Getting cozy in their new home🤎
Rachel Flowers
npub1f5gd...dhyh
surf, health, permaculture, motherhood, beekeeping
Caught my first swarm today.
Primal, pls connect me with other people who are into #beekeeping


Also wanna shout out @atyh for all the zaps, good fella ⚡️
Ordered another cedar top bar hive, and gunna manage to catch a swarm. Will update photos of my successes 🐝
One of my favorite facts about bees is that they can see the energetic field of un pollinated flowers when scouting.
#ilovebees
Professional holistic organizing | virtual & in person.
Gimme a shout! The transformation that happens when you declutter what no longer serves you is unmatched. Clear your space so you can evolve.
www.chooseflow.net
IG: chooseflow


The busier you are, the more intentional you must be
we’re so back


What’s the best cold storage wallet or hardware wallet for #bitcoin ?

What if many modern “disorders” are not so much innate flaws in people, but normal human responses to an abnormal environment?
Here are some angles to consider:
1. The world has changed faster than our brains
• For 99% of human history, life was slow-paced, tied to nature, and stimuli were limited (firelight, birdsong, face-to-face conversation).
• In the last 10–15 years, we’ve had an explosion of smartphones, social media, 24/7 notifications, LED lighting, background music in every store, billboards, fast-moving visuals, etc.
• Our nervous systems simply didn’t evolve for this constant, layered sensory input.
2. Overstimulation vs. ADHD
• ADHD is often framed as a “disorder of attention,” but another way to look at it is: the world is now a constant barrage of competing inputs, so being scattered is a logical response.
• In environments with fewer stimuli, what we call “ADHD symptoms” might actually disappear or lessen. (There are studies showing kids with ADHD often thrive in outdoor, movement-based, or highly engaging hands-on settings).
3. Medicalization of normal responses
• Psychiatry often labels traits as “disorders” when they clash with societal expectations (e.g., needing to sit still in a classroom for 8 hours, or focusing on boring computer tasks).
• But maybe the problem isn’t the person—it’s the environment and the system demanding unnatural levels of attention, productivity, and sensory endurance.
4. Stress as a modern epidemic
• Rising diagnoses of ADHD, anxiety, depression, and sensory processing issues may all be signals of the same root problem: humans living in overstimulating, disconnected, artificial environments.
• What looks like “mental illness” could actually be a culture-level mismatch.
5. The double bind
• Because the system isn’t changing anytime soon, people seek diagnoses and medications as coping tools just to function in this hyper-stimulating society.
• But if society itself is sick, then diagnosis is partly a way of adapting individuals to tolerate unhealthy conditions, rather than addressing the root cause.
⸻
EXAMPLES: Neurasthenia & Railroad spine.
Can we all collectively rebuke these god awful white LED lights lol
happy


Etymology is so important🗣️
Me every time I see fungi
I’m back on shaping my life vision intentionally & I love it. So, my free times look like this.

Im a lover of beautiful woodwork


has anyone here experienced amazing benefits from coffee enemas?