http://iglovequotes.net/
This is so me.😂👌
People keep posting ‘what’s REALLY in your food’ articles like I’m gonna stop eating whatever it’s about lmao Listen, death is coming. Death is coming. Pass me a hot dog.
Viktor Schauberger - Living Water, 1982. Our Earth is the planet of water. Seventy percent of the world’s surface is covered by water. Our bodies are about two-thirds water. It is essential to all life. Yet, our present science understands little of its real nature. The naturalist Viktor Schauberger called it a living organism, insisting that in its various forms, as blood, sap or biological water, it is the basis of all life. As a young man, Schauberger had a remarkable experience while sitting by a rushing stream in his pristine Alpine refuge. Listening to its vivacious music, he intuited how water needs to move and behave in order to stay healthy. Still water is passive; it is amorphous and apparently lifeless. As soon as it begins to move, it is filled with surfaces that define little structures, convoluted in form, and with dancing vortical shapes. The nature of water is to move. When it is active it comes alive; in movement it fulfills its potential, which is to bring life. In classical times water was stored in egg-shaped amphorae, because the egg shape stimulates fluids to move and circulate, which is why Nature uses it in emerging life forms. A number of researchers claim that water has a memory; when we think we have ‘purified’ water of the chemicals and hormones we have mindlessly thrown in, in order to make it ‘safe’ to drink, the energy of these contaminants remain, polluting our energy bodies in the same way that chemicals affect our physical bodies. Because of its nature, water sacrifices itself entirely to the environment, for good or for ill. In order to maintain its quality, water needs to behave like it does in a natural stream, dancing and cavorting in spirals and vortices, constantly moving sinuously in capillaries or circulating within its storage chambers. The vortex introduces more complex molecular structures that can carry higher etheric energy which will drive the pathogenic or harmful organisms to the water’s edge where they are immobilised by the aggressive oxygen to be recycled later. People mocked Viktor when he insisted that water behaves like a living organism. When it has reached maturity water displays amazing properties. He showed how, when it is vibrant and healthy, it pulsates, twists and spirals in a very specific way that maintains its vitality and purity, enabling it to fulfill its function as an energy channel and a conveyor of nutrients and waste for all organisms. If you watch water streaming down an inclined road after a shower of rain, or a rivulet on the sloping beach running into the sea, we will notice how it pushes down in a jerky rhythm, as pulsations. That is because water is alive – it actually does pulsate, just as blood pulsates through the veins and arteries of the body.
the new star wars looks so good
“The description that General Relativity puts forth — that of matter telling space how to curve, and curved space telling matter how to move — needs to be augmented to include an uncertain position that has a probability distribution to it. Whether gravity is quantized or not is still an unknown, and has everything to do with the outcome of such a hypothetical experiment. How an uncertain position translates into a gravitational field, exactly, remains an unsolved problem on the road to a full quantum theory of gravity. The principles that underlie quantum mechanics must be universal, but how those principles apply to gravity, and in particular to a particle passing through a double slit, is a great unknown of our time.”
Perhaps the greatest holy grail in theoretical physics is the quest for a quantum theory of gravity. For all the gravitational phenomena we’ve ever measured, observed, or subjected to a test, General Relativity has come through with predictions that match what we’ve seen exactly. For all the other physical phenomena in the Universe, the rules of quantum field theory and the Standard Model of particle physics match up perfectly. But what would happen if we tried to apply General Relativity to an inherently quantum phenomenon? In particular, what happens if we fire a single particle, like an electron, through a double slit? What happens to that particle’s gravitational field?
Believe it or not, measuring that (or something analogous to it) would tell us whether gravity is a fundamentally quantum force or not! Come learn why this is arguably the most important, first stop on the road to quantum gravity.
PSA: Just because I’m a lesbian, doesn’t mean that I’m attracted to every female that I see.
i donated blood today. feels good to finally be somebody’s type.
gabbie hanna
all songs can be found on my studying playlist here
Americano/Maths and Sciences: ‘Getting Along’ by The Magic Gang
dusty lines of chalk on the scratched board, burning eyes and jumbled words, lost crumbs between keyboard cracks, thursday night pints paired with pub chips, thick condensation resting on bus windows, creased shirts you cannot steam out
Iced Latte/Fine Art, Film and Photography: ‘Tell Me It’s Real’ by Seafret
vintage jackets stained with lost memories, falling in love with people in coffee shops, freckled cheeks and star-stained eyes, hanging earrings and layered necklaces, glasses on wine on rooftops the night before an exam, personalised spotify playlists that make your heart flutter
Cappuccino/Philosophy, Sociology and Psychology: ‘Fancy Shoes’ by The Walters
lukewarm light leaking into bedrooms, rhythmic typing in the library, splatters of caffeine on lined paper, melting iced cubes in frosted drinks, grass stains on knees, pencil sketches taped to your wall and admired, golden hearts and curious minds, sharp horns from playing devil’s advocate
Mocha/Creative Writing, Drama and Fashion: ‘girl in new york’ by ROLE MODEL
structured jackets and wildlife hair, crying to music under the sorrowful layer of night, bottomless cocktails in neon-lit bars, thick biro pens dotted in every bag you own, chunky boots on cobbled floors, red lipstick that you reapply without caution
Espresso/History and English Literature: ‘Adeline’ by alt-J
scribbled kisses on the bottom of letters, silky coffee washing down your throat, cheap red wine in crystal glasses, fountain pen annotations along another’s words, prayers and wishes to your favourite greek goddess, spending your entire budget on gold-embossed book covers
Flat White/Zoology, Geography and Geology: ‘Paper Birds’ by Greer
spewing random facts to everyone’s enjoyment, art postcards taped to bedroom walls, warm cookies paired with almond milk, overflowing book shelves you wish to talk about, simple charms hanging on small hoop earrings, caffeine at night and milky tea in the morning