J.R.R. Tolkien On Fairy Tales

J.R.R. Tolkien

J.R.R. Tolkien’s hostility toward Disney was not the reflex of an aging scholar suspicious of cartoons or new technology. It was not jealousy, nor a cranky dislike of popular taste. It was a deeply reasoned rejection rooted in a clash of worldviews about what stories are, what they are meant to do, and what is lost when they are reshaped for mass consumption.
The conflict began with a striking convergence in 1937.
That year, Tolkien published *The Hobbit*. On the surface it appeared to be a children’s adventure, but beneath that simplicity lay a carefully engineered mythology. Tolkien was not merely telling a story. He was building a world shaped by ancient languages, medieval literature, and a belief that stories carry moral and spiritual weight. Every place name, every song, every creature belonged to a history that extended far beyond the page. The book was playful, but it was not casual.
Just months later, on December 21, 1937, Disney released *Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs*. It was the first full-length animated feature film, a technical triumph and a financial gamble that paid off spectacularly. When it reached Britain in early 1938, it was impossible to ignore. It dazzled audiences and redefined what popular entertainment could be.
Two visions of fairy tales had arrived almost simultaneously.
Tolkien and his close friend C.S. Lewis went to see *Snow White* together. Both were medievalists. Both believed fairy tales mattered. Neither viewed them as light amusement or childish diversion. They watched carefully.
They left unimpressed.
Lewis wrote in his diary that he found the film cloying. Tolkien’s reaction ran deeper and lasted far longer. What disturbed him was not the animation, which he openly admired, nor Disney’s skill, which he never denied. What unsettled him was what Disney believed fairy tales were for.
Tolkien’s view of fairy tales was precise and serious. In his essay *On Fairy-Stories*, he argued that they were not decorative fantasies for children but ancient instruments for confronting reality. True fairy tales, he believed, acknowledged fear, loss, danger, and moral consequence. They dealt in peril, not comfort. Their power came from the fact that disaster was genuinely possible.
Central to this belief was what Tolkien called “eucatastrophe,” the sudden turn toward joy that feels miraculous only because the darkness beforehand is real. The happy ending matters because it was never guaranteed. Remove the danger and the joy becomes sentimental. The story loses its truth.
Disney’s *Snow White*, as Tolkien saw it, did exactly that. The symbols were still there. The wicked queen. The forest. The dwarfs. But they had been reshaped into something safer, softer, and easier to digest. Evil was obvious and contained. The dwarfs became comic personalities. Fear was present but carefully managed. Everything moved toward reassurance.
To Tolkien, this was not reinterpretation. It was dilution.
He believed Disney had taken stories that once functioned as myth and turned them into spectacle. The transformation kept the outward form while hollowing out the inner purpose. It was like translating poetry into plain prose. The meaning might survive, but the force that made it poetry was gone.
Years later, in a 1964 letter to a film producer, Tolkien put his feelings plainly. He wrote of a “heartfelt loathing” for Disney’s work, not because of incompetence, but because he believed Disney’s undeniable talent had been “hopelessly corrupted.” Anything Disney touched, Tolkien feared, would be flattened into something visually rich but morally shallow.
This was not personal animosity. Tolkien never met Walt Disney. He did not concern himself with Disney the man. His objection was philosophical. It was about intent.
Disney believed stories reached their fullest purpose when they were simplified and clarified. Moral ambiguity became good versus evil. Characters were sorted cleanly into heroes and villains. Darkness was made approachable. Endings were unambiguously happy. This, Disney believed, allowed stories to reach millions.
