Okay, if he can get past Bruce Leeβs rabbit and through the red door he can be in the Club.
π Hardlypie's Hovel β’ Psychumor Syllabus β’ Intuitive Public Radio β’ IPR β’β’β’ Transdimensional (transitional) subscription: t.me/+WTegDckOQru254rN
Mark: t.me/c/1496817677/208
t.me/SpaceDogSchool/2294
π Hardlypie's Hovel β’ Psychumor Syllabus β’ Intuitive Public Radio β’ IPR β’β’β’ Transdimensional (transitional) subscription: t.me/+WTegDckOQru254rN
Mark: t.me/c/1496817677/208
t.me/SpaceDogSchool/2294
β€1
I remember #zombiesrun and how vivid the game was for me, moving my body and loving the air and sunlight cleansing me.
I would see flowers and snails and stop to snap a photo -- then keep running.
I had clothing, I remember, that fit well and stayed on my body while moving. :-)
The South Austin neighborhoods I explored while tuning my game strength were full of intriguing visual stories I enjoyed being immersed in. These neighborhoods were pleasant. Maybe they still are. They provided a creative fusion, a stark contrast to the auditory (fictional?) crisis narrative indicating dangers of the nearing walking dead.
Be wise to sudden attacks; pick up your speed to pull away from chases.
Nab every supply you can find.
There were things happening in my neighborhoods there in Texas and in the greater world around me that were just as unsettling as... if not radically more so than... the nifty life-and-death podcast audio running game about zombies.
What was I learning?
(What are you learning?)
facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid028NwV3gYKSByn7X9zHJGtSzkFA3ikZVFuod6SH2zR2cJPscAX3LE63RfGdr453XNjl&id=500321077&mibextid=Nif5oz
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6111
I would see flowers and snails and stop to snap a photo -- then keep running.
I had clothing, I remember, that fit well and stayed on my body while moving. :-)
The South Austin neighborhoods I explored while tuning my game strength were full of intriguing visual stories I enjoyed being immersed in. These neighborhoods were pleasant. Maybe they still are. They provided a creative fusion, a stark contrast to the auditory (fictional?) crisis narrative indicating dangers of the nearing walking dead.
Be wise to sudden attacks; pick up your speed to pull away from chases.
Nab every supply you can find.
There were things happening in my neighborhoods there in Texas and in the greater world around me that were just as unsettling as... if not radically more so than... the nifty life-and-death podcast audio running game about zombies.
What was I learning?
(What are you learning?)
facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid028NwV3gYKSByn7X9zHJGtSzkFA3ikZVFuod6SH2zR2cJPscAX3LE63RfGdr453XNjl&id=500321077&mibextid=Nif5oz
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6111
This context of dream traveling... of being pushed to breaking, the fear of broaching survival honesty, and of social supply-seeking... brings the energy of long ago physical activities into a new and different clarity in my present body.
11 years ago, what were you dreaming and feeling?
Were you also running?
Did you also have a sense that you could succeed?
facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02qddAuw2d5kybJqdqdU4aMSwnuLZFcTaa4jTuFovnvwdNsyw2vwBP2GuvSN8sV6yvl&id=500321077&mibextid=Nif5oz
2.09 mile #zombiesrun this morning. Very somber and "dark night of the soul," storywise, matched the mood I woke up with -- and matched the almost-rainy weather, too. Lots of flowers poking through the veil, though, as I'm sure some of you noticed from my Instagram feed... :}
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6113
11 years ago, what were you dreaming and feeling?
Were you also running?
Did you also have a sense that you could succeed?
facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02qddAuw2d5kybJqdqdU4aMSwnuLZFcTaa4jTuFovnvwdNsyw2vwBP2GuvSN8sV6yvl&id=500321077&mibextid=Nif5oz
2.09 mile #zombiesrun this morning. Very somber and "dark night of the soul," storywise, matched the mood I woke up with -- and matched the almost-rainy weather, too. Lots of flowers poking through the veil, though, as I'm sure some of you noticed from my Instagram feed... :}
t.me/MaxMoRadio/6113
π₯1
l.kohanov.6.28.07.webedit.bncd
Linda Kohanov: The Tao of Equus
ποΈ 6/9/07 β’ π 53:27 β’ π 26 MB
Podcast: Attunement: Deep Conversations
Author: Linda Kohanov and Anthony S Wright PhD
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/attunement-deep-conversations/episode/84374019
Episode: http://www.attunement.biz/AttunementMain/podcasts/l.kohanov.6.28.07.web.mp3
A Woman's Journey of Healing and Transformation Through the Way of the Horse
t.me/TheSovereignHorse/198
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11682
ποΈ 6/9/07 β’ π 53:27 β’ π 26 MB
Podcast: Attunement: Deep Conversations
Author: Linda Kohanov and Anthony S Wright PhD
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/attunement-deep-conversations/episode/84374019
Episode: http://www.attunement.biz/AttunementMain/podcasts/l.kohanov.6.28.07.web.mp3
A Woman's Journey of Healing and Transformation Through the Way of the Horse
t.me/TheSovereignHorse/198
t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11682
Listen now (12 min) | Fr. James Aloysius Shea O'Brien, SJ β’ With gratitude to Jim. β’ https://www.intuitivepublicradio.network/p/fr-james-aloysius-shea-obrien-sj β’ t.me/IntuitivePublicRadio/11801
β€βπ₯1
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"A girl performing Group C Compulsory Changquan, or 3rd Duan Changquan." β’ facebook.com/share/v/RsmdWA3WQz1TrXnS β’ t.me/IntuitiveMovement/67 β’ t.me/IntuitiveStrength/1792
"Welcome back to this year's World's Strongest Man Competition..." β’ facebook.com/share/9poVaGE9vJtcLxDK β’ t.me/IntuitiveEdge/4 β’ t.me/IntuitiveStrength/1793
β€1β€βπ₯1
' GM beautiful souls β¨
4.20 mile 10kgs weighted vest run
Every 1 mile. 20 x press ups, 20 x squats & 20 x sit-ups.
