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justme

Voyager 1 was launched in 1977 with a simple mission — fly past Jupiter and Saturn, send back some photos, and that would be it. Nobody told it to stop. On November 18, 2026, this spacecraft will hit a milestone no human-made object has ever reached in the entire history of our species. It will be exactly one light-day from Earth — 16 billion miles away. So far that a radio signal, traveling at the speed of light, takes a full 24 hours just to reach it. If NASA sends a "good morning" on Monday, Voyager won't hear it until Tuesday. And NASA won't get the reply until Wednesday. Think about that. A two-day conversation. With a machine we built in the 1970s. Here's what makes this even more remarkable. Voyager 1 is dying. NASA shut down one of its last remaining science instruments just this April — a sensor that had been running nonstop since the day it launched, nearly half a century ago. The spacecraft now runs on roughly the power of a dim light bulb. Engineers are attempting a last-resort fix they've nicknamed "the Big Bang" — a risky all-at-once overhaul — just to keep it alive long enough to see its 50th birthday in 2027. And still it flies. At 38,000 miles per hour, deeper into interstellar space, with no destination and no plans to return. Here is the number that should stop you cold. Voyager 1 has spent 49 years traveling one light-day. The nearest star to our Sun is 4.2 light-years away. That means after nearly five decades of non-stop travel, Voyager has covered just 0.0027% of the distance to our closest stellar neighbor. Space is not big. Big is not even the right word. Strapped to its side is a golden record — a disc containing music, greetings in 55 languages, and the sounds of Earth — placed there by Carl Sagan, just in case someone out there ever finds it, millions or billions of years from now. The loneliest object humanity has ever created, carrying the best of what we are, sailing into a silence we will never hear the end of.

Robin Keohane

As I am negotiating a Gray divorce. They call it that whoever They are. I am represented by council, my husband is on his third attorney, and he walks in with Brother by his side. Now I can understand hanging with your brother but we were married a looong time and I have fed your brother saw him live with a few of my girlfriends, they doged the bullet. Now we figure before going to trial we will try mediation, who shows up, the brother. What a world. Now my husband relied on me a lot, he did mow the grass and wack his weed oh sorry weeds but I was a busy woman. Not to brag 😂 But put your big pants on and come deal with this and make your own decisions. Brother has no kids. Not even a dog of course he wants what was aquired. People I Love you, hang in with me, and maybe I can still have a life. ❤️

justme

There Are 3 Groundbreaking Alzheimer’s Treatments on the Horizon—a Neurologist Explains How They Work By Emily Laurence Sardinha, Alzheimer’s disease is one of the biggest health threats of our time. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, an estimated 7.4 million Americans 65 and older are currently living with Alzheimer’s disease. Of the total U.S. population, one in nine people over age 65 has Alzheimer’s. Currently, there is no cure for Alzheimer’s, but there are treatments that extend cognitive health and delay symptoms from progressing as quickly. Dr. Rudy Tanzi, PhD, a neurology professor at Harvard, director of the Genetics and Aging Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital and who is credited for discovering the first Alzheimer’s gene, explains that there are two prominent drugs currently being used for managing Alzheimer’s: Leqembi and Kisunla. Dr. Tanzi explains that these drugs work by targeting and clearing amyloid plaques in the brain, which are a hallmark of the disease. They are given through IV infusions and have been shown to moderately slow cognitive decline in people with early-stage Alzheimer’s. Related: 14 Specific Ways You May Be Able to Prevent Dementia, According to Neurologists Dr. Tanzi notes that one major downside of these drugs is that they are very expensive, costing between $26,500 and $32,000 a year. “Part of the reason why they are so expensive is that people taking them must get brain scans every one or two months to make sure there is no swelling happening in the brain,” he explains. Soon, these two expensive drugs may not be the only way Alzheimer’s is treated. There are a few groundbreaking new medical treatments that may soon become widely available, including one that Dr. Tanzi is helping develop.

