled directly from the fabric of space itself. The discovery suggests that the ingredients of stars, planets, and people ultimately emerge from a vacuum that is far more alive than we ever imagined. – A Facebook post by ‘Quantum Science’

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Saturday, 27 June 2026

The World of Plants

“No matter what else, we can be daily grateful we have been put in touch with knowledge, for its source is inexhaustible”. – Unknown

A peek into the world of plants. Here are some trivia, and fun facts about plants, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Plant Care Today’ ‘Colours of Nature’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.

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The moment you drop a spent tea bag into the soil, something ancient wakes up. Within hours, fungal threads begin threading through the damp leaves, starting the quiet work of transformation that gardeners have forgotten how to see.

Tea leaves break down differently than most kitchen scraps. They're already partially decomposed from the brewing process, so microbes can access their nutrients almost immediately. But here's the part that surprised me after decades of composting: the bag itself becomes scaffolding for an entire underground ecosystem. Beneficial bacteria colonize the fabric. Microscopic nematodes graze on the bacteria. Fungi extend their networks outward, connecting your tea bag to plant roots inches away, forming highways for nutrient exchange that no fertilizer company can replicate.

The nitrogen in those soggy leaves doesn't blast into the soil all at once. It seeps out gradually as organisms digest the plant matter, releasing nutrition in sync with what your plants can actually absorb. I've watched seedlings planted near buried tea bags develop root systems twice as dense as their neighbors. Not because of magic, but because consistent low-level feeding lets roots explore instead of scrambling.

And that moisture-holding trick? Tea leaves can absorb several times their weight in water. They act like tiny underground sponges, swelling when you water and slowly releasing moisture back into the surrounding soil as it dries. For container plants especially, this buffering effect can mean the difference between a plant that tolerates your schedule and one that punishes every missed watering day.

The earthworms notice within days. I've unearthed tea bags after a week and found them surrounded by worm castings and tunnels. Something about the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio calls them in like a dinner bell. While they're there, they're restructuring your soil, creating channels for air and water that make everything grow better.

The tannins left in used tea leaves don't just add flavor to your morning cup. In soil, they create conditions that certain pests find genuinely unpleasant. Not toxic, not harmful — just annoying enough that aphids and fungus gnats choose easier meals elsewhere. I've used this for years on indoor plants that attract those tiny flying irritants, and it works with a gentleness that chemicals can't match.

What strikes me most is the timing. You finish your tea, you're standing by a plant anyway, and the whole transaction takes five seconds. No special equipment, no Amazon order, no driving to the garden center. Just awareness that what looks like waste is actually raw material for collaboration between you and the billion organisms living in every handful of soil.

This is recycling before the truck arrives, before the bin, before the whole industrial apparatus. Straight from cup to earth, from your small habit to a plant's root zone, from yesterday's breakfast to next week's growth. The fungi don't care about your sustainability goals — they just know opportunity when they sense it. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You lean over a jar of lavender buds floating in golden oil, and the scent hits you before you've even unscrewed the lid. That's not poetry — that's your olfactory bulb sending chemical messages straight into your limbic system, the part of your brain that controls emotion and memory before your thinking mind even knows what happened. Scientists have clocked it: linalool and linalyl acetate, the two primary compounds in lavender, register in your nervous system within seconds of inhalation. Aspirin has to travel through your stomach, into your bloodstream, past your liver. Lavender just walks right in through the front door.

What you're creating when you submerge those dried flowers in carrier oil isn't a beauty product. It's a biological conversation. The plant cells release their volatile oils into the fatty medium, and that oil becomes a delivery system your skin actually recognizes. Our ancestors didn't have double-blind studies, but they knew what worked. They packed lavender into olive oil and let the Mediterranean sun do the extracting. Temples used it. Midwives carried it. It was medicine that smelled like summer.

The method matters more than you'd think. Heat the oil past 120 degrees and you're not speeding things up — you're breaking molecular bonds that took the plant all season to build. The slow infusion, two to four weeks on a sunny windowsill, gives those compounds time to migrate intact. Every few days you shake the jar gently, and you're helping the process along, coaxing the chemistry without forcing it. The quick method works when life demands it, but patience makes potency.

Here's what most people misunderstand: this isn't essential oil. Essential oils are steam-distilled concentrates, so powerful they can irritate skin on contact. What you're making is an infusion, closer to a very strong tea than a pure extract. The whole flowers steeping in a carrier oil create something that's both therapeutic and gentle, something you can smooth directly onto pulse points or tired feet without a second thought. It's moisturizing because of the carrier oil, calming because of the lavender, and stable because you've kept water completely out of the equation.

