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styofa doing anything

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Sade Olutola
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i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
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todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
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sheepfilms
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AnasAbdin

Andulka
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Product Placement
YOU ARE THE REASON
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@catsandcrops
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Mental Crop Rotation
When farmers grow the same crop too many years in a row, it can leave their soil depleted of minerals and other nutrients that are vital to the health of their fields.
To avoid this, farmers will often alternate the crops that they grow because some plants will use up different minerals (such as nitrogen) while other plants replenish those minerals. This process is known as “crop rotation.”
So the next time you find that you need to step away from a project to work on something else for a while, don’t beat yourself up for “quitting” that project. Give yourself permission to practice “mental crop rotation” to maintain a healthy brain field.
Because I’ve found that when that unnecessary guilt and pressure are removed from the process, a good mental crop rotation can help you feel more energized and invigorated than ever once you’re ready to rotate back to that project.
: A crucial part of crop rotation is that the field is let fallow sometimes. You plant what’s called a “cover crop”, which is something you don’t expect to harvest– it’s there for its roots to hold the soil in place, and often it’ll be what’s called a nitrogen-fixer, i.e. a plant that can pull nitrogen out of the air and fix it into the soil with its roots (but sometimes it won’t, sometimes it’s really just there to shelter the soil surface), and then you’ll till in that cover crop, or let the frost kill it and the stalks lie as mulch, and then you’ll rotate productive crops back into that field the next season.
It’s important, though, to understand that during the fallow period, no nutrients are removed from that ground, and nothing is expected of it. Whatever the land grows then, it keeps, and it gets tilled back in or decomposes in place, to return its energy to the earth.
We’re not allowed, in our current society, to just let our minds be fallow for a bit, to produce nothing for export, to make nothing that can be sold. But it’s part of good land stewardship, to give every field time when it doesn’t need to give you anything back.
So yes, grow and produce different things from time to time, rotate them around your mind and exercise different mental muscles, take different things from your creative processes, yes– but also, give yourself a fallow spell now and again, and let the field of your mind grow things for itself to keep, to break down and save for later.
Did You Know Neolithic Chinese Farmers Grew Millet as well as Rice?
Prehistoric farmers in what is today China had two main crops: millet in the north, rice in the south, and a vast middle region of mixed farming.
You should absolutely look at this map in high-resolution because there is a lot going on. It shows the northermost limit of rice cultivation and the southernmost limit of millet cultivation, possible centers of the domestication of each, and shows archaeological sites where rice, millet, or both were grown in prehistoric times.
Vanessa Stockard (Australian, b.75, Sydney, Australia) - Satan in Green Paintings: Acrylics
33 votes and 2 comments so far on Reddit
Louis Coulon In 1904, is well know for his 13 foot long beard which he held cats in.
via reddit
“Am I a cat?”
The Dark Hedges, Northern Ireland. Source
some well-dressed cats by ami Yoshie OHKUBO
kitty familiars
cinemagraph artist: kitchenghosts
@bear-mochi
Just had to take a picture of this little guy and its big friend. One of the cutest things I saw in Venice.