justme

I’m having a moment thinking about people letting other people take over their emotions whether it’s happy or sad or mad whatever we end up when we do that letting someone else be in control until we realize that we have to be the ones in control of our emotions not over other peoples feelings toward us but ours toward them ,people can be players and have no consideration of feelings for anyone else or what they’re actions may cause with other people’s feelings at the end of the day we are responsible for our own self,it is up to us to be able to move past whatever feeling someone else may cause us to feel ,if you have someone that doesn’t respond to your love, but you keep on when it’s hopeless they are not the ones that are hurting you. You are hurting yourself. You need to have self-care take care of yourself. You see your relationship isn’t gonna work even if it might be painful for the time being sometimes it’s best to let it go  instead of holding on to hopelessness. Sometimes people are hurt by their own actions, not really by others, but not letting go and moving on yourself . If you see, it’s hopeless stop hurting yourself and move on.

justme

WEATHER Repeated storms to unleash dangerous flash flooding in the South A prolonged stretch of stormy weather is expected to bring dangerous flash flooding across large portions of the southern United States through next week, as multiple rounds of heavy rain repeatedly target already saturated areas. Forecasters warn that the combination of tropical moisture, slow-moving storm systems, and stalled weather fronts could create life-threatening conditions from Texas and Louisiana to Mississippi, Alabama, and parts of Georgia and Florida. Some communities may receive several inches of rain in a short period, increasing the risk of rapid flooding, road closures, and water rescues. Why the Flood Threat Is Increasing Meteorologists say the primary concern is a weather pattern known as “training storms,” where thunderstorms repeatedly move over the same locations like train cars traveling along the same track. This setup is being fueled by deep tropical moisture streaming northward from the Gulf of Mexico. At the same time, a slow-moving frontal boundary is preventing storms from moving quickly out of the region. The result is repeated rounds of intense rainfall over areas that have already experienced heavy downpours in recent days. Ground conditions across much of the South are becoming increasingly saturated, meaning even moderate rainfall could quickly overwhelm drainage systems, creeks, and rivers. Areas Facing the Greatest Risk The highest flash flood risk is expected across southeastern Texas, Louisiana, southern Mississippi, and parts of Alabama. Major metropolitan areas, including Houston, New Orleans, and Jackson, could experience significant impacts if heavy storms repeatedly develop over urban corridors. Forecasters are also monitoring flood potential in western Georgia and the Florida Panhandle as the storm system gradually shifts eastward.

Dan

Your question What event was Jesus predicting in Luke 17:22-37? Here are the verses you’re referring to. Let’s break it down verse by verse. In verse 22 Christ said this. “And he said unto the disciples, The days will come, when ye shall desire to see one of the days of the Son of man, and ye shall not see it.” Christ was telling his Apostle that after he leaves this earth, they will desire for the days when they will see him again as they were then. But they would not be able to because he was going to be with the Father and would not be seen again until his return. This is why in the next verse he cautions them against those who say the following. “And they shall say to you, See here; or, see there: go not after them, nor follow them.” There have been a lot of those who have claimed to be Christ through the years. Christ is telling them and to us these things will happen. But he tells them not to believe them. He will not come like that, as it states in the next verse: “For as the lightning, that lighteneth out of the one part under heaven, shineth unto the other part under heaven; so shall also the Son of man be in his day.” Then he tells them but before he leaves the following will happen. “But first must he suffer many things, and be rejected of this generation.” The things that Christ would suffer first would be crucifixion and his generation would reject him. This is the meaning of verses 22-25. Then Christ tells them the following in verses 26-27 “And as it was in the days of Noe, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man. They did eat, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark, and the flood came, and destroyed them all. Christ is showing them that life will go on as normal right up to his coming. People will be eating and drinking, they’ll be in marriages and those given in marriage right up to the end. Then the destruction will come. I hope this has given you an understanding of wh