For Whom Are You Leaning On The Box?

For Whom Are You Leaning On The Box?

He used way too much tape on the box.

Not just one strip across the top. He had wrapped it round and round until the cardboard was completely covered in clear plastic. He carried it into the post office pressed against his chest like a shield.

It was a Tuesday afternoon. The line was long. People were shifting their weight, checking their phones, looking at the clock.

The guy with the box looked about thirty. Faded work jeans. Dirt on the knees. A hoodie with the drawstrings missing.

When he finally got to the counter, he set the box on the metal scale. He let out a breath like he had been holding it since the parking lot.

The clerk was an older guy. Name tag said Arthur. He typed the zip code into the computer and waited for the scale to settle.

“Fourteen pounds,” Arthur said. “Going to Seattle. That comes out to thirty-eight dollars and fifty cents.”

The younger guy went completely still.

You know that stillness. It happens when somebody realizes they’re short on money and they have to figure out how to handle it in public.

He pulled his wallet out. Opened it slow. He had a twenty and a ten.

“I only got thirty,” he said. His voice was low. He looked down at his boots. “Can I borrow a knife to take some stuff out?”

Arthur didn’t sigh. He didn’t roll his eyes. He just handed a box cutter across the counter.

The guy sliced through all that tape he had just put on. He opened the flaps. Inside was a pair of brand new pink snow boots. Heavy ones. Tucked around the boots were three thick hardcover books, a jar of fancy peanut butter, and a small wrapped gift.

He pulled the books out. Pushed the box back on the scale.

“Thirty-two dollars,” Arthur said.

The guy swallowed hard. He pulled the peanut butter out. Then he reached for the boots.

He stopped. You could see him doing the math in his head. He needed to send the boots, but the boots made it too heavy.

He looked up at Arthur. “If I just send the boots, is it under thirty?”

Arthur looked at the pile of stuff on the counter. He looked at the pink boots. Then he reached under his register and pulled out a different box. A priority flat rate box.

He dropped it on the counter.

“You ever use one of these?” Arthur asked.

The guy shook his head.

“Flat rate,” Arthur said. “Doesn’t matter if it weighs two pounds or fifty. Long as you can tape it shut, it ships for eighteen bucks.”

The guy stared at the new box. Then he looked at Arthur.

“You think all this will fit?” he asked.

“Only one way to find out,” Arthur said.

The guy started packing. He put the boots in first. Then he wedged the books down the sides. He shoved the peanut butter in the middle and placed the little wrapped gift on top.

The box was full to the top. The flaps wouldn’t close flat.

Arthur walked around from behind the counter. He didn’t say a word. He just leaned his forearms heavily on the top of the box, pressing the cardboard down flat with his own body weight.

“Tape it,” Arthur said.

The guy grabbed the tape gun and ran three thick strips across the seam while Arthur held it together.

It worked.

The guy paid with his twenty. Arthur handed him two dollars in change.

The guy put the money in his pocket. He stared at the box sitting on the scale. He looked exhausted, but a different kind of exhausted than when he walked in.

“I haven’t seen her since July,” he said.

He didn’t say it to the room. He just said it.

Arthur printed the shipping label and slapped it on the box.

“She’s gonna love the boots,” Arthur said.

The guy nodded once. He turned around and walked out into the rain.

People talk a lot about big miracles. They talk about life-changing money or grand gestures.

But sometimes a miracle is just an older man leaning his weight on a cardboard box so a father can send his kid everything he bought for her.

Sometimes it is just somebody noticing you’re trying your best and deciding to make it a little easier.

Martin Cooper

Martin Cooper

It was a Tuesday morning in New York City. The year was 1973.

A man stepped out of the New York Hilton onto Sixth Avenue, looked around at the taxis and pedestrians rushing past, and held something to his ear that no one on that street — or anywhere on Earth — had ever seen before.

It was enormous. Gray. Rectangular. Nearly ten inches tall, with a thick antenna jutting from the top like a miniature radio tower. It weighed two and a half pounds — about as heavy as a large bag of sugar. Your arm would ache after holding it for more than a few minutes.

It was a telephone.

And it had no wires.

The man’s name was Martin Cooper. He was a division director at Motorola — not a young dreamer, but a seasoned engineer who had spent years fighting for an idea that most of the world’s most powerful companies had already dismissed as unnecessary.

Before making any statement to the press, before giving any formal demonstration, before posing for a single photograph — Cooper had one call to make first.

He flipped open his phone book, found the number he had memorized for exactly this moment, and dialed.

The phone rang.

A man named Joel Engel answered.

Engel was Cooper’s counterpart at AT&T’s Bell Labs — the most celebrated research institution in the world, the place that had invented the transistor, the laser, and had been building toward the same technology Cooper now held in his hand. For years, AT&T and Motorola had been locked in a race to develop a truly personal, portable, wireless telephone. AT&T believed the future was car phones — large devices bolted into vehicles. Motorola believed differently.