Tolkien believed the opposite. He believed stories gained power by resisting simplification. Moral ambiguity was not a flaw but a reflection of reality. Characters could be brave and weak at the same time. Evil was rarely simple. Fear mattered because it was earned. Stories were not meant to comfort first. They were meant to tell the truth.
This belief shaped Tolkien’s fierce resistance to adaptation. Throughout his life, filmmakers approached him about adapting *The Lord of the Rings*. He resisted nearly all of them. He feared that Hollywood would do to his work what Disney had done to fairy tales.
He imagined Sam Gamgee turned into comic relief. Gollum reduced to a straightforward villain. Boromir stripped of his moral struggle. Mordor softened to suit family audiences. The darkness replaced by spectacle. The joy manufactured rather than earned.
These fears were not hypothetical. They were based on what Tolkien had already seen happen to traditional stories. He had watched the Grimm brothers transformed into merchandise. He had no reason to trust that his own work would be spared.
In his letters, Tolkien made his position clear. He would rather his stories never be filmed than be altered in ways that destroyed their integrity. Reaching fewer people mattered less to him than preserving what made the stories true.
To Tolkien, mythology was not raw material for improvement. It was something to be guarded. Stories changed naturally over time, he understood that. But there was a difference between organic evolution and alteration driven by commercial necessity. Disney’s changes belonged to the latter.
Critics accused Tolkien of elitism. They argued that Disney introduced fairy tales to children who would never read medieval texts or folktales. They said accessibility mattered.
Tolkien’s answer would have been simple. What, exactly, were those children being introduced to?
If danger is removed, if moral struggle is simplified, if fear becomes harmless, then the story may entertain, but it no longer performs the function of a fairy tale. It becomes something else.
This did not mean Disney’s films lacked value. Tolkien never claimed they were poorly made. His claim was that they were doing a different job. They delighted. They reassured. They did not confront.
To Tolkien, when stories lose their darkness, they lose their mythic power. They can still charm and teach basic lessons, but they can no longer grapple with evil, choice, and consequence in a way that prepares the human mind for reality.
The irony is unavoidable. Tolkien’s own work was eventually adapted to film and achieved enormous commercial success. Peter Jackson’s *Lord of the Rings* trilogy reached a global audience and earned billions. Tolkien did not live to see it.
Whether he would have approved is impossible to say. The films changed many things. But they preserved darkness, loss, and moral struggle in ways Disney adaptations typically did not. They did not fully sand the edges away.
The question Tolkien raised remains unsettled.
When stories are adapted for the widest possible audience, what is lost? When clarity replaces complexity, when safety replaces danger, when comfort replaces truth, do we still have the same story?
Disney proved that transformation brings reach. Tolkien argued that it also brings loss.
One believed stories should be reshaped so everyone could enjoy them. The other believed some stories lose their soul when reshaped that way.
Neither position is trivial. Neither is easily dismissed.
But Tolkien’s opposition to Disney was not stubbornness or nostalgia. It was the considered judgment of a man who devoted his life to understanding how stories work, why they matter, and what happens when their purpose is changed.
It began with *Snow White*. It ended as a warning.
That not all success is harmless.
That not all change is improvement.
And that sometimes, in making stories available to everyone, we quietly remove the very things that once made them worth telling.

