@lawrencekingyo God has a way of sorting out everything in the end. You remain his favorite and will always have an abundance of blessings.
If you made someones career and never got a thank you, it's comforting to know you could never be that low, and that in of itself is repayment enough.
I don't underatand people that forget the help they got on the way up
If someone bought me a coffee when I had nothing I remember it
The people that resent you today are often the people you helped at some point
Crazy
Remove physical objects in your midst which cause angst, unhappiness, melancholy, or trepidation. These things are remembrances of past traumas, and emanate a kind of corrosive aura.
Throw them out.
Pattern recognition is a psyop.
Befriend, trust, be open to receive, and love hard.
If you clam up like a seashell you get nothing, see nothing, and you influence 0
One bad apple doesn't kill the branch. Ask God.
Walk your lawn before you mow it. Especially in spring and summer, especially after rain.
Lawn mowers kill toads, fledgling birds, snakes, baby rabbits, and box turtles by the millions every summer. None of them get out of the way fast enough. Most of them are exactly the species your yard most benefits from having around.
Two minutes of walking before you start the mower saves all of this. Look for matted patches of dead-looking grass (rabbit nests), small ground depressions, sleeping toads in the morning dew, fledgling birds hidden in long grass, and any small turtle you weren't expecting.
If you find a rabbit nest, flag the corners with garden stakes and mow around it for the next 2 to 3 weeks. The babies leave the nest on their own.
Two minutes of looking is the difference between a perfect lawn and a perfect lawn that didn't kill anything.
The reason we think dandelions are weeds is because of a 1950s marketing campaign.
Dandelions, native to Europe and Asia, were brought to North America in the 1600s by European colonists who grew them deliberately.
Every part is edible. The leaves are a salad green, the flowers were made into wine, and the roots were roasted as a coffee substitute and used medicinally for liver and kidney conditions for thousands of years. They were a kitchen-garden staple well into the 1800s.
The shift happened after World War II, when 2,4-D (originally developed for chemical warfare research) was approved as a residential herbicide. Companies like Scotts built the modern lawn-care industry around the idea that a perfect green lawn meant zero broadleaf plants.
Dandelions, being bright yellow and resistant to mowing, became a visible enemy, and the campaign worked. By the 1970s, "dandelion-free" was synonymous with "well-kept."
They aren't native, but they aren't doing significant ecological harm either. The herbicides used to kill them, on the other hand, kill bees, contaminate groundwater, and have been linked to non-Hodgkin lymphoma in humans.
If you hate dandelions, it's most likely due to a marketing campaign that ran before you were born.
@lawrencekingyo "Rich people just buy" lmao so true
It really is a challenge for prospects to be forth right and honest about their finances...great video
Half of Twitter is journaling to yourself.
Always have a take it or leave it attitude.
If not you'll abandon your own personality and values, and cling onto someone elses.
Going plant-based is the final red pill.
Not vegan. Name is tainted. You can't lead a cause with bad connotation.
You see the outpour for animal welfare rights from even the "real men eat steak" guys.
Because ultimately nobody wants to support these atrocities. I wonder why farm footage is not advertised or marketed...