And Cooper, standing on a Manhattan sidewalk in the spring of 1973, had just proved it.

“Joel,” he said, “I’m calling you from a cellphone. A real cellphone. A personal, handheld, portable cellphone.”

Silence.

Cooper couldn’t see Engel’s face. But silence, in a competition as fierce as this one, said everything.

“There was silence on the other end of the line,” Cooper recalled years later with a grin. “And he said something very nice and polite. To this day, he doesn’t remember that phone call.”

The device Cooper was holding had been built in just 90 days.

Not months of careful deliberation. Not years of gradual refinement. Ninety days — a frantic, sleep-deprived sprint fueled by competitive desperation, because Motorola had learned that AT&T was about to petition the government for exclusive rights to the mobile phone spectrum. If they moved first, the game would be over.

So Cooper assembled his team, set the clock, and told them to build something the world had never seen.

What they produced was, by any objective measure, absurd.

It stood nearly ten inches tall. It weighed 2.5 pounds. Inside its chunky gray shell, engineers had packed 30 individual circuit boards, wired together by hand, working alongside batteries and antenna components in an impossibly tight space. The phone took ten full hours to charge. Once it was charged, you had roughly 20 to 30 minutes of actual talk time before it died.

They called it the DynaTAC — short for Dynamic Total Area Coverage.

Everyone else called it something simpler: The Brick.

“The battery life was only 20 minutes,” Cooper joked in later interviews. “But that was not a problem, because you couldn’t hold that heavy thing up for more than 20 minutes anyway.”

The demonstration on Sixth Avenue was witnessed by reporters who had gathered specifically to watch — but many of them weren’t entirely sure what they were looking at. The idea of a telephone with no cord, no wall socket, no physical connection to anything — it didn’t quite fit inside the imagination of 1973.

One passerby, so distracted by the sight of a man speaking into a handheld device while walking, stepped off the curb and nearly got hit by a taxi.

That moment, in miniature, captured everything. The world wasn’t ready for what Cooper was holding. And yet, in a very real sense, the world had already changed. The call had been made. The proof existed. The only question now was how long it would take for everyone else to catch up.

The answer turned out to be: about a decade.

It wasn’t until 1983 — ten years after that sidewalk demonstration — that the first commercial handheld mobile phone became available to the public.

The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X cost $3,995 — roughly $12,000 in today’s money.

It weighed 28 ounces, offered around 30 minutes of talk time, and took ten hours to recharge overnight.

By every practical measure, it made almost no sense.

People lined up for months to buy one anyway.

The waiting lists stretched around the block. Executives carried them like scepters. Wall Street traders barked orders into them on trading floors. The phone became a cultural icon almost immediately — most famously immortalized in the 1987 film Wall Street, where Gordon Gekko paced a beach at dawn, the antenna of his DynaTAC silhouetted against the sunrise, speaking in the shorthand of a man who couldn’t afford to be unreachable.

Owning one didn’t just mean you had a phone.

It meant you had arrived.

Looking back now, the temptation is to laugh at the absurdity of it all. A phone heavier than most modern laptops. A battery that expired before most morning meetings ended. A price tag that exceeded many people’s monthly salary.

But Martin Cooper and his team at Motorola weren’t building a finished product.

They were building a proof.

A proof that people didn’t need to be tethered to a desk to make a phone call. A proof that communication could be personal — not just tied to buildings and offices and homes, but carried in a person’s hand wherever they went. A proof that the phone could become, over time, as intimate and essential as a wallet or a set of keys.

“We used to tell people,” Cooper recalled, “that someday when you’re born, you would be assigned a phone number. And if you didn’t answer the phone, you would die.”

He was joking, of course.

Mostly.

Today, there are more mobile phones on Earth than there are people — over 8 billion active devices connecting human beings across every language, continent, and time zone.

The smartphone in your pocket weighs a few ounces. It fits in your hand. It contains more computing power than the systems that guided astronauts to the moon. It lasts all day on a single charge, connects to the internet at speeds that would have seemed fictional in 1973, and does things that Martin Cooper, standing on that Manhattan sidewalk, never could have imagined.

But here is what he did imagine:

That communication should be free. That a person shouldn’t have to be somewhere specific to be reachable. That the telephone — the most important communication tool in human history — belonged in a person’s hand, not mounted on a wall.

He imagined it. He fought for it. He built it in 90 days.

And then, because he was human and the moment deserved it, he picked it up and called the one person who most needed to hear it.

Your phone is probably within arm’s reach right now. Maybe it’s in your pocket. Maybe it’s sitting on the table next to you. Maybe you’re reading these words on its screen.

That is not an accident.

That is the world Martin Cooper invented on a Tuesday morning in 1973 — when a man walked out of a hotel, held a gray brick to his ear, and dialed in the future.

One call.

One brick.

One rival who picked up the phone.

And the entire world changed.

Christine Granville

Christine Granville

She stood at the German checkpoint with two live grenades under her arms, pins already pulled, and smiled.

