Compressed Air Power Plant

Ragged Chutes

What’s actually possible is suppressed from public view. This is a diagram of an actual compressed-air power plant that ran for over 70 years; it was shut down because an insurance company claimed that it attracted too many observers and someone could get injured, so they shut it down… They are trying to control the rain, the groundwater, your ability to save seed, and so much more – why wouldn’t they hide basic things like nearly-free energy generation? This is #Permaculture in practice, and this is a diagram from The Permaculture Student 2: https://www.thepermaculturestudent.com/shop/the-permaculture-student-2-the-textbook-ebook

Livestock Farming

Livestock Farming

A pasture grazed by cattle alone is a good pasture. Put cattle and sheep on it together and it becomes something else.

The cattle take the long grass, the coarse stems, the rough patches. The sheep come behind and clear what the cattle left: the short regrowth, the wildflowers, the plants a cow won’t touch. Two heights, two mouths, two patterns. Twice the use, none of the waste.

Add a goat and the bramble line retreats. Add a pig on the woodland edge and the parasite cycles break. Add a few geese and weeds you never knew you had quietly vanish. Each animal eats what the others refuse and breaks the worms the others carry. The system tunes itself.

The result is about as biodiverse, productive and low-input as farming gets. More carbon in the soil. More birds. More wildflowers. Less disease. Less spent on feed, wormer and fertiliser. Ground that would grow no crop at all turns into meat, milk and wool.

This is the oldest idea in farming. Nearly every working agricultural culture has done it since the beginning: Roman estates, medieval manors, Mongolian camps, Welsh hill farms.

The single-species, single-field, single-product model that shoved it aside is barely a century old, and it is running out of road on every measure you can name.

The fix is older than the problem. A Welsh farm with cattle on the low pasture, sheep on the high, a goat on the bramble line and a couple of geese in the orchard.

The farmer would explain the whole thing in four minutes, if anyone asked.

The policy paper never has.

Dr. Thomas Seyfried

Dr. Thomas Seyfried

Cancer remains one of the leading causes of death in the United States, with thousands of lives lost each day. Researchers widely agree that healthy lifestyle choices including avoiding tobacco, maintaining a healthy weight, being physically active, limiting alcohol, protecting against excessive sun exposure, and following recommended cancer screenings reduce the risk of many cancers.

Some scientists, including Dr. Thomas Seyfried, have proposed that disruptions in cellular metabolism play an important role in cancer development and have explored metabolic therapies, such as ketogenic diets, fasting, and other approaches, as potential areas of research. While this work has generated scientific interest, unfortunately the broader medical community continues to view cancer as a complex group of diseases involving interactions among genetic mutations, metabolism, environmental exposures, lifestyle factors, and the immune system.

Standard treatments such as surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, and hormone therapy are claimed to have improved survival rates for many types of cancer and remain the treatments of choice.

Ongoing research aims to better understand cancer biology and develop more effective, personalized treatments while emphasizing prevention through healthy lifestyle choices and early detection.

Fact: According to leading cancer organizations, an estimated 30–50% of cancers may be preventable by reducing known risk factors and participating in recommended screening programs.

The WHO estimate 90%+ of cancer risk is diet and lifestyle, not genetic.

The blame on genetics fails to account for the fact that diet, exercise and environmental factors (like toxins), labelled epigenetics (Dfn. epi above’ genetics), have ability to ‘turn on’ or ‘turn off’ gene expression.

Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes only. Claims that any single diet, supplement, or metabolic therapy can prevent or cure cancer are not supported for all cancers, and treatment decisions should always be made in conjunction with someone who has a proven track record of helping the body recover from cancer.

Jimi Hendrix and Les Paul

Jimi Hendrix and Les Paul

A 53 year old guitar legend told Jimi: “You’re ruining my invention” — 5 minutes later Les Paul was crying

Spring 1968, Gibson Guitar Factory, Kalamazoo, Michigan. A private event for dealers and session musicians. Maybe 40 people in the room, all professionals who’d built careers on the instrument they were celebrating. Les Paul was there. Of course he was there. This was his guitar. Not metaphorically, literally.

He’d invented the solid body electric guitar in 1941, perfected it over years, and in 1952, Gibson put his name on it. The Les Paul model. 26 years later, it was the most recorded guitar in popular music. At 53, Les was still playing regularly, still touring, still showing younger musicians how it was done. His technique was immaculate.

Clean, precise, every note crystal clear. He’d made his reputation on control, on making the electric guitar sound refined, not a noise maker. He’d heard about Jimi Hendrix. Everyone had. The young guitarist who’d come from London the previous year and changed American rock music overnight. Are You Experienced? Purple Haze.