Anna Mary Moses

Anna Mary Moses

Anna Mary Robertson woke up every morning at four o’clock. She did it for seventy-eight straight years, long before anyone ever imagined her name would hang on gallery walls.

The alarm was never a clock. It was habit. Darkness still pressed against the windows when she swung her legs out of bed and pulled on her boots. Cows waited to be milked. Chickens needed feeding. The stove had to be lit. Breakfast had to be cooked for whoever happened to be hungry that morning. After that came the garden, the laundry, the mending, the endless small repairs that kept a farm from falling apart.

This was life in rural New York in the late nineteenth century, and Anna Mary knew no other way to exist.

She was born in 1860, the third of ten children, into a world where survival depended on hands that never rested. Schooling was brief. Childhood was shorter. By the age of twelve, she was sent away to work as a hired girl for wealthier families. Twenty-seven cents a week bought the right to scrub floors, wash clothes, cook meals, and raise children who belonged to someone else.

There was no room for wanting. No space for imagining a different life. Whatever dreams she carried were pushed down until they were nearly forgotten.

Still, something in her noticed beauty. As a child, she crushed berries and mixed the juice with chalk, painting rough colors onto scraps of wood when no one was watching. It was a quiet pleasure, fleeting and impractical. It did not help with rent or bread or winter coats. So she let it go.

At twenty-seven, she married Thomas Moses. Together they farmed land in Virginia, then returned north to New York. Life followed the same rhythm it always had. Work. Weather. Birth. Loss.

Ten children were born. Five survived.

Each death hollowed her a little, but she did not stop. She cooked. She cleaned. She sewed quilts by lamplight after everyone else had gone to bed. She patched clothes until fabric turned thin as paper. She learned endurance the way other people learned art.

Years collapsed into seasons. Seasons into decades. The children grew up and left. Thomas’s back gave out, but he worked anyway. Anna Mary worked alongside him, her hands cracked and strong, her body shaped by repetition.

She rose before dawn. She slept late only when illness forced her to. She never once thought of herself as an artist.

In 1927, Thomas died.

Anna Mary was sixty-seven years old.

The farmhouse fell quiet in a way it never had before. No footsteps. No shared meals. No voices carrying across the fields. For the first time in her life, she belonged only to herself, and she did not know what to do with the silence.

She turned to embroidery, the familiar motion of needle and thread. But age had arrived uninvited. Arthritis stiffened her fingers. Each stitch burned. What had once been comforting became unbearable.

Her sister suggested painting.

“Your hands might manage a brush better than a needle,” she said.

Anna Mary had never held a paintbrush in her life. She had never seen a museum. She did not know what “art” was supposed to look like. But she walked into the general store and bought a few cheap tubes of house paint, the kind meant for barns and fences. She found old boards in the shed. She mixed colors on cardboard.

She was seventy-eight years old when she painted her first picture.

It was simple. A farmhouse. Rolling hills. Figures working the land.

But something opened.

Memories flooded out. Winter sleigh rides. Maple sugaring parties. Barn raisings. Harvest dances. Children skating on frozen ponds. A world she had lived inside and watched slowly disappear.

She painted from memory, not observation. She did not sketch. She did not revise. She worked quickly, confidently, joyfully. Sometimes she painted until two in the morning, humming hymns at her kitchen table.

For three years, she painted without expectation. She gave pictures to neighbors. Sold a few for three or four dollars at the local pharmacy. It was enough to buy groceries. Enough to keep going.

Then, in 1938, a man named Louis Caldor walked past the pharmacy window.

He was an art collector from New York City. The paintings stopped him cold.

He bought every single one.

“Who painted these?” he asked.

“That’s just Grandma Moses,” the pharmacist said. “She’s about eighty.”

Caldor drove straight to her farmhouse. He found her in a calico dress and apron, painting at her kitchen table.
“You’re going to be famous,” he told her.

She laughed. She thought he was teasing.

He wasn’t.

Within two years, her paintings were hanging in New York galleries. Critics called her work primitive. Naive. Untrained. They searched for categories because they didn’t know where to put an elderly farm woman who painted joy without irony.

The public understood immediately.

They saw warmth. Community. A world where people knew each other and seasons mattered. They saw happiness without apology.

At eighty, Anna Mary Moses appeared on the cover of *Life* magazine. At ninety, she painted every day. She worked until she was 101 years old, producing more than 1,600 paintings.
She had spent nearly eight decades doing what survival demanded.

Then she spent the rest of her life doing what her hands had always wanted to do.

She did not talk about inspiration. She did not speak about destiny. She simply painted what she knew and loved.

Anna Mary Moses proved that a beginning does not expire with age. That the life you were meant to live can wait patiently for you. And that sometimes, the longest road leads exactly where it was always supposed to end.