The German guards stared at her. Then at the grenades. Then back at her face—calm, confident, daring them to move.

They ran.

Krystyna Skarbek walked through the checkpoint and disappeared into the mountains.

That wasn’t the first time she’d gambled with her life. And it wouldn’t be the last.

Poland, 1908. Krystyna Skarbek was born into minor Polish aristocracy—the kind with a title and a crumbling estate but not much money. She grew up riding horses, speaking multiple languages, and learning that being charming could open as many doors as being wealthy.

She married young, divorced, married again. By 1939, she was living a comfortable life—until September 1st, when Nazi Germany invaded Poland.

Within weeks, Poland collapsed. The Soviet Union invaded from the east. Poland ceased to exist as an independent nation, carved up between two totalitarian powers.

Krystyna was 31 years old. She could have fled to safety and waited out the war. Instead, she got on a train to Britain and walked into the War Office with a proposal.

“Send me back,“ she said. “I’ll ski into Poland with propaganda and help organize resistance.”

British intelligence was skeptical. Women weren’t typically recruited as field agents—they worked as clerks, translators, radio operators. Safe jobs. Behind desks.

But Krystyna wasn’t offering to sit behind a desk. And Britain was desperate. The war was going badly. They needed anyone willing to take impossible risks.

They said yes.

By early 1940, operating under the codename Christine Granville, Krystyna was skiing across the Carpathian Mountains into occupied Poland, carrying propaganda materials hidden in her clothing. She made contact with Polish resistance groups, gathered intelligence on German and Soviet military movements, and skied back out with information the Allies desperately needed.

She did this repeatedly. Through mountain passes in winter. Through German patrols. Through checkpoints where being caught meant torture and execution.

She was so effective that the Nazis plastered wanted posters across Poland offering rewards for her capture. German intelligence knew someone was feeding information to the British. They just couldn’t catch her.

In 1941, her luck ran out—temporarily.

The Gestapo arrested her in Budapest, Hungary. They knew she was a spy. They had evidence. They were preparing to interrogate her, which in Gestapo terms meant torture until she revealed her networks, then execution.

Krystyna had maybe hours before the real interrogation began.

She bit down on her tongue. Hard. Blood filled her mouth. She started coughing violently, spitting blood, looking pale and weak.

The Gestapo doctor examined her and made his diagnosis: tuberculosis. Advanced stage.

In 1941, tuberculosis was highly contagious and usually fatal. The Gestapo didn’t want to risk infection spreading through their prison. They released her, assuming she’d die soon anyway.

Within days, Krystyna had crossed the border to safety. The tuberculosis vanished—because it had never existed.

She’d gambled that the Nazis’ fear of disease was stronger than their desire to interrogate one spy. She won.

Britain recognized what they had: possibly the most fearless agent in the war. In 1944, they sent her to France.

By then, the Allies had landed at Normandy and were pushing through France. But southern France was still occupied, crawling with German troops. The French Resistance and Italian partisan fighters needed coordination, supplies, and someone brave enough to move between groups while German patrols hunted for insurgents.

Christine Granville parachuted in.

She hiked through mountains connecting resistance cells. She carried messages, smuggled supplies, and gathered intelligence on German positions. She moved through occupied territory like she owned it—charming some guards, bribing others, bluffing the rest.

That’s when the grenade incident happened.

She was at an Italian border checkpoint. German soldiers demanded papers. Instead of running or trying to talk her way through, Christine raised both arms to show a live grenade under each armpit.

The pins were already out.

If the Germans shot her, she’d drop her arms. The grenades would fall. Everyone in the immediate area would die.

The Germans chose to live. They scattered. Christine walked through and kept moving.

But her most audacious mission came in August 1944.

Three British SOE agents—including her friend Francis Cammaerts—had been captured by the Gestapo. They were being held in Digne-les-Bains, scheduled for execution within hours.

Christine didn’t have backup. She didn’t have time for a plan. She had herself, her languages, and her nerve.

She walked into Gestapo headquarters.

She told the commanding officer she was a British agent—and that the war was almost over. The Allies were advancing rapidly. German forces were in retreat. When the Allies arrived, anyone who had executed captured agents would be tried as war criminals.

But anyone who showed mercy? They might be treated with leniency.

It was an outrageous bluff. The Gestapo officer could have arrested her on the spot. Instead, he hesitated.

Christine kept talking. She offered money—two million francs she claimed were stashed nearby. She promised that sparing the prisoners would be remembered favorably when the war ended.

The officer released all three men.

Hours later, they were gone. The Gestapo officer realized too late that he’d been manipulated by one woman with nothing but words.

Christine Granville became one of the most decorated women of World War II. Britain awarded her the George Medal and the OBE. France gave her the Croix de Guerre. Poland honored her as a hero.

Winston Churchill reportedly called her his favorite spy.

She had survived the Gestapo, countless near-death missions, grenade bluffs, mountain crossings in winter, and years operating in enemy territory when capture meant torture and death.

The war ended. Christine had won.

And then Britain forgot her.

