GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD WELCOME.TO JANUARY 1ST THROUGH JANUARY 31ST 2026

  • #281
I vividly remember the day the Challenger exploded. It was a clear, cold day here in SE AL. That vapor plume was visible here.
 
  • #282
Hi guys!!! 😃

In Poland we have now STUDNIÓWKA season 😍💃🕺

It means Prom Parties for High School students 🥳

It is the last opportunity for a moment of carefreeness before intensive preparations for Finishing Exams.

100-day rule:
Traditionally, the prom takes place approximately 100 days before the high school leaving exam.

Studniówka (100 days)
ALWAYS starts with
POLONEZ
Traditional Polish Dance ❤️

Students are dancing
and teachers & parents
are bursting with pride haha!!!


This Studniówka Polonez is older
and I have already sent it to Music Thread
BUT it is my FAVOURITE :D 😍 👍

 
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  • #283
This is strange. A mushroom that causes THE SAME hallucination no matter where it's grown/eaten.... seeing little people.

Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forest

One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

In a 1991 paper, two researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences described cases of people in Yunnan Province who had eaten a certain mushroom and experienced "lilliputian hallucinations" – the psychiatric term for the perception of tiny human, animal or fantasy figures. It is so named after the small people who inhabit the fictional Lilliput Island in the novel Gulliver's Travels.

The patients saw these figures "moving about everywhere", the researchers wrote – usually, there were more than ten tiny beings on the scene. "They saw them on their clothes when they were dressing and saw them on their dishes when eating," the researchers added. The visions "were even more vivid when their eyes were closed".

people in China, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea do not seem to have a tradition of purposefully seeking out L. asiatica for its psychoactive effects, according to Domnauer's findings. "It was always just eaten for food," Domnauer says, with hallucinations being an unexpected side-effect.

There's another curious factor: other known psychedelic compounds also usually produce idiosyncratic trips that vary not only from person to person but also from one experience to the next within the same individual. With L. asiatica, though, "the perception of little people is very reliably and repeatedly reported", Domnauer says. "I don't know of anything else that produces such consistent hallucinations."


 
  • #284
This is strange. A mushroom that causes THE SAME hallucination no matter where it's grown/eaten.... seeing little people.

Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forest

One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

In a 1991 paper, two researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences described cases of people in Yunnan Province who had eaten a certain mushroom and experienced "lilliputian hallucinations" – the psychiatric term for the perception of tiny human, animal or fantasy figures. It is so named after the small people who inhabit the fictional Lilliput Island in the novel Gulliver's Travels.

The patients saw these figures "moving about everywhere", the researchers wrote – usually, there were more than ten tiny beings on the scene. "They saw them on their clothes when they were dressing and saw them on their dishes when eating," the researchers added. The visions "were even more vivid when their eyes were closed".

people in China, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea do not seem to have a tradition of purposefully seeking out L. asiatica for its psychoactive effects, according to Domnauer's findings. "It was always just eaten for food," Domnauer says, with hallucinations being an unexpected side-effect.

There's another curious factor: other known psychedelic compounds also usually produce idiosyncratic trips that vary not only from person to person but also from one experience to the next within the same individual. With L. asiatica, though, "the perception of little people is very reliably and repeatedly reported", Domnauer says. "I don't know of anything else that produces such consistent hallucinations."



I wonder if the Lilliputian people are nicer to each other than the fullsize ones sometimes are.
 
  • #285
This is strange. A mushroom that causes THE SAME hallucination no matter where it's grown/eaten.... seeing little people.

Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forest

One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

In a 1991 paper, two researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences described cases of people in Yunnan Province who had eaten a certain mushroom and experienced "lilliputian hallucinations" – the psychiatric term for the perception of tiny human, animal or fantasy figures. It is so named after the small people who inhabit the fictional Lilliput Island in the novel Gulliver's Travels.

The patients saw these figures "moving about everywhere", the researchers wrote – usually, there were more than ten tiny beings on the scene. "They saw them on their clothes when they were dressing and saw them on their dishes when eating," the researchers added. The visions "were even more vivid when their eyes were closed".

people in China, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea do not seem to have a tradition of purposefully seeking out L. asiatica for its psychoactive effects, according to Domnauer's findings. "It was always just eaten for food," Domnauer says, with hallucinations being an unexpected side-effect.

There's another curious factor: other known psychedelic compounds also usually produce idiosyncratic trips that vary not only from person to person but also from one experience to the next within the same individual. With L. asiatica, though, "the perception of little people is very reliably and repeatedly reported", Domnauer says. "I don't know of anything else that produces such consistent hallucinations."



