マイケルジャクソンのミュンヘン公演での伝説のビリージーン🤯😭
イントロのキレッキレのダンスを観ただけで、あまりのカッコ良さに気を失う人が続出。
やっぱカッコいい🤯😭カッコ良過ぎる。
Prince, George Michael, Madonna
Stevie Wonder
プリンス ジョージマイケル マドンナ
スティーヴィーワンダー
Michael Jackson - Billie Jean
Years ago, a mathematician named Grigori Grabovoi started studying how specific numerical sequences hold physical vibrations. He theorized that you can tune your reality just like you tune a radio dial.
And it gets weirder. These sequences reportedly caught the attention of intelligence agencies and ended up in declassified CIA documents regarding frequency healing.
If your energy is stagnant, you don't always need a 10-step morning routine to fix it. You just need to change the dial.
Here are the core frequencies Grabovoi mapped out to reset your field:
• For deep peace & nervous system regulation: 1001105010
• To attract unexpected money: 520 741 8
• For steady, long-term income: 9213140
• To manifest a dream job: 493151 864 1491
• To clear negative attachments: 4748132148
• General physical healing & wellness: 9187948181
• Radical self-love: 396815
You don't have to meditate on these for hours.
Write the one you need on your wrist with a pen. Put it on a sticky note on your bathroom mirror. Keep it on a small piece of paper in your wallet.
Pick one area of your life that feels heavy right now, write the sequence down today, and just let the vibration shift the background noise.
Note: The most effective way to use a sequence is to write it directly on your left wrist with blue ink or draw it on your water glass before drinking.
Water holds memories, and your skin acts as a direct channel to your nervous system.
Where you place the vibration determines how quickly your reality changes.
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Twenty-two fathers spent eleven days cutting a road through a West Virginia mountain, and the woman waiting at the end of their work would spend the next thirty-one years repaying the favor. In the autumn of 1931, Alice Bowman arrived in McDowell County, West Virginia, eager to begin her first teaching job at a one-room schoolhouse tucked into a hollow beneath Spruce Mountain. She was only twenty-four years old, recently graduated, and ready to teach. But there was one problem. There was no road to the school. For generations, local children had traveled by foot along a narrow forest path, and no one had ever needed a wagon road before. Alice came from outside the hollow and needed a way to reach the school each day. When county officials explained there was no money available to build a road and suggested she simply walk the mountain trail, the families of the hollow decided that answer was not good enough.
The following Sunday, after church services ended, twenty-two fathers gathered to discuss the problem. A farmer named Caleb Hensley stood and said they had asked a teacher to come educate their children, and the least they could do was make sure she could get there. He announced he would begin work on Monday and invited anyone willing to help. Every single father showed up. For eleven days they worked by hand, using shovels, pickaxes, mule teams, and generations of knowledge about the mountain they called home. They cut through rock, shaped grades, managed drainage, and slowly carved a road where none had existed before. On the twelfth day, Alice guided her wagon up the newly completed road while families lined both sides to watch her arrival. When she reached the schoolhouse, she stepped down, looked at the road, looked at the men who had built it, and for a moment could not find the words.
Then she walked over to Caleb Hensley, shook his hand, and made a promise. She told him she would teach their children as long as they needed her. Most promises made in emotional moments fade with time. This one did not. Alice Bowman taught in that hollow for the next thirty-one years, traveling that same road day after day. The fathers had built a road to bring a teacher to their community, but what they truly built was an opportunity for generations of children who would pass through her classroom. And looking back on that mountain road today, you have to wonder: how many lives were changed because a group of ordinary people decided that someone else's journey mattered as much as their own?
STEVE JOBS GOT FIRED FROM APPLE.
Then he walked straight into MIT and dropped the most raw, unfiltered 60-minute business masterclass ever recorded.
Zero PR bullshit. Zero image to protect.
Just pure, brutal honesty from the man who built Apple once and was about to rebuild it even bigger.
Stop scrolling.
Watch this tonight instead of Netflix.
Bookmark it. Come back to it.
In 1940, a pair of identical twin boys were born in Ohio and placed for adoption just weeks after birth. They were sent to different families who had no contact with each other. Neither family knew much about the other. Each set of parents, independently, chose to name their new son James.
The two boys grew up in separate homes, in separate towns, living what appeared to be entirely separate lives. But as researchers would later discover, the parallels running through those lives were almost impossible to believe.
Both boys went by the nickname Jim. Both married a woman named Linda, then divorced her. Both then remarried a woman named Betty. Both had a son and named him James Alan. Both owned a dog at some point in their childhood and gave it the same name: Toy. Both had worked in law enforcement. Both drove the same model of Chevrolet. Both had built a white bench around a tree in their backyard.
Neither Jim knew the other existed until 1979, when they were 39 years old and finally reunited.
The case of James Springer and James Lewis, known ever since as the Jim Twins, became one of the most studied examples in the history of twin research. University of Minnesota researchers used their reunion as a landmark moment in understanding how much of human personality, preference, and behavior is shaped by genetics rather than environment.
Two men raised by strangers in different towns. Same name. Same marriages. Same dog. Same sons. Same bench in the backyard.
Some things, it turns out, run deeper than circumstance.
We grew up watching hand drawn Disney and now it's gone. We don't talk about this enough.
Every frame of this video was painted by hand, by a human being. Every single one...
To put that into perspective: to make Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney employed around 750 artists for three years, and they produced nearly two million individual paintings. More than 700 of the backgrounds were painted in watercolour. Over 150 people worked in a single department whose only job was to ink and paint the transparent sheets, called cels, that the characters were drawn on.
It all ended within our lifetime.
According to the Smithsonian, The Little Mermaid, released in 1989, was the last Disney feature made with the hand-painted cel method. The very next film, one year later, went digital.
And something was lost in that transition. In every frame of the old films, a human hand physically touched the surface. A person sat at a desk, held a brush, and made a decision. Two million small decisions, made by hundreds of people, most of whose names we will never know.
But the deepest difference is that the old animators knew they were making a cartoon. They did not try to copy the world. They stretched it, exaggerated it, bent it out of shape, because they understood something we seem to have forgotten: a drawing that imitates life exactly feels dead.
Walt Disney even had a name for this: he called it the plausible impossible.
Today, everything chases realism. And somehow, the more real it looks, the less alive it feels...
I started my newsletter because the past is full of beauty, and fewer and fewer people take the time to show it to us anymore. Every week I try to. If that is something you'd like to be part of, you can join through the link in my bio, and if you'd like to support my work, a paid subscription is what makes it possible.
Thanks for reading.
A 4-year-old boy whose father left him, stood outside every single day for months waving at strangers... just hoping somebody would say hi back, in North Carolina.
Then one neighbor walked across the street to meet him.
Now an ENTIRE NEIGHBORHOOD shows up for his soccer games, his swim lessons, his birthday parties.
Roman Butzlaff is 4 years old, from Concord NC, just outside Charlotte.
His mom says he wakes up every single morning excited to say "hi" to somebody. It's the very first thing he wants to do.
But behind that big smile was a hurting little heart. His parents split about a year ago and his dad moved away.
Then a neighbor named Wade Fulgum did the simplest, most powerful thing in the world.
He just walked across the street... and met the little boy who was always waving at him.
And it spread.
Now about a DOZEN neighbors, people who barely knew each other's names, show up for Roman's soccer games.
His basketball games. His swimming lessons. Even his preschool open house. His birthday party guest list was basically a map of the block.
One neighbor said it best: "If the world was like this child, what an awesome, awesome place it would be."