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Normal people: Breakfast is your morning meal.
Me: If you’re on the road and something is about to get in your way/crash into you, you must BREAK FAST!!!
Not Mine.
As wind picks up, 'neath frosted glass,
Window, my window, the hourglass
Of my soul.
Cliché? Maybe, but in the mind
Of a thousand men of similar kind,
I waited.
They say the glass looks to the soul
But honestly we fear no toll
When it strikes.
When he comes. He takes what he can.
When he comes. He wont understand
If you plead.
Thats why you cant, you shouldn't try
Cos he'll remember, an eye for an eye
I have sinned.
The window, open, just for a day,
Soulless demise taken far away
And he laughs.
You'll know when the voice becomes his,
The cackling demon, been there for years
Im changing.
It's not because of you, not yet
If you spend just a day in my head
Then he'll speak.
You'd get along, the window and voice,
Icy and cold, attempting the choice
Of a lifetime.
So he speaks. And you listen. Once.
He'll hold you contempt, if he hears a pulse
But not mine.
Not mine.
Not mine.
What's more, tumblr didn't want to let me repost this. How's that for a charm.
Hundreds of millions of years ago, the planet was trapped in a global ice age. But exactly how icy things got is still up for debate.
“Snowball Earth” is a scientific idea that, millions of years ago, our planet may have been almost completely covered in ice—from the poles all the way to the equator.
In simple terms: Earth may have looked like a giant frozen snowball
It’s interesting for a few reasons:
It shows how extreme climate change can be—not just warming, but total freezing.
Scientists believe life still survived during this time, which tells us life is very resilient.
It raises questions about how the planet “recovered”—possibly through volcanic activity releasing CO₂ and warming the atmosphere again.
It helps us understand how delicate Earth’s climate system is, and how small changes can lead to massive global effects.
So it’s not just a cool idea—it actually helps scientists study both past and future climate changes.
Slim Gaillard was one of jazz’s most distinctive and entertaining figures, blending technical skill with humor and playful experimentation.