Un koreano se vistio de mujer embarazada para mostrar que es mentira que en la india son acosadores
Y casi se lo comen vivo
(Los subtitulos estan en chino)
My jaw is still on the floor. A random citizen just pulled off a full-on action movie move to help cop catch an offender . Real-life superheroes exist😎❤️
Dünya Kupasına katılan Norveç Milli Takımı, Amerika’da sıcaklara dayanamayıp antrenmanı yarıda kesti.
Avrupalılar, Latin Amerikalılara nazaran daha fazla acı çekecekler; çünkü Latin Amerikalılar, Asyalılar ve Afrikalılar ülkelerinin doğası ve iklimi gereği yüksek sıcaklıklara alışkınlar.
Not long ago in Rome, someone called the police after hearing loud crying coming from an apartment. When four officers arrived, they found 84-year-old Jole and her 94-year-old husband, Michele, inside their home. Thankfully, nothing bad had happened. The couple had just gotten emotional while watching TV. Jole had asked her husband why the news was so full of sad stories that day, and it brought her to tears — which led someone to call for help.
Jole and Michele have been married for almost 70 years. They told the officers they had been feeling very lonely and that it had been a long time since anyone came to visit. The officers also noticed that the couple hadn’t eaten a good meal in a while. While they waited for an ambulance to check on them, two of the officers decided to cook a simple spaghetti dinner — just pasta with butter and parmesan — while the others sat and talked with the couple.
That day, the officers didn’t have to stop a crime, but they did something just as important. They showed care, kindness, and love to two people who really needed it.
She ate lunch alone for 730 days straight. What this 16-year-old built from that pain now protects millions of kids worldwide.
Seventh grade. Natalie Hampton carried her tray through a packed cafeteria and felt it — that specific, suffocating dread of not knowing where to go.
She'd already learned what happened when you approached the wrong table. The silence. The turned backs. The whispered laughter that followed you all the way to the empty table by the wall.
The one everyone could see.
The one that said: nobody wants her.
For two full years — 730 consecutive lunches — that table was hers. Alone.
The bullying went further than whispers. She was shoved into lockers. Four physical attacks in two weeks. She came home with scratches and bruises. When she finally reported it, school administrators sent her to counseling — to find out what she was doing wrong.
The isolation grew so heavy she was hospitalized for anxiety.
Then ninth grade came. A new school. And almost overnight — everything changed. Students welcomed her. She made friends within weeks. She finally knew what safe felt like.
But she couldn't stop thinking about the kids still sitting at the wall table. Right now. Today.
She remembered what she'd needed most during all those lunches. Not a teacher. Not a pamphlet. Just one person saying: "You can sit with us."
So at 16 — with zero coding experience and "a lot of enthusiasm," as she put it — Natalie built exactly that.
She called it Sit With Us.
The idea was simple and genius: students sign up as "ambassadors," keeping their table open. Other kids privately browse available tables on their phones before ever walking into the cafeteria — and show up knowing they're already welcome.
No public rejection. No moment of judgment. Just a guaranteed seat.
Within 7 days of launching: 10,000 downloads.
Then the world found her. NPR. The Washington Post. CBS News. Messages from Morocco, Australia, the Philippines, France — kids who'd been eating alone for years, finally finding a place to belong.
Sit With Us now operates in 30 countries.
"Even if it helps one person," Natalie said quietly, "it was worth building."
She turned 730 lunches of loneliness into a lifeline for millions.
That's not just survival. That's transformation.
⚠️ In 2022, a UK mum at 31 weeks pregnant suddenly became allergic to her own baby.
It started with unbearable itching on her belly, then hours later her entire body exploded in red spots and huge painful blisters.
Her skin literally peeled off in agony.
Fiona was in so much pain she couldn’t even hold her newborn son, Barney.
Diagnosis: Pemphigoid Gestationis - an ultra-rare autoimmune disease (1 in 50,000 pregnancies) where her immune system mistook the baby’s placental proteins as invaders and attacked her own skin.
Thankfully, after heavy steroids she recovered and is now living happily with young Barney.
But with a 50% chance of it returning in future pregnancies Fiona has taken the difficult decision: no more kids.
Her husband told a court she was too strong to be a wife. The judge agreed and stripped Wangari Maathai of everything, her family, her job, her home.
She looked around and noticed women walking miles every single day just to collect firewood. So she handed them seeds instead. The government responded with arrests, beatings, and a padlocked office door.
30,000 women trained. 51 million trees planted across Kenya. Nobel Peace Prize in 2004. They handed her destruction. She turned it into an entire forest.
After giving birth, a woman's internal wounds take six months to heal, 12 months for physical recovery, two years for hormonal balance, and up to five years to rediscover her identity. Relationships frequently fail during this time due to a lack of understanding. Be kind and patient with new mothers; they are facing more challenges than it appears.
Barrelier abusó y asesinó a Agostina de 14 hace una semana, a una chica de 20 la secuestró y casi abusó el año pasado, y hoy sale a la luz que hace 8/9 años este tipo con un grupo de hombre abusaron a una nena de 12 años y que se archivó la causa. El Poder Judicial es cómplice.
My wife retired from the military during Trump’s first presidency after 22 years of service.
Trump’s letter of appreciation was signed using autopen. They had to blow the signature up, which made it look pixelated. It was garbage.
