@shadowfax_in where exactly is your customer care number. 6 days and I have created 6 different about the delivery partner’s misbehaviour tickets and I have gotten no response from your side.
The delivery partner has my two orders since 6-7 days. He is not willing to deliver (1)
@shadowfax_in Every morning shadowfax tells me in the morning at 9 am that my order will be delivered today. I wait the entire day. Every night post 10 pm, the delivery partner calls & immediately puts me on mute. I keep saying “hello hello”, he disconnects (2)
@shadowfax_in@shadowfax_in and then he updates the status as “failed delivery.”
Your delivery partner is harassing me with this mentally unstable behaviour of his EVERY NIGHT. And failing to deliver my order. I have an emergency surgery lined up and I REALLY NEED THOSE ORDERS!!!!!
I aspire to be a woman who keeps learning and evolving. Never stuck, never stagnant. Always reading, listening, growing, changing. I want to be humble enough to admit when I'm wrong and brave enough to do better. I want to be 50 and still discovering new things about myself.
Two Pregnant Cows Rescued
(from ending in Slaughter)
653 Cows Saved since 3/8/23
(Kindly check pinned thread)
All Cows are Cared for Life
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A Harvard psychiatrist said one sentence about why ambitious people are self sabotage. It made his colleagues stop talking mid conversations.
The sentence was this:
"The body doesn't distinguish between a real threat and a memory of one."
His colleagues sat in silence because they knew what it meant. Every ambitious person in their practice was reacting to dangers that no longer existed.
A criticism from 10 years ago still triggered fight-or-flight. A failure from their 20s still lived in their chest. A voice from childhood still told them they weren't safe.
The body doesn't update the calendar. It just keeps protecting.
So when a promotion gets close, the body says "danger." When visibility increases, the body says "threat." When success is finally possible, the body says "stop."
That's what self-sabotage actually is. Not a character flaw. Not a secret fear of success. Just a nervous system stuck in an old timeline.
The psychiatrist noticed something else. The ones who broke the pattern weren't the ones who tried harder. They were the ones who learned to show their body a new timeline.
A 60-Second Practice When You Feel Self-Sabotage Rising
Pause. Place one hand on your chest. Whisper to yourself: "That was then. This is now." Take three slow breaths. Let the body catch up to the present.
“The true horror of existence is not the fear of death, but the fear of life. It is the fear of waking up each day to face the same struggles, the same disappointments, the same pain. It is the fear that nothing will ever change, that you are trapped in a cycle of suffering that you cannot escape. And in that fear, there is a desperation, a longing for something, anything, to break the monotony, to bring meaning to the endless repetition of days.”
Usted vive en un planeta donde los árboles se avisan del peligro
a través de raíces que se tocan bajo la tierra.
Donde los pulpos sueñan en colores.
Donde los elefantes vuelven a los huesos de sus muertos y se quedan allí en silencio, como recordando.
Donde las abejas bailan para decirse adónde volar.
Donde las flores florecen después del fuego, como si el renacer fuera su manera de hablar.
Donde los cuervos recuerdan los rostros crueles y enseñan a sus hijos a reconocerlos.
Donde las hormigas hacen ciudades con túneles y puentes invisibles al ojo apurado.
Donde los gatos ronronean con una frecuencia que puede ayudar a sanar huesos.
Donde las ballenas cantan canciones que cruzan los océanos y cambian un poco en cada encuentro.
Donde las ardillas adoptan crías huérfanas y las cuidan como propias.
Donde los delfines se llaman entre sí por su nombre, y los caballos reconocen el sonido de una voz amiga.
Donde las mariposas recuerdan rutas de migración que sus antepasados siguieron muchos veranos atrás.
Donde los hongos crean redes infinitas bajo la tierra, ayudando a los bosques a respirar unidos.
Donde los lobos cuidan a sus mayores y cantan juntos a la luna.
Donde las luciérnagas vuelven a encender la noche para que los grillos tengan algo que cantar.
Donde los peces se agrupan para protegerse, moviéndose como si fueran un solo cuerpo.
Donde las tortugas regresan año tras año al mismo lugar donde nacieron.
Donde los árboles viejos guardan en sus anillos la historia del clima, del tiempo y del hombre.
Donde la vida, incluso en silencio, se acuerda del beso de la luz.
Usted vive ahí.
En un mundo que siente,
que cuida,
que recuerda.
Feliz día :)
THESE TRICKS CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE ONE DAY
1. Sudden panic attack – Touch something cold (water, phone, metal). Your brain switches from fear to safety mode.
2. Heart beating too fast – Cough 2–3 times forcefully. It resets your heart rhythm.
3. Can’t breathe properly – Put your hands on top of your head. Your lungs open up instantly.
4. Feeling dizzy – Focus on one spot and tense your legs. Blood rushes back to your brain.
5. Stuffy nose – Hold your breath and nod your head up & down slowly. Open blocked airways.
6. Sudden anxiety – Splash water on your face – it activates the calm reflex.
7. Can’t sleep – Exhale longer than you inhale (4–7 breathing). Your brain goes into sleep mode.
If you want to learn more life-saving tips, turn on notifications.
This happens almost every night in the Parker home. Mrs. Parker is 82 years old and lives with Alzheimer's disease.
Because of her illness, she has something called "sundowning." At night, she often believes she has to leave the house to go to work, even though she retired many years ago.
For the past eight months, her German Shepherd, Max, has learned this pattern.
🔬Study shows SARS-CoV-2 causes direct damage to heart cell mitochondria - even months after recovery - helping potentially explain Long COVID heart symptoms like chest pain, palpitations & fatigue.
Let’s break it down 🧵
🚨 YOUNG DOCTOR : I am quitting my job.
"I was asked by my female boss to admit nearly every patient, even when it was not required" 😳
"ICU stays were stretched to increase hospital bills"
"No salary is bigger than ethics & patient safety"
Think about it. When your pet walks in from another room just to find you, that means they were somewhere else for a moment… and decided to come see you.
In their own simple way, their little brain thought about you. They wondered where you were, what you were doing, and they came looking for you.
They didn’t need anything. They just wanted to be near you.
That’s love in its purest form. Quiet, loyal, and completely unconditional.
A retired nurse smelled her husband's Parkinson's 12 years before his diagnosis.
Joy Milne noticed the smell in 1982. Woody. Musky. Yeasty.
Doctors didn't diagnose him until 1994.
For over a decade, she was puzzled why he was smelling different. It was his neurons dying.
So they put her to the test. Joy Milne had to smell 12 T-shirts: 6 from Parkinson's patients, 6 healthy controls.
She correctly identified all 6 PD patients. She did make 1 “mistake” and marked one control as "false positive."
8 months later, that person was also diagnosed with Parkinson's.
She wasn't wrong. She was just early.
New research (2025): Parkinson's can be detected through scent 12 years before physical symptoms appear.
Twelve years.
Imagine starting treatment that early. Slowing progression before it even begins.
This started because one woman could smell it on her husband. Now science is catching up.