@SaycheeseDGTL I hope yall see what America is doing
Black boy gets shot in the back = Not Guilty
Black boy defends against two white thugs = guilty of murder
The Black father is asked to produce men strong enough to survive racism, gentle enough to sustain relationships, ambitious enough to build wealth, & humble enough to remain teachable. He is asked to do this without a blueprint, without institutional support nor help
If we date, don’t stop being you. Keep having fun, keep seeing your friends, keep chasing your goals, and keep enjoying your life. A relationship should add to your life, not take away from it. Just make sure you save time for us too.
Imagine picking mk9 over this 2 player adventure masterpiece you can grind with ur homeboy 😭 AND it has a verses mode too if yall wanna squabble with insane camera angles. Like this shi not even close crazy we have not gotten another adventure mk game yet
Parker Messick has 6 pitches and he throws all of them over 10% of the time!
The @CleGuardians southpaw breaks down his confidence in his entire arsenal on #MLBCentral.
Your brain can’t tell the difference between reading about running and actually running. The same brain cells fire either way. Neuroscientists at Emory University proved this by scanning people’s brains for 19 days while they read a novel over 9 nights. Every single reading session changed the brain’s wiring. And those changes lasted five days after the book was finished.
A book physically changes you. Your brain treats the characters’ experiences like your own memories. The regions that light up when you feel someone else’s pain, when you process language, when you physically move your body, all fire while you’re sitting there turning pages.
A Yale study tracked 3,635 people for 12 years. Book readers had a 20% lower risk of dying during the study compared to people who didn’t read. Even 30 minutes a day was enough to show a survival advantage. And this held across every demographic. The researchers controlled for age, income, race, education, existing health conditions, and depression. The survival advantage came specifically from books. Magazines and articles didn’t produce the same result.
Charlie Munger helped turn Berkshire Hathaway into a 20,000-to-1 return over his career. He had a line that stuck with me: “I constantly see people rise in life who are not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent, but they are learning machines. They go to bed every night a little wiser than they were when they got up, and boy does that help, particularly when you have a long run ahead of you.”
His kids said he was “a book with a couple of legs sticking out.” He read across science, psychology, physics, history, and economics, and built an entire investment system out of ideas he found in those books. He died at 99. Berkshire returned 2,000,000% under his and Buffett’s watch.
A bouquet of books might be the only gift that rewires someone’s brain, adds years to their life, and could contain an idea that changes the entire direction of how they see the world.