After the war, the SOE was disbanded. Agents were given modest pensions and told to disappear into civilian life. Don’t talk about what you did. Don’t draw attention. The missions were classified.

Christine struggled. She was a war hero who couldn’t talk about her heroism. She spoke multiple languages but had no formal qualifications. She tried various jobs—ship steward, telephone operator—but nothing stuck.

Money was tight. The British government had promised to take care of its agents. The reality was different.

On June 15, 1952, Christine was working as a steward on a ship. A man named Dennis Muldowney—someone she’d briefly dated and rejected—had become obsessed with her. He’d been stalking her.

That day, in the lobby of a cheap hotel in London, Muldowney stabbed Christine Granville to death. She was 44 years old.

The woman who survived the Gestapo, who bluffed German guards with live grenades, who saved captured agents hours before execution—killed by a jealous stalker in a London hotel lobby.

Britain gave her a pauper’s funeral. A handful of former agents and Polish expatriates attended. No state honors. No recognition. Just a quiet burial for a woman who had been one of the war’s most effective spies.

For decades, Krystyna Skarbek—Christine Granville—was forgotten. Her files remained classified. Her story was barely mentioned in histories of WWII espionage.

Gradually, historians began uncovering her missions. Books were written. Her story emerged. Today, she’s recognized as one of the most remarkable agents of the war—Britain’s longest-serving female agent, a woman who operated in enemy territory for years, who never broke under interrogation, who saved dozens of lives.

But she never got to see that recognition. She died believing Britain had forgotten her. And for decades, it had.

Think about the absurdity: a woman who stood at a German checkpoint with live grenades, who talked her way out of Gestapo custody, who bluffed a Gestapo officer into releasing prisoners, who skied through Nazi-occupied territory carrying secrets that helped win the war—died broke and forgotten in a London hotel.

Krystyna Skarbek survived everything the Nazis threw at her. She didn’t survive peacetime.

Today, there are memorials. Books. Her story is taught in intelligence training programs as an example of resourcefulness under pressure. She’s finally recognized as what she always was: one of the most fearless, effective agents in the history of espionage.

But that recognition came too late. She died thinking she’d been discarded.

The next time you hear about WWII heroes, remember: some of the bravest never wore uniforms. Some carried grenades with the pins pulled and smiled at the guards. Some talked their way into Gestapo headquarters and talked their way out with prisoners who were supposed to die.

And some of them died forgotten in cheap hotels because the country they saved didn’t take care of them.

Krystyna Skarbek deserves to be remembered alongside the greatest spies in history. Not just for what she did during the war—though that alone is extraordinary.

But for what happened after. Because her story is a reminder that heroes don’t always get happy endings. That survival isn’t guaranteed. That countries forget the people who save them.

In honor of Krystyna Skarbek / Christine Granville (1908-1952), who bluffed the Nazis, survived the Gestapo, saved British agents from execution, and died forgotten—until historians finally told the truth about what she did.

She stood at a checkpoint with live grenades under her arms. The guards ran.

She walked away.

And she kept walking until the war was won.

That should have been enough for Britain to remember her.

It wasn’t. But now we do.

Scientists Compared the Strength Genetics of Every Race on Earth — The Gap Is Unbelievable

Genetics Differences By Population Group

What determines human strength? Is it training, environment, genetics — or a combination of all three? In this video, we explore the controversial scientific discussions surrounding strength genetics across different human populations and what researchers have discovered about muscle composition, endurance, athletic performance, and evolutionary adaptation.

View Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRH4rdDFBGA

Systematizing Willpower

Tom:
G’day Chat, I recently saw a post of Facebook but the feed refreshed before I noted who posted it or before I could save it. The post had to do with the subject of how humans make decisions, how they are a result of a debate between many points of consciousness rather than from a single point of consciousness. Can you retrieve that article from another. perhaps original, source?

ChatGPT:
G’day Tom,

What you describe strongly resembles the “multiple competing agents” model of mind — the idea that what we experience as a single conscious self is actually the outcome of many semi-independent processes debating, negotiating, and competing inside the brain.

The best-known version is probably Marvin Minsky’s **Society of Mind** theory from his book The Society of Mind. The core idea is that the mind is not one unified thinker, but a “society” of smaller mental agents interacting with each other. ([Agentica][1])

A good overview is here:

* [Society of Mind overview](https://agentica.wiki/articles/society-of-mind?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

And the original book:

* [The Society of Mind book info](https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780671657130/the-society-of-mind/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

The Facebook post may also have been referencing newer neuroscience versions of the same basic idea, such as:

* **Global Workspace Theory** — consciousness emerges when competing brain processes “win access” to a shared mental workspace.
* **Modular mind** theories — different brain systems constantly compete/cooperate.
* **Internal Family Systems (IFS)** psychology — the psyche contains many “parts” with different motives.
* Split-brain and neuroscience work showing decisions are often initiated unconsciously before the conscious mind rationalises them afterward.