The first time you dab it on your wrists before bed, you'll notice your shoulders drop. That's not placebo. That's linalool binding to neurotransmitter receptors, the same ones that medications target, but without the side effects or the prescription pad. Massage it into the soles of your feet and your whole body softens. Smooth it through the ends of your hair and you're sealing in moisture while surrounding yourself with a scent that tells your nervous system the day is done.

Stored in dark glass away from heat, this infusion holds its power for six months to a year. You'll know it's still good because it smells like calm, not rancid or musty. If moisture sneaks in, the whole batch will tell you—cloudiness, off smells, the signs are clear. But make it right, with bone-dry flowers and clean technique, and you've just put ancient medicine in a modern bottle.

You don't need a laboratory or a license. You need flowers, oil, time, and a little bit of trust that plants have been doing this far longer than we've been trying to decode them. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Pick up that supermarket rosemary and sniff. You're inhaling a chemical defense system millions of years in the making. Those oils that smell divine to us? They're the plant's molecular armor against browsers and bugs. One stem by your door transforms into four tools at once.

I planted my first doorway rosemary because I needed something that could survive neglect in a spot where the afternoon sun bounced off white siding like a convection oven. What I got was a living threshold guardian that's been earning its keep in ways I never anticipated.

Here's what happens when you brush past rosemary on your way out the door. Those needle-like leaves hold pockets of volatile compounds — cineole, camphor, pinene—evolved to discourage hungry animals in the Mediterranean scrublands. When you disturb the foliage, even slightly, you rupture microscopic oil glands. The molecules go airborne instantly.

Your olfactory system picks them up within seconds. These same compounds cross the blood-brain barrier and interact with neurotransmitter systems that govern memory formation and stress response. Researchers measured this in controlled studies and found memory performance jumping by three-quarters when people worked in rooms scented with rosemary. Cortisol levels dropped within minutes of exposure.

You're not imagining the mental clarity. You're experiencing the same chemical conversation that kept ancient herbivores from decimating rosemary stands thousands of years ago. The plant speaks in molecules we happen to find pleasant and useful.

Meanwhile, the insects at your entrance are receiving a completely different message. That aromatic cloud you find invigorating reads as hostile territory to mosquitoes, flies, and gnats. They navigate by scent, and rosemary's signature overwhelms their receptors. It's not a poison — it's a proclamation that this zone belongs to a plant they'd rather avoid.

Watch what happens on summer evenings when porch lights draw every flying thing in the neighborhood. The rosemary-flanked entrance stays noticeably clearer than bare doorways. The plant's working a perimeter you can't see, broadcasting in a language you don't speak but absolutely benefit from.

Then there's the practical magic of having culinary-grade herbs within arm's reach of your kitchen. When you snip a four-inch sprig for roasted vegetables, you're harvesting at peak potency — oils fully concentrated, flavor undimmed by packaging and transport and time. The scent from fresh-cut rosemary fills your kitchen in a way dried herbs simply cannot replicate.

And here's the remarkable part: that harvesting actually strengthens the plant. Each cut triggers branching below the cut point. You're shaping a denser, bushier specimen while gathering dinner ingredients. The plant responds to pruning the way it responded to browsers in its native habitat — by throwing out more growth, more leaf surface, more oil production.

Rosemary asks for what most plants would call poverty conditions. Fast-draining soil that doesn't hold moisture. Full sun beating down for hours. Irregular watering once the roots establish. Give it rich earth and frequent irrigation, and the roots sit in moisture they never evolved to handle. The whole system softens, weakens, becomes vulnerable to rot.

Plant it lean and mean. Let it dry between waterings. Stand back.

I've watched the same two specimens frame my front entrance for eight years now. They've weathered summer droughts and winter freezes, shape-shifted from gangly starts to sturdy shrubs. Every departure and arrival passes through their aromatic corridor.

Four functions from one plant: brain chemistry adjustment, pest deterrent, culinary garden, and threshold marker that stays green through seasons when everything else surrenders its leaves. All while asking for less attention than nearly anything else you could grow.

The world forgot to mention that the best plants often do their finest work in the margins we overlook—like the space between inside and out, where a woody herb from rocky hillsides finds its strange perfection. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Your snake plant isn't dying when it droops — it's redirecting the show. Those bent leaves? Still photosynthesizing like champs while the real action happens underground.