Of Friction, Tension, Dovetail Joints And Cooperation

Two Arguing In Trade Class

I watched two boys threatening to kill each other over a news headline that wouldn’t matter by Tuesday, standing in a room full of saws they didn’t know how to use.
That was my final Tuesday. The administration called it “The Transition.” I called it what it was: the death of the last place in this school where truth was something you could touch. They were gutting my woodshop to put in a “Digital Innovation Lab.” Apparently, the world needed more podcasts and fewer chairs.
I’m seventy-two. My hands look like tree bark, and I’ve got a lower back that predicts rain better than the Weather Channel. I was just supposed to pack my tools and leave.
But then Hunter and Leo walked in.
They weren’t supposed to be there. They were cutting gym class, hiding out in the dust-choked silence of the shop. Hunter was a kid who wore work boots that had never seen a job site, angry at a world he felt was leaving him behind.
Leo was the opposite—slight, anxious, wearing a hoodie that cost more than my first car, angry at a world he felt was burning down.
I didn’t hear what started it. Probably something they saw on a screen. But when I walked out of the supply closet, they were chest-to-chest.
“You people are the problem,” Hunter spat, his face red. “You’re a dinosaur,” Leo shot back, his voice shaking but sharp. “You’re ruining everything.”
They were parroting scripts written by millionaires in television studios, acting out a war neither of them started.
I could have sent them to the principal. I could have walked away. But I looked at the lathe in the corner, covered in forty years of dust, and I felt a sudden, desperate need to leave something behind that wasn’t silence.
I picked up a piece of scrap pine and slammed it onto a workbench. The sound cracked like a gunshot.
They jumped apart, eyes wide.
“Phones,” I barked. I held out a grease-stained hand. “On the bench. Now.”
“We weren’t doing anything,” Hunter stammered, posturing.
“I didn’t ask what you were doing. I said phones.”
Reluctantly, they handed over their lifelines. Two black rectangles of glass that told them who to hate every morning.
I pointed to the center of the room. There sat the Beast. A twelve-foot solid oak conference table. It belonged to the Town Council. It was built in 1955.
Someone had spilled industrial solvent on it, ruining the finish, and the legs were wobbling. The town wanted to scrap it for a plastic one. I had rescued it.
“This leaves tomorrow,” I told them. “It needs to be stripped, sanded, and stabilized. And I can’t lift it alone.”
“I have a physics test,” Leo said, looking at the door.
“Physics,” I grunted. “Good. Today you’re going to learn about friction and leverage. Grab a sander.”
For the first twenty minutes, the air was thick with resentment. The belt sanders roared, drowning out their ability to argue. That’s the beauty of loud machinery; it forces you to shut up and pay attention to your hands.
Hunter attacked the wood aggressively, trying to force the varnish off. Leo was timid, barely touching the surface.
“Stop,” I yelled over the noise. I walked over to Hunter. “You’re digging in.
You’re scarring the wood because you’re angry. The wood doesn’t care about your feelings, son. Treat it with respect, or it’ll give you splinters.”
I turned to Leo. “And you. You’re afraid of it. You’re dancing around the problem. Put your weight into it. Lean in.”
They glared at me, but they adjusted.
An hour passed. The smell of decades-old varnish gave way to the clean, sharp scent of red oak. It’s a smell that gets into your lungs and cleans out the rot. The sweat started coming. Real sweat. Not the kind you get from stress, but the honest kind that comes from work.
“We need to fix the legs,” I said, flipping the massive table over. “Hunter, grab that end. Leo, get the other. On three.”
It was heavy. Stupidly heavy. Hunter slipped. The weight shifted entirely to Leo.
