Aún no podía hacerme a la idea de que la gente hiciera el amor sin mí.
Ella volvió a ser ajena y no me ofendo… haberla perdido perturba y amarga.
𝔇𝔲𝔠𝔄𝔡𝔐𝔢
Abro hilo sobre la superposición cuántica de la tortilla de Maíz:
Si a una tortilla le pones comida, es un taco. Y si lo metes en aceite caliente, es un taco dorado. Ah, pero si lo metes enrrollado en el aceite, se llama flauta.
Long before Mexico City existed, the magnificent city of Tenochtitlan ruled the Valley of Mexico.
I think one of the greatest moments in history to witness would be the height of Tenochtitlan in the early 1500s, before Hernán Cortés and the Spanish conquistadors conquered and destroyed the city. Seeing one of the world’s most remarkable urban centers at its peak would be an unforgettable experience.
When the Spanish first arrived in 1519, Tenochtitlan was among the largest cities on Earth, with an estimated population of 200,000 to 300,000—larger than most European capitals of the era. Built on an island in Lake Texcoco, it was connected to the mainland by three massive causeways equipped with removable bridges for defense. A network of canals ran throughout the city, allowing canoes to transport people and goods so efficiently that Europeans often compared it to the “Venice of the Americas.”
At the heart of the city stood the Templo Mayor, an enormous twin-temple pyramid dedicated to the gods Huitzilopochtli and Tlaloc. Surrounding it were palaces, government buildings, temples, and bustling plazas. Nearby, the Great Market of Tlatelolco drew thousands of merchants each day, offering everything from food and pottery to textiles, jewelry, and luxury goods from across Mesoamerica.
The Aztecs also demonstrated extraordinary engineering and agricultural innovation. They expanded farmland using chinampas—highly productive artificial farming plots built in shallow lake waters—while aqueducts supplied the city with fresh water from nearby springs. Carefully planned neighborhoods organized by occupation and social status completed a city that combined sophisticated engineering, architecture, and urban planning, making Tenochtitlan one of the greatest achievements of the pre-Columbian world.
Hoy me llegó el primer caso de envenenamiento accidental por consumo de hongos silvestres ⚠️🍄
La situación es grave y nada se puede hacer para revertir los efectos tóxicos.
Por favor, si vas al bosque no recogas y consumas hongos que no conoces
🚫🍄
¿No es más fácil poner inhibidores de señal en las cárceles o hacer rastreos de extorsionandores, que obligar a más de 100 millones de mexicanos a registrarse?
Los mexicanos han perdido la confianza en las instituciones corruptas, ante la negativa de millones de usuarios a realizar el registro, @Claudiashein tuvo que ceder y anunciar una prorroga escalonada.
Las bases de datos de instituciones financieras, telefónicas y de gobierno están comprometidas (las venden al crimen organizado), para que ahora se complementen con más datos personales como la CURP.
!Hay que decir, NO AL REGISTRO!
🔘 Dustin Poirier 🇺🇸 💎 told us 3 months ago and today he has shown us how difficult it is:
▪️March 2026- Podcast with Joe Rogan🎙️
"It's scary to be retired. For 20 years I woke up thinking what I had to do to be a better fighter, what can I do to become a champion and boom, you hang up the gloves, wake up and you're a civilian
"I'm re-learning to know who I am, I don't know who I am without a fight. Fighting was an obsession that plagued me for 20 years. Now I wake up and it's gone. What should I do? I’m still trying to figure it out Joe”
▪️ June 2026: he is arrested while drunk and confesses that he is not having a good time with his retirement😣
This is a problem most fighters probably go through... that's why many don't retire, or retire and come back 🥲
#ufc #mma #dustinpoirier
@DovySimuMMA Never. Life is hard, but you have proven yourself to be a warrior with great courage. I have faith in God that everything will turn out well for you. Blessings @DustinPoirier
Everyone hears the saying “don’t meet your heroes”. When I met Dustin Poirier, that saying completely shattered for me. I was a complete stranger to him, yet he chatted with me and had me walking away from the conversation a better man than I was before it. He’s helped the lives of thousands of kids through The Good Fight Foundation & has been a role model his entire career for being strong for yourself when facing adversity. If you can’t empathize with his pain & his mistakes, you’ll never forgive yourself for your own. The Diamond will always be my hero
#ULTIMAHORA
Reportan confrontación entre 2 sujetos dentro de las Instalaciones del Metro Ciudad de México 🇲🇽 @MetroCDMX 🥊🥊
Usuarios denuncian qué los sujetos se empezaron a pelear por qué se quedaron viendo feo uno al otro, a pesar de estar cada quien en un vagón distinto del #MetroCDMX ❌
En una ocasión, mi papá nos contó cómo eran los vendedores ambulantes en el México de su infancia. Entre todos esos personajes, mencionó a uno que me llamó especialmente la atención: el vendedor de tripas infladas. En ese momento me pareció extraño imaginar que alguien pudiera vender algo así… hasta ayer, que encontré esta imagen.
Resulta que las tripas infladas tenían muchos usos. Además de servir para hacer chorizo en casa, se utilizaban como nosotros usamos hoy una bolsa de plástico. Se rellenaban con semillas —arroz, trigo, frijol y otras— para almacenarlas en la cocina, o se llenaban de comida para llevar al campo durante las jornadas de trabajo y poder comer a lo largo del día.
Restauración y color.
Fotografia de 1870 de la coleccion Cruces y Campa.
The airport incident was messed up, but don’t call Dustin Poirier a terrible person because of one mistake. He has helped 1000s of people throughout his career. Provided more than 300,000$ worth of meals for the Good Fight Foundation, constantly donated his fight bonuses. I met him before UFC 329 in New Jersey and he was the nicest fighter I met so far, and I met almost everybody. 💎🫂