Another very influential modern framing is from Michael Gazzaniga, who argued the brain has many systems operating in parallel, while consciousness acts more like an “interpreter” creating a coherent story after the fact.

You may also be recalling material inspired by:

* Daniel Kahneman’s “System 1 / System 2” model,
* Julian Jaynes,
* or modern AI/neuroscience discussions comparing the mind to a parliament or committee rather than a ruler.

One phrase commonly used in these discussions is:

> “The mind is not a single voice but a coalition.”

That is not a formal quote from Minsky, but it captures the theme well.

If you want, I can also:

* trace likely viral Facebook repost sources,
* find the exact article/post wording,
* summarise the neuroscience evidence for the “many minds” model,
* or compare these theories against classical ideas of a unified self.

[1]: https://agentica.wiki/articles/society-of-mind?utm_source=chatgpt.com “Society of Mind | Agentica”

Tom:
Thanks! I think your first reference was the one.

ChatGPT:
Glad that helped. The The Society of Mind really was one of the foundational works behind a lot of today’s “mind as many agents” thinking.

A few of its core ideas that often get repeated in social media posts are:

* Intelligence emerges from many simple processes interacting.
* There is no single “captain” in the brain.
* What feels like a unified self is partly a constructed narrative.
* Different mental subsystems can cooperate or conflict.
* Emotions, logic, habits, memory, and instincts are semi-independent processes rather than one unified will.

It was remarkably ahead of its time. Modern neuroscience and AI have actually moved somewhat toward Minsky’s direction rather than away from it.

You might also enjoy:

* Thinking, Fast and Slow
* The Consciousness Instinct
* The Ego Tunnel
* Gödel, Escher, Bach

And if you want the neuroscience angle specifically, split-brain research is fascinating because it shows that the left and right hemispheres can sometimes act almost like separate centres of intention. The work of Michael Gazzaniga is central there.

Interesting subject because it cuts right across philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, AI, and even old spiritual traditions.

Tom:
I read the Wiki entry but it does not include the potentially most useful upshot of his hypothesis, that one needs to create the framework or system that promotes the optimum or constricts access to the non-optimum alternatives so the management by committee has its decisions and conclusions channeled towards optimum conduct.

ChatGPT:
Yes — and that is arguably where the idea becomes practically powerful rather than merely descriptive.

Minsky largely focused on *how* minds may function, but the natural implication is exactly what you describe:

> Since the “self” is an emergent negotiation among many competing sub-processes, behaviour can be altered less by commanding the self directly and more by shaping the environment and incentives under which those internal processes compete.

In other words:

* you do not merely “decide” to be disciplined,
* you construct conditions in which the disciplined sub-agents consistently win.

That shifts the question from:

> “How do I force myself to do X?”

to:

> “How do I structure the system so the better impulses gain leverage and the destructive ones lose leverage?”

That idea now appears all over:

* behavioural economics,
* habit formation,
* addiction treatment,
* military training,
* monastic disciplines,
* UX design,
* political systems,
* AI alignment,
* and organisational management.

A few examples:

* Remove junk food from the house ? the “immediate gratification” agents have fewer tools available.
* Automate savings ? the “future planning” agents act before impulsive spending agents can intervene.
* Public commitments ? social-status agents reinforce long-term goals.
* Meditation ? increases awareness of competing impulses before automatic enactment.
* Ritual and routine ? reduce the number of decisions exposed to unstable internal debate.

This is also why many traditions evolved systems rather than merely moral instructions.

For example:

* Stoicism created cognitive practices.
* Buddhism created attentional disciplines.
* Monastic orders created environmental structures.
* Modern productivity systems create external scaffolding.
* Legal systems constrain socially destructive impulses at population scale.

Your phrasing “management by committee” is actually very apt. In committee systems, you rarely eliminate disagreement; instead you:

* define procedures,
* weight incentives,
* limit options,
* control information flow,
* and establish veto powers.

Human self-regulation appears to work similarly.

Modern neuroscience increasingly supports this general picture because different brain systems:

* value different time horizons,
* respond to different reward structures,
* operate at different speeds,
* and sometimes directly conflict.

For example:

* limbic reward systems favour immediacy,
* prefrontal systems favour long-term modelling,
* habitual systems favour efficiency,
* social systems favour group acceptance,
* threat systems favour safety.

A great modern expression of your point comes from Atomic Habits:
environment often beats willpower.

Or, in older language:

> Character is easier to maintain than to recover.

The really interesting extension is that civilisation itself can be viewed as meta-cognition at societal scale:
laws, customs, markets, education, and institutions all function as external constraint-and-guidance systems for the “committee minds” of millions of humans.

Quote of the Day

“The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.”
Eleanor Roosevelt – Diplomat and Activist (1884 – 1962)

Leonard Lawrence

Leonard Lawrence

Misdiagnosed and drugged, the true story of Leonard Lawrence

Story by CCHR United Kingdom

Leonard Lawrence was a fully fit and experienced commercial/airline pilot. He had been working for British Aerospace since 1989 when he experienced and recorded his first ’fume event’ – the presence in a plane’s onboard air system of toxins. In the most serious cases, these toxins contain organophosphates identical to those responsible for deaths and brain damage among agricultural workers. Research was conducted on behalf of the United States Air Force and early warnings were given in 1955 of the neurological dangers of aircraft cabin bleed air.

