25/04/2026
You can’t hide what you do when no one’s watching.
Your habits will expose you, whether you like it or not.
People don’t need to ask, they can see it.
In how you speak, how you look, how you carry yourself.
Results don’t lie.
They reflect what you do repeatedly, not what you say once.
Most people try to fake the outcome but avoid the work.
That doesn’t last.
Do it right in private, or get exposed in public.👊💥
25/04/2026
Every habit, every routine, every new challenge feels awkward at first. That’s normal.
If you keep doing it long enough, the discomfort fades. The thing you dread today will be the thing you rely on tomorrow. Stick with it.
25/04/2026
A slice of England's iconic A303 road shows how it changed over thousands of years.
More details/photos: https://hja.li/cgmy
25/04/2026
A 9th-century Viking runestone in Sweden contains the world's longest runic inscription. For over a century, it was thought to be a simple memorial for a dead son.
New research suggests it's a complex riddle about a global climate catastrophe that happened 264 years earlier.
25/04/2026
The Komodo dragon is the largest extant species of lizard & can eat up to 80% of its body weight in one meal, while it mostly eats carrion, the view of a deer that gets swallowed in one bite is truly impressive.
More details/photos: https://hja.li/xf0l
24/04/2026
Born in 1832, Jonathan the tortoise turned 193 today. Yes… 193. This dude is literally the oldest land animal alive. He survived 2 world wars, outlived 40 U.S. presidents, 8 British monarchs, and probably watched more drama on Earth than all of us combined.
He can’t see and smell anymore, but he still recognizes his caretakers just by voice and touch like a wise old gangster. Think about this: Jonathan was alive before the lightbulb existed… and there is a high chance he might still be here AFTER some of us are gone. Happy birthday legend... keep confusing time, history, and all of us… and may you live many more years!
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24/04/2026
The city of Warsaw, Poland, uses eight mussels with sensors hot-glued to their shells to monitor and automatically shut off the city water supply if the shellfish so chooses.
When water quality drops, mussels close their shells, tripping the sensor and alerting control computers. When four of the eight mussels close their shells, the control system automatically shuts off the water supply. Mussels are employed for 3 months before being put back into the wild, and more than 50 water plants around Poland employ this same technique.
Adult clams and oysters can filter up to 50 gallons of water per day, but if the water becomes too toxic, they’ll close their shells up and ride it out.
More details/photos: https://hja.li/qv06
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