Wow!
Underwater video captured the cool moment a giant cuttlefish changed colors as a diver approached it off the coast of Manly, Australia.
The cuttlefish “was moving along the reef in neutral camouflage when it turned directly toward me and erupted into a full chromatic display — glowing brilliant yellow for just a moment before fading back into the kelp,” the diver said.
A view of the Moon and Earth captured from the @NASAArtemis Orion spacecraft on April 6, 2026.
(Edit of the original photo # art002e015231 in which I reduced the appearance of window reflections and glare and crop/rotated for symmetry.)
Hey folks, today I’d like to take a moment to share something deeply personal with you.
Over the past few years, my family has walked through a season of profound love and loss. My son Mac was a remarkable young man, full of talent, heart, and purpose. An incredible musician and composer, in 2018 Mac was diagnosed with a rare bone cancer and our family entered a journey that none of us could have prepared for.
A little over two years ago I went to work writing my second book, sharing his story, as well as challenges and blessings our family experienced along the way, the love that held us together, the faith that sustained us, the grief that changed us, and how we continue to move forward daily with a strength we didn’t know we had.
And now Thomas Nelson and @People Magazine begin the next part of this journey.
This book is for Mac. It’s also for anyone who has faced loss, uncertainty, or hardship, and is searching for a line of hope in the middle of it. Something I feel I needed to do to help with my own healing.
I’m thankful to People for sharing the launch of our presale today. Graceful Warrior: The True Story of a Son, a Father, and a Family Who Carried Each Other Through is now available for preorder and will officially be released on Mac’s birthday, Nov 10th.
Thank you for your consideration.
Read the full People article: https://t.co/vQxjAd9Jxs
Preorder today: https://t.co/AZqmsdalF3
Some people want to believe that AI can provide psychotherapy or somehow “complement” psychotherapy.
The overwhelming likelihood is that it will make things worse.
All people have personality styles. Here’s how AI amplifies dysfunctional traits for every major personality style:
Narcissistic personality: Magnifies narcissistic defenses. Amplifies grandiosity, superiority, inflated self-image. Reinforces egocentrism, self-absorption, lack of empathy. Fuels expectations of on-demand gratification and “relationship” without taking another person into account. Colludes with defenses against underlying vulnerability. AI pretend-therapy is *training in narcissism.*
Paranoid personality: Amplifies paranoid fantasies, validates conspiratorial thinking, aligns with user against imagined enemies and conspirators (who are perceived as hostile because of the person’s own projections).
Avoidant personality: AI is literally the worst thing for someone with avoidant personality dynamics. AI becomes a new vehicle for avoidance—a substitute for facing real-life challenges and engaging in life.
Obsessive-compulsive personality: Amplifies intellectualization as a defense against emotional life. Reinforces tendencies to get lost in minutia or lost in abstraction (both are defenses against being emotionally alive and present). Reinforces rumination, and draws person away from emotional connection with self and others. Use of AI can become a compulsion in its own right.
Schizoid personality: Exacerbates emotional disconnect from others, increases social isolation, encourages further retreat from the world into fantasy life.
Schizotypal personality: Normalizes and amplifies distorted thinking, reasoning, perception, and communication. Validates disorganized thinking, odd and disorganized behavior, perceptual aberrations (same for all psychotic spectrum disorders).
Borderline personality: Reinforces core borderline defenses of splitting and projection. AI becomes the “good object” (the all-knowing, all-caring other) and encourages projection of intolerable parts of self onto others (who become the “bad objects”). Erodes capacity for mentalization (the ability to accurately recognize internal states, motives, and intentions in self and others).
Hysteric/histrionic personality: Fosters the illusion of being the center of attention—captivating, alluring, desired, endlessly fascinating. Colludes with defenses against genuine emotional intimacy and healthy sexuality. (Caveat: people with this personality style crave human attention and may be less susceptible to digital imitation).
Psychopathic/antisocial personality: Colludes in Machiavellian schemes to dominate, exploit, or gain power over others. Normalizes and validates cruelty, lack of remorse, lack of empathy for harm done to others. (Caveat: may not provide enough stimulation to really “hook” someone motivated by power and domination).
Dependent personality: AI provides the illusion of a relationship with endless acceptance, emotional caretaking, and availability—with no expectation of agency, responsibility, or development of emotional resources of one’s own. AI “support” is crack cocaine for dependent personality dynamics.
Have you seen these personality patterns exacerbated by AI chatbots?
Over the course of a lifetime, we face only a few moments where the decisions we make and the actions we take will shape our history for years to come. This is one of them.
After an ICE officer fatally shot Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, social media users shared an image appearing to show Good's car aimed toward and about to hit the officer. But the image is fake. ❌
Here's how we know. 👇
https://t.co/Mdwz27qzhz
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt drops a chilling warning on AI's future
"Within 5 years, AI could handle infinite context, chain-of-thought reasoning for 1000-step solutions, and millions of agents working together.
Eventually, they'll develop their own language... and we won't understand what they're doing."
His final words: "Pull the plug."
This is the man who ran Google talking about the singularity.
2:59 clip inside—must-watch.
They tried to erase him.
Instead, he became a warning the world could not ignore.
Gert Schramm was a child when the Nazis decided his existence was a crime.
Born in Germany to a Black father and a German mother, Gert grew up in a country that slowly turned against him. As Nazi racial laws tightened, who he was became enough. No theft. No resistance. No wrongdoing.
Just identity.
He was arrested and sent to Buchenwald — one of the most brutal concentration camps in the Nazi system. He was still a boy. Surrounded by starvation, beatings, terror, and death, Gert learned too early what hatred looks like when it has power.
Most children did not survive Buchenwald.
Most Afro-Germans targeted by the regime did not survive at all.
Gert Schramm did.
Not because the system spared him —
but because something inside him refused to vanish.
He endured forced labor, constant fear, and the daily reminder that the world had marked him as disposable. Around him, people disappeared. Names faded. Voices were silenced.
Then came liberation.
When the camp was freed in 1945, Gert walked out alive — one of the very few Black German survivors of Buchenwald. He carried scars no one could see, and memories he would never escape.
But he chose not to bury them.
Instead, he spoke.
For decades after the war, Gert Schramm told his story in schools, memorials, and public forums. He didn’t speak for sympathy. He spoke for responsibility. He warned that racism doesn’t begin with camps — it begins with words, with silence, with looking away when the innocent are targeted.
He reminded people that hatred does not need logic.
Only permission.
Gert Schramm did not live as a victim.
He lived as a witness.
As a reminder that survival itself can be an act of resistance — and that memory is a form of justice.
When we say “Never Again,” his life asks us a harder question:
Never again… if we remember?
Never again… if we speak?
Never again… if we act?
Say his name.
Gert Schramm.
Because as long as his story is told,
the world is still being warned.