“I got it!” Leo grunted, his face going pale, knees buckling. “Don’t drop it!”
Hunter yelled, but he didn’t just yell. He scrambled, sliding under the frame, jamming his shoulder up to take the weight off Leo.
For ten seconds, they stood there, panting, locked together by three hundred pounds of timber. If one moved, the other would get crushed.
“Together,” I said softly. “Set it down. Slow.”
They lowered it. When they stood up, they didn’t look at their phones. They looked at each other. Just for a second. It wasn’t a look of friendship, but it was a look of recognition. You have mass. You are real. You are not a pixel.
I brought them over to the broken joint on the leg.
“Look at this,” I said, tracing the jagged wood. “This is a dovetail joint. It’s the strongest joint in carpentry.”
They leaned in.
“You see how the tails are cut?” I asked. “They flare out. They’re trapezoids. Once you fit them together, you can’t pull them apart just by pulling. The only way this joint fails is if the wood itself breaks.”
I looked them in the eye.
“The carpenter who built this didn’t use nails. He didn’t use screws. He used friction. He used tension. The two pieces of wood are cut differently, forced to fit together. The pressure is what holds them up. If they were exactly the same, they’d slide right apart. It’s the difference that locks them in.”
The room went quiet. The ventilation fan hummed in the background.
“You two,” I said, gesturing between them. “You think you’re enemies because you’re cut different. But a house built with only one kind of board falls down in the first wind. America wasn’t built by people who agreed on everything. It was built by people who hated each other’s guts but knew they needed the other guy to raise the barn.”
Hunter looked at his boots. Leo ran his thumb over the raw oak grain.
“Glue,” I ordered.
For the next two hours, the politics disappeared. The headlines about the election, the economy, the social wars—they dissolved in the smell of sawdust and wood glue. There was only the task.
Hold this. Pass the clamp. Too much glue, wipe it. My arm is cramping. Switch sides.
When we finished, the table looked magnificent. The grain popped with a coat of fresh oil, swirling like a topographic map of a country that no longer existed. It was solid. You could have parked a truck on it.
The bell rang. The spell broke.
They wiped their hands on rags. They were covered in the same gray dust. You couldn’t tell who voted for who. You couldn’t tell whose dad was a lawyer and whose dad was a mechanic. They were just two young men who had made something useful.
I handed them back their phones. The screens lit up immediately with notifications—doom, outrage, noise.
Hunter looked at his screen, then looked at the table. He didn’t check his messages. He just slid the phone into his pocket.
“It’s… good,” Hunter said. “It’s solid.” “Yeah,” Leo said, flexing his sore hand. “It’s not going anywhere.”
They walked to the door. Before they left, Leo turned around.
“Mr. Frank? What happens to the table?”
“It stays,” I said. “The Town Council voted to keep it. Said they couldn’t find anything new that felt real.”
They nodded and walked out into the hallway, into the noise of hundreds of kids staring at screens. But I saw them walk out differently. Shoulders back. Heads up. They didn’t walk together, but they walked parallel.
I swept the shop one last time. I left the sawdust on the floor.
We live in a time where everyone wants to be the hammer, smashing down anything that doesn’t look like them. We’ve forgotten that the goal isn’t to break things—it’s to build things that can stand the weight of the world.
We don’t need to agree on everything. We just need to remember that we are the wood, not the fire. And if we don’t learn to lock together, holding tight to the very people we struggle against, we’re going to collapse.
I turned off the lights. The smell of oak lingered in the dark. It smelled like hope.