The Monterey Pop Festival where he’d set his guitar on fire. Les had opinions about all of it. “That’s not guitar playing,” he told people. “That’s chaos. I built this instrument for clean tone, for jazz, for precision. These rock kids are just making noise with it. Feedback, distortion, all that garbage.

They don’t understand what the guitar is for.” Someone at Gibson had invited Jimmy to the event. A publicity move, probably. Get the hottest guitarist in rock music to show up at a Les Paul celebration, get some photos, create some buzz. Jimmy had said yes, though nobody was sure he’d actually come. Around 9:00 p.m., he walked in. Jimmy was wearing a purple velvet jacket, his Afro huge, even by 1968 standards.

A white Stratocaster case in his hand. He looked around the room quietly, not making a scene, just observing. A few people recognized him immediately. Whispers started spreading through the crowd. Les Paul was in the middle of telling a story about recording “How High the Moon” in 1951, when someone tapped his shoulder and pointed toward the entrance.

“Jimi Hendrix just arrived.” Les turned and looked. He’d never met Jimmy in person, only seen him on television, seen the footage of Monterey, heard the records. He looked younger in person, smaller, less threatening. Les excused himself from the conversation and walked over. “Mr. Hendrix,” Les said, extending his hand. “Les Paul.”

“I know who you are, sir,” Jimmy said quietly, shaking his hand. “Honored to meet you. I’ve been playing your guitar since I was 15.”

“I’ve heard your records,” Les said, not warm, not cold, observational.

“Yeah?” Jimmy said, uncertain how to read the tone.

“You play a Strat, though.” Les nodded toward the case.

“Mostly,” Jimmy said, “but I learned on a Les Paul. Couldn’t afford a new one. Bought a used one in Seattle for $50. Played it until the neck warped.”

Les nodded. There was a pause. Around them people were watching, sensing something was about to happen, but not sure what. “Can I ask you something?” Les said.

“Sure.”

“Why do you play so loud?” Jimmy didn’t answer immediately.

He was used to this question, used to the judgment behind it.

“It’s how I hear it,” Jimmy finally said.

“The guitar wasn’t designed for that,” Les said. “I built it for clean tone, for hearing every note. When you turn up that loud, when you use all that distortion and feedback, you’re fighting the instrument. You’re using it wrong.”

The room had gone quiet. People nearby had stopped their conversations. Jimmy looked at Les. No anger in his eyes, no defensiveness, just listening. “I spent 20 years perfecting this instrument,” Les continued, “making it sing clearly. And your generation is just making it scream. That’s not music. That’s noise.”

Someone in the crowd shifted uncomfortably. This wasn’t the friendly photo op they’d expected. “You ever play clean?” Les asked. “No effects, no volume, no tricks. Just the guitar and your fingers?”

“Sometimes,” Jimmy said quietly.

“Show me.” It wasn’t aggressive. It was a challenge, yes, but delivered calmly. An older craftsman asking a younger one to prove he understood the fundamentals. Jimmy looked around the room. There were several Les Paul guitars on display stands, beautiful instruments under glass cases. Jimmy pointed to one, a 1958 gold top.

“Can I?” A Gibson representative unlocked the case and handed the guitar to Jimmy.

It was the first time many people in that room had seen Jimmy hold a Les Paul. He sat down on a stool someone adjusted the guitar on his lap, spent maybe 30 seconds tuning it by ear. The room watched in complete silence. Les Paul stood about 10 feet away, arms crossed, waiting. Jimmy plugged into a small Fender amp someone had set up earlier for demonstrations.

He turned the volume to maybe three out of 10. Clean. No distortion possible at that level. Then he started playing. He didn’t play one of his own songs. He didn’t play Hendrix. He played Les Paul. Specifically, he played “How High the Moon,” the 1951 recording that had made Les Paul a household name.

The song that had shown the world what the electric guitar could do when played with precision and innovation. Les Paul had recorded that song using sound-on-sound, layering multiple guitar parts to create harmonies that sounded like a full band, but were all guitar. Revolutionary in 1951, still influential in 1968, Jimmy played it note for note.

Not approximately, not in his own style, exactly as Les had recorded it 17 years earlier. The jazz chords, the complex fingerings, the rapid runs, every harmonic, every pull-off, every piece of the arrangement that had taken Les months to perfect. Jimmy played it from memory, clean and precise, making that 1958 Les Paul sing exactly as Les Paul had intended.

The room was mesmerized. Les Paul’s expression changed from skeptical to focused. He was watching Jimmy’s fingers, listening to the phrasing, recognizing his own playing in someone else’s hands. This wasn’t mimicry. This was mastery. Jimmy understood every choice Les had made in that recording, understood the theory behind the voicings, the logic of the progressions, the touch required to make those notes speak clearly.