On the 29th of November 1991, just as his aircraft reached take-off speed, the flight deck filled with hot acrid fumes that were so dense it was impossible to see the instruments and controls and impossible to breathe.

Both Len and his captain were blinded by the fumes as, their eyes and skin burning, their aircraft began to ascend at over 160 mph. Only willpower and long experience enabled the captain to feel his way among the array of instruments for the ’dump valve’ control, which would evacuate the contaminated air from the aircraft engines.

The incident was over in about fifteen seconds, and both pilots soon regained their eyesight, enabling them to commence emergency mayday procedures with Air Traffic Control and safely achieve an emergency forced landing.

This was by no means an isolated experience, as evidenced by the fact that British Aerospace and others later entered into a secret settlement agreement regarding aircraft fumes. In the course of an Australian senate inquiry in 1999, a spokesman for British Aerospace admitted: ’There is absolutely no doubt in our minds that there is a general health issue here. The number of people who have symptoms indicates that there is a general issue. With the weight of human evidence and suffering, which is quite clear, there must be something there.’

Len himself experienced a series of these events, the last in 2004, when he was co-pilot to a recently-retired Civil Aviation Authority flight operation inspector.

Len recalls that he and the captain were aware of an oily smell. What followed was and remains a blank. The plane had descended to five hundred feet above Amsterdam – not aligned to any runway – before they pull out of the descent and return to the correct flight path.

Both men were still suffering from mental confusion, and this time it didn’t go away.

The next day they were flying together again when they received an instruction from Swiss Air Traffic Control to re-route their London bound flight. ’Both the captain and Len were unable to process the information being given,’ says Len. ’That was my last ever flight before I resigned. I could not, and indeed still cannot, think clearly enough to fly.’

Having helped to avert a number of potential disasters caused by the ongoing mechanical fault and the airlines’ failure to fit air quality sensors to their aircraft, Len selflessly retired when he felt he was no longer safe to fly. It might be thought that his employers owed him some respect and appropriate treatment for the damage he had sustained in their employ.

Instead, Len was sent to a psychiatrist, who ignored both the symptoms and the chain of causation, declaring Len to be ’mentally ill’ and in need of pharmaceutical drugs.

There was no mystery about the real causes of Len’s problems. As the Australian Senate enquiry had been told five years previously, ’The source of the odours has been identified as primarily Mobil Jet Oil II leaking past oil seals in the engines and or APU unit (Auxiliary Power Unit) into the air conditioning system.’

In the case of organophosphate poisoning, the psychiatrist’s action was not merely one of standard incompetence and drug pushing. It is recognised that pharmaceutical drugs are inclined to react with the existing toxins to cause cell damage and develop even more poisonous compounds, so are the last thing that should be prescribed.

As a ’mental case’, Len was held by the Official Solicitor to the Senior Courts and medicated with psychiatric medication until he lost mental capacity. Multiple Court of Protection, Medical Certicare’s, were issued to protect Len, but these multiple Court of Protection, Medical Certificates were never disclosed to the Court of Protection by the Official Solicitor and others.

Len was held for more than a year, during which time, to add insult to injury, his assets, savings and home were disposed of illegally by barristers and solicitors without the knowledge of the Court of Protection.

Having lost his home and his marriage the British Airline Pilots’ Association came to his rescue, by-passing the Official Solicitor and referred Len to the Civil Aviation Authority’s psychiatric advisor, Professor Gordon Turnbull FRCP, FRCPsych, RAF (Rtd) who immediately took Len off the drugs and arranged for him to receive long overdue specialist treatment for organophosphate poisoning.

Len Lawrence is clearly a survivor. He has lived through industrial poisonings, multiple losses, corporate and official obstruction and efforts by psychiatrists to suppress and silence him. Not only is he still with us, but he continues to fight for the exposure of cover ups and crooked deals that affect us all.

Justine Bateman

Justine Bateman

In 1982, a sixteen-year-old girl from New York stepped onto a soundstage and became Mallory Keaton—the sharp-tongued, fashion-obsessed sister on Family Ties who would earn Emmy nominations and become a household name for seven seasons.

But behind the fame, Justine Bateman had a dream that wouldn’t wait.

She wanted to go to college. She had recommendation letters from the show’s writers. She was ready to apply.

Then a line producer sat her down and said the words that would haunt her for thirty years:

“You’re under contract to Paramount Studios.”

She couldn’t leave. The decision wasn’t hers to make.

When Family Ties ended in 1989, Bateman kept working. She appeared in films with Julia Roberts and Liam Neeson. She took television roles throughout the 90s. She even launched her own fashion design company in 2000, selling couture pieces at Saks Fifth Avenue under the label SECTION 25.