SARS-CoV-2 Infection, the Spike Protein and GzmA: Yet Another Carcinogenic Mechanism

There is a serine protease that is actively secreted by cytotoxic immune cells like Natural Killer (NK) cells and T cells called GzmA. Levels of this protein are implicated in the development of cancer.

If we look at SARS-CoV-2 infection, we discover that this protease is markedly elevated compared to healthy controls.

What I find intriguing and important is that GzmA is also found to be expressed significantly in those experiencing Long COVID. This was discovered in a just published study.

So, what we have seen is yet another mechanism which shows that SARS-CoV-2 is almost certainly an oncogenic virus. One observation I have made over the years is how the virus and its Spike Protein can tip the balance of so many different biological processes. It seems to always find a way to push the “bad” lever when it affects a process that can be either beneficial or pathological in the body.

https://wmcresearch.substack.com/p/sars-cov-2-infection-the-spike-protein

We’re “At The Beginning Of The Credit Destruction Cycle”; Ed Dowd Warns

(Tom: Those who do not know history are doomed to repeat it. The economy routinely cycles through periods of boom and bust. If you know where you are in the cycle you are less likely to make decisions that turn out badly.)

Ed Dowd Talk

Former Wall Street money manager and financial analyst Ed Dowd of PhinanceTechnologies.com warned in September we were at the “Beginning of Panic Rate Cut Cycle.”  Since that prediction, the Fed has cut interest rates three times.  Looks like Dowd called it correctly.

What is working are precious metals, especially gold.  Dowd does not see gold losing its shine anytime soon.  Dowd says,

“If we get any kind of credit crisis, gold may get sold temporarily where people sell what they can, but not what they want.  Long term, gold looks like it’s going to $10,000 an ounce on the charts by 2030.  Everything is conspiring fundamentally and technically to lead us that way.  They made gold a Tier 1 asset.  

That makes gold money again in the banking system. . .. I would not get scared out of my physical gold position anytime soon.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/were-beginning-credit-destruction-cycle-ed-dowd-warns

Pearl S. Buck

Pearl S. Buck

Her manuscript was destroyed by war. Her disabled daughter needed care she couldn’t afford. Her husband controlled every penny. At 35, broke and desperate, she had one last chance—so she wrote a book that changed the world.

Her name was Pearl S. Buck, and she would become the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. But first, she had to survive what would break most people.

Born in West Virginia in 1892, Pearl spent just three months in America before her missionary parents carried her to China. She grew up in Zhenjiang on the Yangtze River, speaking Chinese before English, playing with local children with her blonde hair hidden under a hat.

“I did not consider myself a white person in those days,” she later remembered.

She belonged everywhere and nowhere—a feeling that would haunt and define her entire life.

In 1917, she married John Lossing Buck and settled in rural China. Three years later, she gave birth to Carol.

Something was terribly wrong.

Carol couldn’t speak. She had violent tantrums lasting hours. She couldn’t learn basic tasks. Pearl’s husband withdrew completely, leaving her alone with a child whose condition no doctor could explain. Today we know Carol had phenylketonuria—a metabolic disorder causing severe developmental disabilities. In 1920, it was a mystery that felt like a curse.

Her husband controlled every penny of their money, forcing Pearl to beg for an allowance from her own teaching salary. He refused to return to America where Carol might get better care. Pearl realized with crushing clarity: she alone would be responsible for her daughter’s future, and she had no way to provide it.

Then came 1927.

During China’s civil war, the Nanking Incident erupted—a violent uprising that forced Pearl’s family to flee with only the clothes they wore. Soldiers ransacked their home.
In her attic workspace sat the only copy of her first completed novel—years of work destroyed in minutes.

The Red Cross evacuated them to Japan, then to a cramped rental in Shanghai shared with two other families. Her husband returned to work, leaving Pearl alone with the children in poverty.

She was 35. Her marriage was dying. Her daughter needed expensive lifelong care. Her manuscript was ash. She had nothing.

Most people would have surrendered.

Pearl started writing again—not from inspiration, but from desperation. Writing was her only path to financial independence, her only hope for Carol’s future.

She found a trade magazine listing three literary agents and wrote to all three.

Two rejected her immediately: “No American market for stories about China.”

The third, David Lloyd, said yes. He would represent her for 30 years.

In 1929, Pearl took Carol to America to find care. Touring institutions broke her heart—warehouses where disabled children were hidden and forgotten. She finally found the Vineland Training School in New Jersey, a place that seemed humane.

Leaving Carol there was, she said, the hardest thing she ever did.

To afford it, she borrowed money she had no idea how to repay.

Meanwhile, her first novel, East Wind, West Wind, was finally accepted—after 25 rejections. It was the last publisher on her agent’s list. One more rejection and it would have been withdrawn forever.

