The length you lasses go to to get a hump... ...back whale... .and then it's all over in 20 seconds . Looks like you're really enjoying yourself, long may it continue
please log in to view this image History . . . . 56 years ago today, Neil Armstrong made 'one small step for man . . . . one giant leap for mankind'
A senior police officer who has common sense. There’s a thing https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c93kz111wgjo
Man who died after being pulled into MRI machine was wearing 9kg weight-training chain, wife reveals | US News | Sky News https://share.google/5Xl3LtA1rRfHszmB2 RIP to the gent, but this is some real life final destination s**t.
Why was he allowed in the room? I had one and they double checked I had nothing metal on me - hair clips, trouser fasteners, bra wires etc. Nobody else was allowed in the room while the machine was being used.
One of the lads on the premier league board has just checked his lottery from last night. He’s won a few quid but must be gutting coming so close.
Diallo arrested by Reg Hollis for shoplifting Could be a Sunday Sport headline https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62827kwj09o
Quantum physics is changing how we see the universe—and maybe even how we see death. Some of its most mind-bending discoveries suggest that the line between life and death might not be as final as we think. What if death, at least in the way we define it, isn’t the end? At its core, quantum physics reveals a universe that’s anything but fixed. Time, space, and matter—concepts we take for granted—start to blur under the microscope of quantum theory. In certain experiments, particles seem to exist in multiple states at once, shift behavior based on observation, and even appear to be influenced by future events. It’s a reality where everything is connected, and the role of the observer—our consciousness—suddenly becomes central. So what happens if consciousness is not just a byproduct of the brain, but something more fundamental? Some interpretations suggest that awareness might persist even after physical death. In this light, the end of the body might not be the end of the self. It could be a shift—something that continues beyond the limits of space and time. This idea echoes theories like biocentrism, which proposes that consciousness isn’t something created by the universe, but something that creates the universe. From this perspective, death isn’t a disappearance—it’s a transition. Not an ending, but perhaps a move to another layer of reality within the vastness of a multiverse. Time itself doesn’t behave the way we perceive it, either. Quantum experiments have shown that particles can “decide” their state retroactively, as if time can move both forward and backward. If time isn’t linear, maybe life isn’t either. And if life doesn’t follow a straight line, death might be less of a wall and more of a doorway. Quantum physics doesn’t offer concrete proof of life after death—but it shakes the foundations of our material view of existence. It invites us to consider that consciousness might outlast the body, that reality is more fluid than we imagined, and that death might not be what we’ve always believed. Maybe what feels like an ending is just the beginning of something far more mysterious.