…which is where she put it as soon as we got home.
I sent @BarackObama a letter request two months before her retirement ceremony because that’s the last leader MSgt. Shead served under.
…it showed up in our mailbox the morning after she retired. It was PERFECT timing.
It’s been framed and displayed for guests to see. 🇺🇸🫡
“So anyone who comes over knows what a real President does for service members, even after leaving the White House.”
- My Wife
‼️Milagro en el Everest: Dawa Sherpa vive‼️
Se ha arrastrado al Campo Base del Everest sin comida, sin oxígeno, y sin ayuda.
Dawa Sherpa, guía sherpa de 52 años, fue abandonado por su expedición cerca de la Zona de la Muerte tras bajar con un cliente polaco con congelación.
Desaparecido desde el 29 de mayo! Sin comida, sin oxígeno y solo, sobrevivió 7 días a más de 7.000m. Cruzó el peligroso Khumbu Icefall sin escaleras y lo han encontrado hoy, el 4 de junio, arrastrándose hacia el Campo Base. (Lo han encontrado los de la limpieza.)
Rescatado con congelaciones graves y ya en hospital en Kathmandu.
📷Everest Today
Tweet para recordar que en 2019 la UBA quiso expulsar a un profesor de física por TENER un canal de YouTube explicando la materia de forma gratuita para todo el universo hispanohablante.
Veo que hoy sigue. Espero que no lo hayan echado
A photographer spent a day mapping a tiny Korean island, taking the kind of street-level photos you can scroll through online. A golden retriever named Maru followed him the whole way, stopping to wait whenever the camera fell behind. He wound up in more than a thousand of the shots.
This was back in 2010. Maru belonged to the only family living on the island, a speck of land off the east coast of South Korea, less than half a mile across. It's so small that the family never bothered with a leash. So when a stranger turned up with a camera and started walking every trail, Maru did what he always did with visitors. He tagged along.
And he was good at it. Photo after photo, there he is, trotting out ahead, glancing back to check the human was still coming, leading the way past sea cliffs and grassy fields and dirt roads.
Goldens were built for exactly this. Starting in the 1860s, breeders in Scotland spent generation after generation shaping a dog that would walk at a person's side across rough country and carry back whatever was shot without leaving a mark on it. Staying close to a human and waiting up for them is the whole reason the breed exists. Goldens are so into people that they make terrible guard dogs. They greet strangers with a wagging tail.
Look closely, and in a lot of the shots Maru is staring right at the camera. Scientists in Japan found something sweet hiding behind that look. When a dog and a person hold each other's gaze, both of their bodies release oxytocin, a feel-good chemical, the same one that floods a new mother holding her baby. Wolves don't do this. Dogs picked it up over thousands of years of living beside us. Every time Maru looked back at that photographer, the two of them were quietly handing each other a little hit of happiness, just for the company.
The photos are from 2010. Maru died in 2021. I still went and looked him up on the map, half expecting him to be gone from there too. He is not. Pull up that little island today, and he is right where he always was, walking a stranger down the road like he has all the time in the world.
Si ma mère n'avait pas fui son pays, je ne serais pas de ce monde.
Elle avait déjà 3 enfants. Et avec la politique chinoise de l'enfant unique, c'était autant d'enfants de trop pour que je puisse naître.
Pour ne pas être avortée ou stérilisée de force, elle n'avait pas d'autre choix que de fuir.
À chaque fois qu'elle me raconte son histoire, je n'ai pas les mots. Tout paraît si dur, si cruel, si loin de la vie calme et confortable qu'elle a tout fait pour me donner en France.
Aujourd'hui, j'ai une passion, les ��checs, et la chance unique d'en vivre. Elle, au même âge, avait déjà traversé toutes ces épreuves.
Et quand je vois sa douceur avec moi aujourd'hui, j'ai du mal à imaginer la guerrière qu'elle a dû être.
Comme tout fils, je dois la vie à ma mère. Mais moi, je la lui dois deux fois. Une fois pour m'avoir mis au monde, et une deuxième fois pour tout ce qu'elle a affronté pour que je puisse naître.
Quelle vie, quelle guerrière ❤️
🇫🇷🎾👩👦Sa mère TRAVAILLAIT DE NUIT pour financer ses rêves. À 17 ans, il devient la nouvelle sensation de Roland-Garros.
Moïse Kouamé, né le 6 mars 2009 à Sarcelles, COMMENCE LE TENNIS vers 5 ans. Très vite, son talent se confirme et sa mère, Suzanne Nsemba, JOUE UN RÔLE CENTRAL dans sa progression : elle QUITTE leur maison pour s’installer à Paris et réduire les trajets, TRAVAILLE DE NUIT comme aide-soignante pour financer ses entraînements et gère son suivi scolaire, son organisation et son quotidien.
À 13 ans, il part en Belgique à l’Académie Justine Henin puis rejoint l’Académie Mouratoglou, vivant LOIN DE SA FAMILLE. Durant cette période, sa mère reste très impliquée à distance, assurant un soutien constant sur le plan moral, logistique et financier.
À 17 ans, il se révèle à Roland-Garros en atteignant le 3e tour après un match de près de 5 heures. Derrière cette performance, L’ENGAGEMENT de sa mère reste déterminant, car elle a tout mis en œuvre depuis son enfance pour soutenir son rêve.
(Gala)