what is yours?

A list of Stephen King’s “personal terrors” was published in 1973.15 This list strikingly reflects the species-typical distribution of evolved fear objects much more so than it reflects the objects, creatures, and situations that a 20th-century inhabitant of Maine ought to fear:
1. Fear of the dark
2. Fear of squishy things
3. Fear of deformity
4. Fear of snakes
5. Fear of rats
6. Fear of closed-in spaces
7. Fear of insects (especially spiders, flies, and beetles)
8. Fear of death
9. Fear of others (paranoia)
10. Fear for someone else

I'd add Fear of vampires and zombies:

a whole lot


firefox crashed!

We will be back once we read thousands of web pages on how to fix.

retronaut

Retronaut: The Photographic Time Machine — coinciding with a book by Wild of the same name, which also debuted last month — features highlights of an unexpected past sourced from Wild’s year of exploring the Woodhorn archive.

"upward going" cosmic rays

...a team of astrophysicists from Penn State University showed that there have been more upward-going high-energy particles than those detected during the two ANITA events. Three times, they wrote, IceCube (another, larger neutrino observatory in Antarctica) detected similar particles, though no one had yet connected those events to the mystery at ANITA. And, combining the IceCube and ANITA data sets, the Penn State researchers calculated that, whatever particle is bursting up from the Earth, it has much less than a 1-in-3.5 million chance of being part of the Standard Model.
Read more

sacred hands



what people say


every day in america


we believe you

Images of Truth from Christine Blasey Ford’s Testimony and What They Mean

The images emerging from the Christine Blasey Ford hearing tell us a lot, but what?

Chasing Ice

glacier collapse

LINK

the body remembers #MeToo

New research reveals that trauma experienced in childhood has longterm damaging effects on quality of life and lifespan. But the same research shows that adults play a critical role in helping children overcome this damage.
READ: The Body Remembers | On Being



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oh yeah...