After about 90 seconds, Jimmy finished the main theme of the song. The room started to applaud, but Jimmy held up a hand. “That’s how you intended it,” Jimmy said, looking at Les. “Now let me show you how I hear it.” He reached down and turned the amp up. Not to 10, not to Monterey levels, but to maybe six.

Enough to get some natural tube distortion, some sustain, some of that warmth that made rock and roll possible. Then he played “How High the Moon” again. But this time it was different. Same notes, same chord progression, same melodic ideas, but now it had weight. It had emotion. It had what Jimmy heard when he listened to that 1951 recording, not just as a technical achievement, but as music, as human expression.

He used the volume knob on the guitar, rolling it back and forth to go from clean to dirty within the same phrase. He used his fingers to create dynamics that clean playing couldn’t achieve, making single notes sustain and bloom in ways that sounded both ancient and futuristic. He took Les Paul’s crystalline jazz arrangement and added blues to it, soul to it, rock and roll to it.

Not replacing what Les had done, but building on it, showing how the same musical ideas could live in 1951 and 1968 simultaneously. And then for the final 30 seconds, he added the Jimi Hendrix touch. A little feedback, controlled and musical. Some wah-wah texture. A harmonic that seemed to come from nowhere.

But even with all of that, even with the volume and the modern techniques, you could still hear Les Paul’s original arrangement underneath. Jimmy hadn’t destroyed it. He’d honored it, then expanded it. When he finished, he turned the amp back down and set the guitar gently on the stand. Nobody applauded. Not yet.

The moment was too big for immediate reaction. Les Paul stood perfectly still. His arms had uncrossed at some point during the performance. His expression was unreadable. Then someone noticed his eyes were wet. Les walked over to Jimmy slowly. The room watched as the 53-year-old legend approached the 25-year-old revolutionary.

“Where did you learn to play like that?” Les asked quietly.

“From your records,” Jimmy said. “From Muddy Waters, from Robert Johnson, from everyone who came before me.”

“The first part,” Les said, “that was my arrangement, exactly.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You’ve had that memorized?”

“Since I was 17. Wore out three copies of that record trying to learn it.”

Les Paul was quiet for a moment. When he spoke again, his voice was thick. “I’ve been playing guitar for 40 years. I invented this instrument. I thought I knew what it was for, what it could do.” He gestured at the Les Paul guitar Jimmy had just played. “I built this for clean tone, for precision, for jazz.

I thought your generation was ruining it, using it wrong, making noise.”

“You weren’t completely wrong,” Jimmy said gently. “Sometimes it is noise, but sometimes noise is music, too.”

“What you just played,” Les said, and now there were definitely tears on his face, visible to everyone close enough to see. “The first part, that was the past.

My past. What I built.”

“Yes, sir.”

“The second part, that was the future. What it’s becoming.” Jimmy didn’t respond, just listened. “And they’re both beautiful,” Les said. “I couldn’t see that before. I thought you kids were destroying what I’d created, but you’re not. You’re completing it. You’re showing me what it was always meant to become.” He put his hand on Jimmy’s shoulder. “I built this guitar 27 years ago. Tonight you showed me what I built it for. I just didn’t know it yet.” The room erupted in applause then. Not the polite applause of a corporate event, but genuine, moved applause from people who understood they’d witnessed something profound.

Les Paul and Jimi Hendrix talked for another hour that night, sitting in a corner while the party continued. Les asked about technique, equipment, how Jimmy created his sounds. Jimmy asked about the early days, Les’s innovations, the choices he’d made. It wasn’t teacher and student. It was two craftsmen sharing knowledge across generations, both learning.

A photographer captured one image that night. Les Paul and Jimi Hendrix sitting side by side, both holding Les Paul guitars, both smiling. Les has his arm around Jimmy’s shoulders. The photo would become iconic. When Jimmy died two years later in 1970, Les Paul was devastated. In interviews afterward, he would always bring up that night in Kalamazoo.

Rachel Ward

Rachel Ward

In the spring of 1983, a British actress named Rachel Ward appeared on American television for four nights, playing a character named Meggie Cleary in a miniseries called The Thorn Birds.

Around one hundred forty million people watched.

For four episodes she played the forbidden love of a Catholic priest, a story spanning decades, set against the Australian outback, built on longing and sacrifice and landscapes so wide they barely seemed real. It became one of the most-watched television events of its decade.

Hollywood had its next star. And Rachel Ward, at twenty-five, had absolutely no idea what to do with that.

She had not planned any of it. Born in England in 1957, raised in an aristocratic family in the Cotswolds, she had moved through the world of high fashion modeling in London, Paris, and New York before drifting toward acting in Los Angeles in the early 1980s. She noticed early what that world was actually offering her.

