Keep your words soft and tender because tomorrow you may have to eat them.
On the night of August 21st, 1986, approximately 1,746 people, as well as 3,500 animals suffocated over a radius of 25 kilometers around Lake Nyos, located in Cameroon. Most of them died in their sleep.
Lake Nyos, dubbed “The Deadliest Lake” by Guinness World Records in
2008, is one of the three ‘exploding lakes’ on this planet. Beneath its
beautiful surface, dangerously high concentrations of carbon dioxide
(CO2) seep into its waters from a pocket of volcanic magma deep below
the lake bed, changing it into carbonic acid.
On a day which later would be called “The Lake Nyos Disaster”,
something, possibly a landslide, triggered the release of approximately
100,000 – 300,000 tons of CO2. A thick cloud of toxic gas spread up to
15 miles from the lake, suffocating thousands of the people sleeping in
the nearby villages of Nyos, Kam, Cha and Subum.
The following excerpt is from a survivor’s report by Joseph Nkwain,
who described the situation when woke up after the cloud had passed:
“I could not speak. I became unconscious. I could not
open my mouth because then I smelled something terrible … I heard my
daughter snoring in a terrible way, very abnormal … When crossing to my
daughter’s bed … I collapsed and fell. […] … I was surprised to see that
my trousers were red, had some stains like honey. I saw some … starchy
mess on my body. My arms had some wounds … I didn’t really know how I
got these wounds …I opened the door … I wanted to speak, my breath would
not come out … My daughter was already dead … I went into my daughter’s
bed, thinking that she was still sleeping. I slept till it was 4:30
p.m. in the afternoon … on Friday. (Then) I managed to go over to my
neighbors’ houses. They were all dead … I decided to leave … . (because)
most of my family was in Wum … I got my motorcycle … A friend whose
father had died left with me (for) Wum … As I rode … through Nyos I
didn’t see any sign of any living thing.”

And the full moon, herself, is a flower in full bloom about to experience loss. Every month she grows in shininess until she is full and then lets go of that light. Does the moon trust that the light will return? Has millions of years of these 28 day cycles taught her something?
Someone can be madly in love with you and still not be ready. They can love you in a way you have never been loved and still not join you on the bridge. And whatever their reasons you must leave. Because you never ever have to inspire anyone to meet you on the bridge. You never ever have to convince someone to do the work to be ready. There is more extraordinary love, more love that you have never seen, out here in this wide and wild universe. And there is the love that will be ready.

Science finally supports that we are all born as blank slates and gender is merely a construct

Certain species of tarantula actually keep frogs as pets in a mutually
beneficial relationship called symbiosis. Insects frequently eat the
eggs of the tarantula, destroying the nest and the tarantula’s future
offspring – and so, in exchange for the frog eating the insects that
enter the spider’s burrow, the tarantula will in turn protect the tiny
frog from other predators.

Linda Blair passes the time with a bit of knitting in between takes whilst filming on the set of The Exorcist.