Repetition every day π§ '
https://twitter.com/JamesCPeters/status/1767822965024882921
t.me/IntuitiveStrength/1794
4.20 mile 10kgs weighted vest run
Every 1 mile. 20 x press ups, 20 x squats & 20 x sit-ups.
Repetition every day π§ '
https://twitter.com/JamesCPeters/status/1767822965024882921
t.me/IntuitiveStrength/1794
X (formerly Twitter)
James Peters | CEO Therapist (@JamesCPeters) on X
GM beautiful souls β¨
4.20 mile 10kgs weighted vest run
Every 1 mile. 20 x press ups, 20 x squats & 20 x sit-ups.
Repetition every day π§
4.20 mile 10kgs weighted vest run
Every 1 mile. 20 x press ups, 20 x squats & 20 x sit-ups.
Repetition every day π§
Forwarded from Humanley
What You Were Never Told About Disease.
Most people are under the impression that disease is just βa part of lifeβ, but nothing could be further from the truth. There is considerable historical and anthropological evidence that suggests at one point in time, humans lived out their lives completely free of disease.
In 1902, Lieutenant William Safford noted that the Chamorro people of Guam βwere remarkably free from disease and physical defects, and lived to a great ageβ.
Anthropologist Charles Hill-tout stated in 1904, that before European contact, the Chehalis and Scowlitz natives of British Columbia had βsound and strong bodies, free from diseaseβ.
In his 1839 report, John Seely Stone detailed the health of the inhabitants of the Pacific Islands, stating βThese islands, like others in the Pacific, were inhabited, at the time of their discovery, by a people of loose and licentious manners, but free from diseaseβ.
Colonist, William Wood, wrote in 1635, that the native Indians of New England βreached 50 years of age before a wrinkle or grey hair appearedβ. They had βlusty and healthful bodiesβ and did not experience health-wasting diseases. It was not uncommon for them to live to a hundred years of age.
When the first fleet landed in Australia, the colonists documented that the native people were in good health and βfree from diseaseβ.
Given that native people across the world were in exceptional states of physical health, their diets could not have possibly been causing disease. So what were they eating? Their diets were determined by what was available in their environment and what was edible (which they had worked out through many centuries of trial and error). They consumed a wide variety of fresh plant and animal foods. They ate locally, seasonally, organically, sustainably, and mindfully.
There are many people out there who want to point towards this food or that food and claim that it is the cause of disease. However, what this evidence tells us, is that itβs not the food in our environment that is making us sick, but rather the adulteration of our food (i.e. monocrop farming, pesticide use, processing, refining, improper storage, food additives, etc), and the deviation away from traditional dietary practices (i.e. eating locally, seasonally, sustainably, mindfully, etc).
It's time to get back to basics.
Follow Humanley: t.me/humanley
Most people are under the impression that disease is just βa part of lifeβ, but nothing could be further from the truth. There is considerable historical and anthropological evidence that suggests at one point in time, humans lived out their lives completely free of disease.
In 1902, Lieutenant William Safford noted that the Chamorro people of Guam βwere remarkably free from disease and physical defects, and lived to a great ageβ.
Anthropologist Charles Hill-tout stated in 1904, that before European contact, the Chehalis and Scowlitz natives of British Columbia had βsound and strong bodies, free from diseaseβ.
In his 1839 report, John Seely Stone detailed the health of the inhabitants of the Pacific Islands, stating βThese islands, like others in the Pacific, were inhabited, at the time of their discovery, by a people of loose and licentious manners, but free from diseaseβ.
Colonist, William Wood, wrote in 1635, that the native Indians of New England βreached 50 years of age before a wrinkle or grey hair appearedβ. They had βlusty and healthful bodiesβ and did not experience health-wasting diseases. It was not uncommon for them to live to a hundred years of age.
When the first fleet landed in Australia, the colonists documented that the native people were in good health and βfree from diseaseβ.
Given that native people across the world were in exceptional states of physical health, their diets could not have possibly been causing disease. So what were they eating? Their diets were determined by what was available in their environment and what was edible (which they had worked out through many centuries of trial and error). They consumed a wide variety of fresh plant and animal foods. They ate locally, seasonally, organically, sustainably, and mindfully.
There are many people out there who want to point towards this food or that food and claim that it is the cause of disease. However, what this evidence tells us, is that itβs not the food in our environment that is making us sick, but rather the adulteration of our food (i.e. monocrop farming, pesticide use, processing, refining, improper storage, food additives, etc), and the deviation away from traditional dietary practices (i.e. eating locally, seasonally, sustainably, mindfully, etc).
It's time to get back to basics.
Follow Humanley: t.me/humanley
www.jstor.org
Guam and Its People on JSTOR
W. E. Safford, Guam and Its People, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 4, No. 4 (Oct. - Dec., 1902), pp. 707-729
β€1
Forwarded from π @BlessTheVacuum β’ Blessings To The Vacuum β’ Intuitive Social Dialogue β’ Intuitive Public Radio β’ IPR β’β’β’
' What collagen fibers look like in an average person vs someone with EDS. We are missing the glue that holds the body together.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23051630/
#ehlersdanlossyndromeawareness '
facebook.com/share/p/LAS3JqBLaNhbeKy7
t.me/BlessTheVacuum/5472
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23051630/
#ehlersdanlossyndromeawareness '
facebook.com/share/p/LAS3JqBLaNhbeKy7
t.me/BlessTheVacuum/5472