Pearl returned to China and began writing in a frenzy, driven by financial terror and creative urgency.

Three months later, The Good Earth was finished.

It told the story of Wang Lung, a Chinese farmer, and his wife O-Lan—ordinary people Pearl portrayed as fully human, complex, dignified, worthy of love. In 1930s America, where racism toward Chinese people was rampant, this was revolutionary.

When the Book-of-the-Month Club chose The Good Earth, Pearl received $4,000—enough for years of Carol’s care. She wept. For the first time in her life, she had security.

The book exploded. Nearly 2 million copies sold in the first year. It remained the bestselling novel of both 1931 and 1932. Pearl earned over $100,000 in eighteen months—an astronomical fortune during the Great Depression. She immediately secured $40,000 for Carol’s long-term care.

In 1938, Pearl S. Buck became the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

But her achievement went deeper than a prize. She had humanized Chinese people to Americans who’d been taught to see them as foreign and lesser. She built bridges across cultures through the simple power of storytelling.

She spent the rest of her life fighting for civil rights, women’s rights, and disability rights. She adopted seven mixed-race children. She wrote over 70 books. She founded Welcome House—the first international interracial adoption agency in America.

Pearl died in 1973 at 80. Carol outlived her mother, dying in 1992 at 72, having spent most of her life safely cared for at Vineland—exactly what Pearl had fought so desperately to ensure.

Pearl’s story teaches us something profound: sometimes our greatest work doesn’t come from comfort or privilege. It comes from necessity. From the determination to survive. From the fierce love that makes us refuse to give up.

She didn’t write The Good Earth because she felt inspired. She wrote it because her daughter needed her, and she had no other way forward.

And that desperation—that pure, undiluted love—produced one of the most important American novels of the 20th century.
Pearl S. Buck proved that when we’re fighting for the people we love, we’re capable of changing the world.

MRSA Slayer

MRSA Slayer

In 2015, a group of scientists decided to put an unlikely medieval remedy to the test.
They turned to a 10th-century Anglo-Saxon medical manuscript known as **Bald’s Leechbook**, which described a treatment for eye infections that sounded almost too simple to take seriously. The recipe called for garlic, onion, wine, and oxgall, mixed together in a **brass vessel** and left to sit for **nine nights**. The instructions were precise—so the researchers followed them exactly, down to the type of container used.
Expectations were low. Medieval medicine is often written off as superstition or guesswork. But when the aged mixture was finally tested in the lab, the results stunned everyone.
The salve was applied to **MRSA**, one of the most dangerous antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the modern world. Instead of barely working, the ancient formula wiped out **up to 90 percent** of the bacterial cells—outperforming many contemporary treatments. Even more surprising, none of the ingredients worked nearly as well on their own. The power came from the **exact combination**, prepared exactly as the text described.
The discovery forced scientists to rethink long-held assumptions about early medicine. It suggested that some medieval healers, through observation and experience, had uncovered complex antimicrobial strategies long before modern microbiology existed.
Since then, Bald’s Leechbook has become a symbol of something bigger: the idea that valuable medical knowledge may still be hiding in ancient texts, overlooked simply because of their age.
Sometimes progress doesn’t come from inventing something new, it comes from listening carefully to the past.

Signs from the Earth, Sun, and Planets suggest something BIG is coming

Sun Explained

The risk of a megaquake striking Japan is rising as more anomalous earthquake activity continues in an area prone to magnitude 9.0+ earthquakes. Simultaneously, large coronal holes on the Sun have been pumping energy into the Earth continuously now for months, and a very rare planetary alignment will occur early January of 2026, right around when Earth is expected to be experiencing space weather notable for often coinciding perfectly with high-magnitude earthquakes. Will this cosmic convergence cause something big to happen, or will we get lucky? Geophysicist Stefan Burns reports

Click to view the video: https://nexusnewsfeed.com/article/self-sufficiency/signs-from-the-earth-sun-and-planets-suggest-something-big-is-coming/