@RadioGenoa In Islam, drawing images of saints is prohibited, so as not to offend their memory and respect for them! Jesus
-Isa, peace and blessings be upon him, is a highly revered prophet in Islam. Therefore, the prohibition is a sign of special respect for the Prophet Isa.
🚨 Did you know; galaxies move toward something invisible beyond the universe, something massive is pulling them.
The Great Attractor — a mysterious gravitational anomaly about 250 million light-years away — seems to be pulling our Milky Way and countless other galaxies toward it at incredible speeds.
@elonmusk 1/3 The problem is that the current generation shouldn't remember the past only in a negative light, because the past is also a lesson. First, kneeling, then flogging, then lynching. Perhaps I've spoken harshly in defiance.
@elonmusk 2/2 But it was the white race that supported the black race in order to achieve equal rights. And that was achieved. What other criticism could there be? In my opinion, kneeling is already humiliation. And that was the beginning.
@iamyesyouareno 2/2 But it was the white race that supported the black race in order to achieve equal rights. And that was achieved. What other criticism could there be? In my opinion, kneeling is already humiliation. And that was the beginning.
Your body can literally shut off pain when needed and this is a power of the human brain.
In moments of acute danger—battle, accident, or sudden attack—the brain floods the system with adrenaline and endorphins. These natural opioids and stimulants act like an emergency circuit breaker: they slam the gates shut on pain signals traveling to the brain, granting a brief window of “pain immunity.” A soldier can keep running on a shattered leg, an athlete finish the play with torn ligaments, or a car-crash survivor crawl from wreckage—all without feeling the full extent of their injuries.
This override is deliberate. Evolution favors survival over comfort; the body decides that escaping the predator or reaching safety matters more than assessing damage right then. Pain is postponed, not canceled.
The effect is short-lived. Once the threat passes and hormone levels crash, the blockade lifts. Pain often returns in a fierce wave, sometimes stronger than it would have been, as the nervous system catches up with reality and reveals fractures, burns, or bleeding that went unnoticed minutes earlier.
What feels like superhuman resilience in the moment is simply the body borrowing from tomorrow’s suffering to buy today’s survival.
This exquisite mechanism—documented in battlefield medicine, sports injuries, and emergency-room reports—reveals how deeply our physiology is wired for one overriding priority: stay alive now, feel later.
References:
[1] Amit, Z., & Galina, Z. H. (1986). Stress-induced analgesia: adaptive pain suppression. Physiological Reviews, 66(4), 1091–1120
Akil, H., et al. (1978). Stress-induced increase in endogenous opiate peptides: Concurrent analgesia and its partial reversal by naloxone. Science, 201(4359), 875–877
Butler, R. K., & Kohan, F. I. (2009). Stress-induced analgesia. Progress in Neurobiology, 88(6), 384–400
🇰🇷 SOUTH KOREA’S INTERNET JUST HIT GOD MODE
SpaceX just rolled out low-orbit internet across South Korea, filling the last gaps on the map.
99.9 % uptime - game, stream, work anywhere without the drama.
Islands, mountains, outliers - Korea’s internet just went pro!
@donaldtusk Tusk, 80 years ago, and for many years before that, you kissed one spot on Russia, now you're kissing it on the USA. The time will come when you'll kiss it on someone else. The problem is you, Tusk. The danger to the world's security lies in your incompetence and your venality!!!