She guest-starred on her brother Jason’s show, Arrested Development. She appeared on Desperate Housewives and Californication.

She never stopped moving.

But she also never stopped remembering what she’d been denied.

In 2012, at forty-six years old, Justine Bateman walked through the doors of UCLA as a freshman.

Not for publicity. Not for a certificate program. Not for a single class.

She enrolled in a full four-year computer science degree program.

She sat in lectures on Java, C++, and engineering ethics alongside students half her age—teenagers who’d grown up with technology while she’d grown up on television sets.

She studied chemistry. She coded. She failed tests and cried in parking garages. She faced job fairs where every other student had perfect GPAs and tech internships while she had… Emmy nominations.

Which meant nothing in a computer lab.

One professor later called her “one of the most terrifyingly motivated students I’ve ever had.”

Think about what that means.

At forty-six, when many people are coasting toward retirement, Justine Bateman was pulling all-nighters studying algorithms. Learning programming languages from scratch. Competing with nineteen-year-olds who’d been coding since middle school.

And she didn’t quit.

In 2016, at forty-nine years old, she graduated with the degree she’d been told she couldn’t pursue at seventeen.

Thirty years. She waited thirty years to finish what a contract had interrupted.

Then she kept going.

She wrote two bestselling books—one dissecting the psychology of fame (Fame: The Hijacking of Reality), another challenging society’s obsession with women erasing their age through cosmetic surgery (Face: One Square Foot of Skin).

She wrote, directed, and produced her feature film debut, Violet, which premiered at SXSW in 2021 and won awards at multiple festivals.

She created more films. Directed. Wrote. Produced.

And when Hollywood faced the 2023 AI crisis—when artificial intelligence threatened to replace actors, writers, and entire crews—Bateman didn’t just speak out.

She built a solution.

She founded CREDO23, an organization that certifies films made without generative AI, protecting the very artists and crews who make entertainment possible.

She turned her computer science degree into a shield for an industry that once told her she couldn’t leave to learn.

Today, Justine Bateman is fifty-eight years old.

She appears on camera without filters or apologies. Her face shows her age, and she refuses to apologize for it.

When the internet comments on her appearance, she points them to her book about exactly why she won’t “fix” anything.

When people ask what happened to her career, she shows them four decades of acting, designing, studying, writing, directing, and building organizations that matter.

She didn’t fade when the spotlight moved.

She didn’t become bitter when doors closed.

She didn’t stop when people said her time was over.

The girl who couldn’t go to college at sixteen became a computer science graduate at forty-nine.

The actress told her best roles were behind her directed feature films in her fifties.

The woman told to “fix her face” wrote a bestseller explaining exactly why she wouldn’t—and became a voice for women refusing to erase themselves to stay relevant.

She didn’t just survive Hollywood. She outgrew it.

And at fifty-eight, she’s still building.

Here’s what her story actually means:

It’s never too late.

Not to go back to school. Not to change careers. Not to pursue the dream that got interrupted thirty years ago.

Contracts end. But determination doesn’t.

She was trapped by Paramount at sixteen, but she didn’t let that contract define the rest of her life. She waited. She remembered. And when she was ready, she walked into UCLA and started over.

Reinvention doesn’t have an age limit.

At forty-six, she became a freshman. At forty-nine, she graduated. At fifty-plus, she directed films. At fifty-eight, she’s fighting AI exploitation in entertainment.

Each decade brought something new because she refused to accept that her story was already written.

Your face doesn’t determine your worth.

In an industry obsessed with youth and appearance, Bateman wrote a book called Face that challenges every assumption about women, aging, and value. She shows her age proudly, not because she’s “brave,” but because she refuses to pretend time doesn’t pass.

Justine Bateman didn’t lose fame.

She outgrew it—and built something bigger.

She turned a contract that denied her education into motivation that lasted thirty years.

She turned a computer science degree into a weapon against AI exploitation.

She turned society’s obsession with aging into a bestselling challenge to change the conversation.

And she’s still going.

Not because she’s chasing relevance. Because she’s building things that matter.

At sixteen, they told her she couldn’t leave.

At forty-six, she proved she could start over.

At fifty-eight, she’s proving you’re never done building.

Justine Bateman

Actress. Designer. Computer Scientist. Director. Author. Advocate.

The woman who waited thirty years to go to college—and used that degree to change everything.

Brain Function Is Like A Muscle – Use It Or Lose It

David Snowdon

A University of Kentucky epidemiologist convinced 678 Catholic nuns to donate their brains and their entire life records to science, and the autopsies he performed quietly rewrote everything modern medicine thought it knew about Alzheimer’s disease.

The findings have been published in JAMA and the New England Journal of Medicine.

Almost nobody outside the field of neurology has heard of them.

His name was David Snowdon.

