Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Power of Neuroplasticity!

Your brain is a living, changing map, and positive thinking can redraw it in remarkable ways. Studies show that when you consistently focus on the good in your life, your brain strengthens the neural pathways that make it easier to notice and seek out more positive experiences. According to PositivePsychology, gratitude activates regions like the prefrontal cortex and ventral striatum, areas tied to reward and emotional regulation. Over time, this repeated activation reshapes the brain through neuroplasticity, the process by which neural connections adapt and grow. also triggers the release of dopamine and serotonin, the “feel‑good” neurotransmitters that stabilize mood and motivation. This creates a feedback loop: the more you practice gratitude, the more your brain looks for reasons to feel grateful. Functional MRI studies even show reduced amygdala reactivity to threat, meaning gratitude can help calm stress responses while reinforcing resilience. This is why practices like gratitude journaling, daily reflection, or even simply naming three good things each day are scientifically backed strategies for improving mental health.

Food(Force) is essential for every move!

Voice for proper governance!

Frigatebirds - Courtship!

Male frigatebirds have one of the most dramatic courtship displays in the animal kingdom. During mating season, the males gather in groups and inflate enormous bright red throat pouches that look like giant balloons. They sit in trees for hours, sometimes even days, trying to attract females flying overhead. While showing off, the males vibrate their wings, shake their heads, and make rattling sounds with their bills to stand out from the crowd. The bigger and brighter the red pouch looks, the more attention they usually get from females. The display may look funny to humans, but it is actually a serious competition. Female frigatebirds carefully inspect the males before choosing a mate, while unsuccessful males can spend an entire breeding season without attracting anyone.

Remove Bacteria from your bloodstream!

Made for eachother!

The other day, I asked my mother if, after nearly six decades of marriage, she was still in love with my father. She looked at me quietly for a moment. Her eyes held years of memories, unspoken stories, and a tenderness that only time can create. She didn’t answer right away. Instead, she smiled—a gentle smile that seemed to carry an entire lifetime within it. That evening, I found a message from her on my phone. Reading it felt like being wrapped in warmth and heartbreak at the same time. "Sometimes you ask whether I still love him. I smile because love, after so many years, can no longer be measured by the feelings people talk about when they are young." "Yes, I love him. But not in the way I once did." "The racing heart, the butterflies, the restless anticipation—they have faded with time. What remains is something deeper: roots that have grown strong through every season of life." "Love is no longer a blazing fire. It is a steady light. It doesn’t shake your world; it helps hold it together. It doesn’t make you lose yourself; it reminds you who you are when life becomes difficult." "There are no grand surprises anymore. Instead, there are the quiet habits we’ve built together—sharing morning coffee, debating little household matters, knowing what the other person needs without a single word being spoken." "Those ordinary moments are love." "At my age, I don’t wait for dramatic gestures. I wait for the comfort of knowing he will listen when I am hurting, support me when I am tired, and stand beside me when I no longer feel strong. And he does." "Always." "Love that lasts a lifetime is not measured by passion alone. It is measured by presence, loyalty, patience, and the decision to keep choosing each other, day after day, year after year." "That is the kind of love that endures."

Tax , Tax & Tax!