“You soon find it’s a very empty and unsatisfying place to inhabit,” she said later. “I was just make-up. I was fantasy.”

What happened instead was something quieter.

On the set of The Thorn Birds she met Bryan Brown, an Australian actor playing her on-screen husband. He was funny, grounded, and completely comfortable in his own skin. He proposed within months of meeting her. She asked him to wait. He told her he might not ask again. She said yes.

They married in 1983, the same year the show aired. They moved to Australia together, where she became a citizen in 1986. They bought a farm, eight hundred sixty-five acres in New South Wales. Three children followed.

Rachel kept working and eventually moved behind the camera too, writing scripts and directing, winning an Australian Film Institute Award in 2001. But the farm kept growing in importance until it became the point of everything.

Then she went further. In recent years she threw herself into regenerative farming, rebuilding soil health and working with the land rather than against it. She spent her days fixing water pumps and moving cattle, her hands roughened in ways that had nothing to do with any role she had ever played.

In late 2024, at sixty-seven, she posted a video. No makeup. Short grey hair. Driving an ATV through a muddy field. Just doing what she does every day, not performing anything at all.

The comments were quick and unkind. What happened to her. I didn’t recognize you. She has aged really bad.

Ward saw them and responded, not with anger, but with something that landed harder.

“I’m so past caring about what people think about one’s appearance or age. All I want to hear is, ‘Actually, Rachel’s cows are looking pretty good.'”

Then she added: “How ironic that my going grey garnered me more attention than if I’d taken my top off.”

And to those defending her in the comments: “I just feel sorry for those poor souls who fear aging so much. They will learn that it’s ultimate freedom as a woman to let youth and beauty go.”

Forty-three years ago, one hundred forty million people fell in love with Rachel Ward on a screen. Today she is more interested in whether her soil is healthy and her cows are doing well.

Hollywood gave her a face half the world recognized. The farm gave her work that actually mattered to her.

She never had much trouble knowing the difference, even when the rest of the world was still catching up.

For those who have been told you were just make-up, just fantasy, by an industry offering you everything except the thing that actually felt like a life, who understand that meeting someone on set who is funny and grounded and completely comfortable in his own skin and saying yes when he tells you he might not ask again is what choosing the quieter thing looks like, who know that eight hundred sixty-five acres and regenerative farming and hands roughened from fixing water pumps instead of any role you ever played is what filled the emptiness the fame never could—this story might feel like recognition that posting a video with no makeup and short grey hair driving an ATV through mud and being told what happened to her by strangers who once watched you cry on their television screens is a strange kind of full circle, and that past caring about appearance and wanting to hear that the cows are looking pretty good instead is the ultimate freedom of letting youth and beauty go.

Which emptiness did you discover behind something the whole world envied, and what does it mean when the freedom you find on the other side of fame is simply not caring anymore what anyone thinks about your face?

Sometimes greatness is simply refusing to give up

Ely Room

Sometimes courage is not lifting a trophy.
Sometimes courage is standing in front of impossible odds and refusing to quit.
That is exactly what Eloy Room did.
At 37 years old, the Curaçao goalkeeper delivered one of the most extraordinary performances ever seen on football’s biggest stage. Facing a relentless Ecuador attack at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Room spent nearly the entire match under pressure as wave after wave of chances came crashing toward his goal.
Most goalkeepers would have cracked.
Room did the opposite.
Save after save, he kept his team alive.
Shots from close range.
Powerful strikes.
Dangerous headers.
Every time Ecuador thought they had found a way through, there was Eloy Room standing in the way.
By the end of the match, he had made an astonishing 15 saves, one of the greatest goalkeeping displays World Cup fans have ever witnessed.
Yet the statistics only tell part of the story.
Because behind every save was a veteran goalkeeper carrying the hopes of an entire nation.
A player who had spent years working for moments like this.
A man who refused to surrender no matter how difficult the challenge became.
As the final whistle blew, the scoreboard showed a hard-earned draw.
For Curaçao, it felt like a victory.
For Ecuador, it felt like a missed opportunity.
And for Eloy Room, the emotions became impossible to contain.
The goalkeeper collapsed to the ground in tears.
Not because he had won a trophy.
Not because he had broken a record.
But because he had given absolutely everything he had.
Football can be cruel.
It can break hearts.
It can expose every mistake.
But every so often, it also produces moments that remind us why we love the game.
Moments where determination matters more than talent.
Where resilience matters more than fame.
Where one person refuses to stop fighting, even when the odds seem overwhelming.
Eloy Room may never score the winning goal.
He may never be the most famous player at the World Cup.
But on that day, with 15 saves and tears in his eyes, he showed the world something just as important.
That sometimes greatness is not about winning.
Sometimes greatness is simply refusing to give up.