The right one will love you
The right person won't walk away when things get difficult.
How they respond to challenges reveals their commitment.
Anyone can love you when everything's perfect.
Anyone can stay when life is easy.
Anyone can commit when there are no problems.
But what happens when real life hits?
You deserve someone who fights for you when things get hard.
You deserve someone who sees obstacles as opportunities to grow together.
You deserve someone who views problems as puzzles to solve as a team.
You deserve someone who believes your love is worth the effort.
To the right person, there's no such thing as you being "too complicated."
To the right person, there's no such thing as you being "too much."
To the right person, there's no such thing as you being "too emotional."
To the right person, you're exactly what they've been looking for.
No argument will push them away permanently.
No disagreement will make them question their choice.
No bad day will make them reconsider their commitment.
No challenge will outweigh their love for you.
They'll work through problems instead of walking away from them.
They'll communicate through conflicts instead of running from them.
They'll fight for your relationship instead of giving up on it.
They'll choose love even when it's difficult.
A person who truly values you would never put themselves in a position to lose you.
Muslims should immigrate to Muslim countries only. There are 57 Muslim countries where they can go to without culture, tradition issues. Muslims should leave as soon as possible,
82 years ago, 14,000 Canadians landed on Juno Beach, many of whom would never come home.
On the anniversary of D-Day, we pause to honour those who served and sacrificed. We remember that our rights, our freedoms, and our way of life were fought for and were won by those who answered the call.
🚨 IS CANADA ABOUT TO BECOME THE 51st U.S. STATE?! 🇺🇸🇨🇦
The ultimate border merger debate is heating up. Would you support the US absorbing Canada?
👍 YES — Manifest Destiny 2.0!
👎 NO — Keep the map exactly how it is!
by Jonathan Fisher, MD, FACC
I am a Jewish physician, and I have never written about that here. I am going to, because of a surgeon I have never met. Emmanuel Moss, chief of cardiac surgery at Montreal’s Jewish General Hospital, is leaving for Atlanta in September.He is one of the few surgeons in Canada routinely performing robotic mitral valve and coronary bypass procedures. People close to him say the deciding factor was not Quebec’s strained healthcare system, which had been strained for years, but a growing sense that he was no longer safe in the city as a Jew.
The hospital he is leaving opened in 1934 with the first official non-discrimination policy of any hospital in Canada. It was founded in response to an era when many Jewish physicians faced discrimination in medical training and hospital appointments. The historical echo is difficult to miss.
When a clinician leaves because of who they are, a health system does not lose a statistic. It loses a specific person who held specific knowledge, relationships, judgment, and expertise developed over decades.
A 2024 survey of Canadian Jewish physicians found that reported antisemitism in hospitals rose from near zero before October 2023 to 39 percent after, and that nearly a third of respondents were considering leaving the country. The association’s chair warned that the consequences could include the loss of hundreds of physicians at a time when the healthcare system can least afford it. That mechanism is not unique to Jews. It is what happens whenever people feel unsafe because of their identity. Experts leave. Communities become poorer in ways that are difficult to measure. Eventually, patients and their families pay the price.
I am writing this as a Jewish physician because this story landed personally. I am writing it as a physician leader because I have spent decades thinking about what allows caring people to do their best work, and what it costs when they cannot. When any clinician feels unsafe because of who they are, something is lost long before they decide to leave.This time, the story touched my own community. That does not make it less relevant to anyone else. It does make it harder for me to stay silent.
Very beautiful photos of the French Air Force aerobatic team, the @PAFofficiel, flying over #Greenland on its way to North America to take part in the celebrations marking the 250th anniversary of the United States.
Because of the Alphajets' limited range, the Patrouille de France crosses the North Atlantic in several stages (🇫🇷🏴🇮🇸🇬🇱🇨🇦🇺🇸).
Exercise isn’t just about building muscle or shedding weight—it fundamentally changes your brain.
Recent research reveals that regular physical activity stimulates neurogenesis in the hippocampus, a region critical for memory and emotional regulation. This growth of new neurons doesn’t just enhance cognitive function—it can actively weaken the grip of trauma and addiction-related memories. Through a process known as neural remodeling, exercise helps rewire the brain’s pathways, reducing the emotional weight of past experiences and improving resilience.
It’s a biological reset that not only sharpens focus and lifts mood but also reshapes the mind’s response to pain and craving, making movement one of the most powerful forms of mental healing available.
🚨 Brazil’s Paralysis Research Breakthrough
Scientists in Brazil are testing an experimental drug that may help the spinal cord repair itself after severe injury. Early studies show some patients regained slight movement and sensation, suggesting possible nerve reconnection.
It’s not a cure yet, but it’s an early step that could offer hope for future paralysis treatments.
Source:
Marques, J. (2026, January 5). First stage of testing for a drug targeting complete spinal cord injury is approved in Brazil. Folha de S.Paulo.
A Planet Where Rock Clouds Appear and Vanish Daily
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has discovered a giant exoplanet about 700 light-years away where clouds may be made of vaporized rock. Every day, intense heat turns minerals into vapor, forming strange rock clouds that disappear again as conditions change. Nothing like this exists anywhere in our solar system.
Source: National Aeronautics and Space Administration. James Webb Space Telescope observations of silicate clouds on a distant exoplanet