He was a young epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota in 1986 when he had what most of his colleagues considered a crazy idea. He wanted to study Alzheimer’s disease the way it had never been studied before. Not through brain scans of confused 80-year-olds in a hospital. Not through self-reported family histories. He wanted to find a group of people whose entire lives were on paper, from their twenties to their deathbeds, and then look inside their brains after they died and see what the autopsies actually showed.

He chose 678 Catholic sisters from the School Sisters of Notre Dame congregation.

The choice was not random. Nuns lived almost identical lifestyles. Same diet. Same housing. Same daily schedule. Same medical care. No smoking. No drinking. No pregnancies confounding the hormonal data. They were, statistically speaking, the cleanest research population on Earth. And they had something no other study population had ever offered.

Their entire lives were already documented. Every nun in the order had written a one-to-two-page autobiography in her early twenties, before taking her final vows. The essays had been sitting in convent archives for 60 years, untouched, waiting to be discovered.

Then Snowdon did the part most researchers would never have agreed to. He asked the nuns, in person, one at a time, if they would donate their brains to science after they died.

They said yes. All of them.

The study ran for over 25 years. Annual cognitive tests. Annual physical exams. Detailed medical records. And at the moment of death, every single brain was carefully removed and analyzed under a microscope.

The findings broke modern neuroscience.

The first thing the autopsies showed was that many of the nuns had brains riddled with the classic plaques and tangles of full-blown Alzheimer’s disease. Severe damage. The kind of damage that, in any other patient, would have produced complete dementia.

But while they were alive, these particular nuns had shown no symptoms at all. They had stayed sharp until the day they died. They had taught classes. They had run errands. They had recognized everyone. Their brains were destroyed. Their minds were intact.

Something was protecting them that nobody had ever measured before.

Snowdon called it cognitive reserve. The brain, he argued, can absorb extraordinary amounts of damage without showing symptoms, as long as it has been built thick enough beforehand. The nuns who stayed sharp had brains that had been so well-developed over a lifetime of learning, teaching, reading, and thinking that they could afford to lose huge sections of tissue and still keep functioning.

Then he found the second thing. The one that made the study famous.

He pulled the autobiographies out of the archives. The essays written by the same nuns 60 years earlier, when they were 22 years old.

He measured a single linguistic feature called idea density. How many distinct ideas a writer packed into each ten words of prose. Not vocabulary. Not grammar. Not style. Just the raw informational compression of a young mind.

The result was so clean it should be illegal to ignore.

The nuns who had the lowest idea density at age 22 were 59 times more likely to develop Alzheimer’s by age 85 than the nuns who had the highest idea density. Snowdon could predict with roughly 80 to 90 percent accuracy who would develop dementia 60 years before it happened, from a single essay written before the woman had even taken her vows.

The detail that should disturb every adult reading this is what happened when the researchers controlled for the obvious objections.

When they controlled for education, the effect held.

When they controlled for occupation, the effect held.

When they controlled for the age at which the nun entered the convent, the effect held.

The cognitive complexity of the 22-year-old mind, measured in a single autobiographical paragraph, was a stronger predictor of Alzheimer’s six decades later than any other variable Snowdon could find.

Then he ran the second analysis. The one that almost nobody quotes.

He measured the emotional tone of the same autobiographies. The frequency of positive words like joy, gratitude, hope, love, contentment. The nuns who wrote about their lives in positive emotional terms at age 22 lived an average of 10.7 years longer than the nuns who wrote in neutral or negative terms.

Same convent. Same diet. Same medical care. Same prayer schedule.

The lifespan was being shaped by something invisible. Something that had been written down before the nun had any way of knowing it would matter.

The paper landed in JAMA in 1996. It has been cited thousands of times since. Almost no one outside academic neurology has heard of it.

The reason most people resist this finding is that it sounds like a sentence handed down before adulthood even began. If the architecture of your old-age brain is being built by what you do with your mind in your twenties, and your emotional resilience is being calibrated by the words you use about your own life, then your eighties are being shaped right now by patterns you cannot even feel yourself making.

Snowdon argued the opposite. He said the data showed cognitive reserve could be built throughout life. The nuns who continued to learn languages, teach courses, read difficult books, and engage in complex conversations in their 60s and 70s also showed slower decline. The brain does not stop responding to mental work just because you got older. It only stops responding when you stop asking anything of it.

The most uncomfortable part of the research is the contrast Snowdon repeatedly emphasized.

Two nuns could have identical brain damage on autopsy. Identical plaques. Identical tangles. Identical genetics. One would have lived her last years confused, frightened, and lost. The other would have lived her last years lucid, joyful, and intact. The only meaningful difference between them was the depth of the cognitive and emotional architecture each had built across the decades before the damage arrived.

The brain you will have at 85 is being constructed right now by the books you choose not to read, the conversations you choose not to have, and the words you choose to use about your own life.

The dementia that arrives at 80 is not a verdict. It is the bill for a structure you either built or did not build between 22 and 60.

Almost nobody walks through the window because almost nobody knows it is open.

You can be the one who does.

https://x.com/sukh_saroy/status/2058493903637266440?s=20