When snake plants sense root trouble (usually from overwatering or compacted soil), they make a strategic choice: stop spending energy on rigid leaves and funnel everything into building a fresh root system. That green blade flopping over is still producing sugars, still feeding the recovery process you can't see.

Here's the brilliant part about staking them — you're essentially giving your plant a two-for-one deal. The stake holds leaves in optimal light position so photosynthesis runs at full capacity, while roots below get uninterrupted access to all that energy for repair work.

It takes 4-8 weeks for new roots to establish enough that leaves regain their natural rigidity. During that time, those "splinted" leaves are pulling double duty. The plant that looks like it's struggling? It's actually already solving its own problem. Your stake just makes the math easier.

What's the longest you've supported a recovering snake plant before it stood up on its own again? – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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You're standing in a forest, and something's chewing on a Douglas fir twenty feet to your left. The tree knows it. Within hours, the Douglas fir on your right knows it too — and it's already flooding its needles with defensive compounds before a single pest touches its bark.

This isn't telepathy. It's fungus doing what fungus does best: connecting everything.

Mycorrhizal fungi wrap around tree roots in a living embrace. The tree feeds the fungus sugars it made from sunlight. The fungus feeds the tree minerals and water it pulled from distant soil. But information moves through those same threads — chemical sentences passed root to root, tree to tree, in a language we're only beginning to decode.

When a Douglas fir gets attacked by beetles or caterpillars, it doesn't just defend itself. It releases chemical signals into the fungal network, and those signals travel. Not fast by our standards — maybe a centimeter an hour through the soil — but fast enough. In the time it takes you to bake a loaf of bread, a distress call can ripple outward to trees standing well beyond the danger zone.

The neighbors respond. They begin manufacturing tannins, terpenes, enzymes that make their foliage harder to digest. They're preparing for a siege that hasn't arrived. And because they started early, they're far less likely to suffer catastrophic damage when the insects finally do show up.

Scientists proved this network exists by severing it. They isolated test trees, cutting them off from underground fungal contact, then simulated attacks on nearby Douglas firs. The disconnected trees showed no response. No preemptive defense. No warning received. They stood there biochemically blind while their neighbors sounded alarms they couldn't hear.

One mature Douglas fir links to around forty-seven others on average. Imagine that — a single tree in conversation with nearly fifty companions, sharing resources in good times and warnings in bad. Your garden operates on versions of this same principle. The tomato plant you think is solitary is likely networked to the beans, the squash, maybe even the oregano, all trading information and nutrients through fungal filaments finer than a human hair.

This is why I never yank out every last root when I'm clearing spent plants. Those pathways took time to build. The mycelium remembers. Leave some structure behind, and next season's seedlings plug into an intelligence that was already there, humming beneath the surface, ready to connect them to something much larger than themselves.

You think you're planting individuals. You're actually planting a neighborhood. And neighborhoods talk. – A Facebook post by ‘Plant Care Today’

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Friday, 26 June 2026

Snapdragons

Antirrhinum is a genus of plants in the Plantaginaceae family, commonly known as dragon flowers or snapdragons because of the flowers' fancied resemblance to the face of a dragon. They are also sometimes called toadflax or dog flowers. - Wikipedia

They were amongst the flower display in the Flower Dome recently.

The bright, rich coloured blooms of the snapdragons are gorgeous. They stand out in a garden, and are favoured as cut flowers.

Snapdragons grow on tall, upright spikes, each bearing numerous blooms arranged in a staggered pattern. Their flowers are bilaterally symmetrical and tubular, featuring two distinct ‘lips’, designed so only the buffest bees can open them.

If you gently squeeze the base of the flower, it snaps open and shuts like a dragon’s mouth. I guess that’s where the name ‘snapdragon’ comes from. After the flowers wither, what remains are dry seed capsules that hauntingly resemble little skulls.

Snapdragons grow equally well in containers and pots as in beds. They usually live for about three years, attracting not only hummingbirds but also butterflies and bees, making them ideal for a pollinator garden.

The leaves and flowers have been traditionally used as poultices for various inflammations. Crushed snapdragon flowers were also used to treat burns, rashes, and insect bites.

The snapdragon flower is a symbol of strength and graciousness.

You can click on the picture for a better view.

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Thank you for stopping by. Follow me if you find my posts interesting. If you know of anyone who might appreciate them, do recommend the blog to them. Cheers!