@Uricarp91218@eveebiebss Y si tu novia no te para el carro con esos comentarios, claramente tmb es víctima inconsciente o tiene el mismo nivel cognitivo q vos.
Un dato que no hay que soslayar y que podría haber cambiado los hechos:
El antecedente penal de Barrelier cuando fue detenido el 6 de mayo del 2025 por privación ilegítima de la libertad calificada.
Se trata de una denuncia por violencia de género debido a que secuestró a su expareja, que logró huir semidesnuda y maniatada a una barbería enfrente de la casa de Barrelier.
El fiscal Iván Rodriguez lo dejó libre. Estuvo solo 20 días preso y quedó libre bajo fianza. Lo defendió en aquel entonces el abogado penalista Ricardo Moreno, actualmente concejal.
Un año después Barrelier asesinó a Agostina y lo defendió el abogado penalista De Bianco, yerno de Moreno.
No hay casualidades. Inacción judicial y banca política por un dirigente del peronismo local de las 62 organizaciones.
That 2 PM sleepiness has nothing to do with your lunch. It hits at the same time even when scientists feed people the same tiny meal every hour, in a room with no clocks and steady lighting. Your body is doing it on purpose.
You have two body clocks running at the same time. The first runs on the 24-hour cycle you know about: sleepy at night, awake during the day. The second runs on a 12-hour cycle. Halfway through every day, your brain fires off a quieter version of its nighttime sleep signal. Most people hit this wall between 2 and 4 PM no matter what they ate or how well they slept the night before.
Morning coffee can deepen the crash. Caffeine sticks around in your bloodstream for 5 to 7 hours, so the cup you drank at 8 AM is still half-active at 2 PM. It blocks adenosine, the chemical that makes you feel tired. As long as caffeine is in your system, adenosine keeps stacking up in the background. You just can't feel it. Then the caffeine wears off, and all that built-up tiredness lands on your brain at once. That crash is the tiredness bill you were always going to pay.
Most of human history was built around this dip. The word siesta comes from the Latin "hora sexta," meaning the sixth hour after dawn. Roman shopkeepers, monks, and Mediterranean farmers all stopped working at that hour. The same pattern shows up in China today: surveys say around two-thirds of the population takes a daily nap of about 30 minutes. The countries that fight the dip pay for it. In the US, government data shows drowsy-driving crashes peak in two windows: midnight to 6 AM, and 2 to 4 PM. The afternoon spike lines up almost exactly with the body's biological dip.
NASA put a number on the fix back in 1995. They gave long-haul pilots a 40-minute rest break during cruise, and the pilots fell asleep in 5.6 minutes on average and slept for 25.8 minutes. The payoff: alertness improved 54%, and job performance jumped 34%. Every major sleep lab since has landed on the same answer: 20 to 30 minutes. Long enough to take the edge off, short enough that you don't slip into deep sleep and wake up groggy.
The 2 PM wall is what happens when a Stone Age body runs on an office schedule that expects the afternoon to feel like the morning.