Gulliver's Travels
and Little People!!! :oops:

This illustration always scared me as a child 😬


1769627266718.webp


I preferred
"Children from Bullerbyn" by Astrid Lindgren!!! 🥰

1769627540901.webp
 
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  • #286
Gulliver's Travels
and Little People!!! :oops:

This illustration always scared me as a child 😬


View attachment 640258

I preferred
"Children from Bullerbyn" by Astrid Lindgren!!!

View attachment 640261
As it should because they are apparently real! Think about it... hallucinating is one thing, but for different people, in different geographies, over different time frames... all with the same hallucination!??!
 
  • #287
It sounds funny but it's not.
On reading this, it drives some people mad.
And for some people it doesn't wear off.
 
  • #288
As it should because they are apparently real! Think about it... hallucinating is one thing, but for different people, in different geographies, over different time frames... all with the same hallucination!??!

In near death experiences
for people all over the world
there are also common elements:
a feeling of leaving the physical body,
entering a tunnel,
seeing a bright light,
experiencing deep peace,
and encountering beings.
Some also see their life as if watching a film.
 
  • #289
Hi guys!!! 😃

In Poland we have now STUDNIÓWKA season 😍💃🕺

It means Prom Parties for High School students 🥳

It is the last opportunity for a moment of carefreeness before intensive preparations for Finishing Exams.

100-day rule:
Traditionally, the prom takes place approximately 100 days before the high school leaving exam.

Studniówka (100 days)
ALWAYS starts with
POLONEZ
Traditional Polish Dance ❤️

Students are dancing
and teachers & parents
are bursting with pride haha!!!


This Studniówka Polonez is older
and I have already sent it to Music Thread
BUT it is my FAVOURITE :D 😍 👍


To add...

Studniówka 2026 😍
So many Parties
So many High Schools

But....
One Polonez/Polonaise

Tradition!!! ❤️



Teachers dancing too 😍 👍



Practising in the gym 😂
Teachers too (Principal, vice, senior classes teachers 🥳 )


Even in the streets


:)

I remember my Studniówka.
It was unreal hahaha
Beautiful memories.
You know...
Long dress and a red garter 🤩
Wearing a red garter on the left leg is the most well-known Studniówka custom.
Every girl is expected to wear one
as an omen of good luck during final exams!
 
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  • #290
This is strange. A mushroom that causes THE SAME hallucination no matter where it's grown/eaten.... seeing little people.

Every year, doctors at a hospital in the Yunnan Province of China brace themselves for an influx of people with an unusual complaint. The patients come with a strikingly odd symptom: visions of pint-sized, elf-like figures – marching under doors, crawling up walls and clinging to furniture.

The hospital treats hundreds of these cases every year. All share a common culprit: Lanmaoa asiatica, a type of mushroom that forms symbiotic relationships with pine trees in nearby forest

One must be careful to cook it thoroughly, though, otherwise the hallucinations will set in.

In a 1991 paper, two researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences described cases of people in Yunnan Province who had eaten a certain mushroom and experienced "lilliputian hallucinations" – the psychiatric term for the perception of tiny human, animal or fantasy figures. It is so named after the small people who inhabit the fictional Lilliput Island in the novel Gulliver's Travels.

The patients saw these figures "moving about everywhere", the researchers wrote – usually, there were more than ten tiny beings on the scene. "They saw them on their clothes when they were dressing and saw them on their dishes when eating," the researchers added. The visions "were even more vivid when their eyes were closed".

people in China, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea do not seem to have a tradition of purposefully seeking out L. asiatica for its psychoactive effects, according to Domnauer's findings. "It was always just eaten for food," Domnauer says, with hallucinations being an unexpected side-effect.

There's another curious factor: other known psychedelic compounds also usually produce idiosyncratic trips that vary not only from person to person but also from one experience to the next within the same individual. With L. asiatica, though, "the perception of little people is very reliably and repeatedly reported", Domnauer says. "I don't know of anything else that produces such consistent hallucinations."


WOW. This is nuts. How in the...?
 
  • #291
GIVE US THIS DAY OUR DAILY THREAD, JANUARY 29TH 2026
On January 29, 1964, the band was in the middle of their Paris residency at the Olympia Theatre, performing nightly shows while simultaneously recording in London during off-hours — a genuinely exhausting and surreal period of Beatlemania.
  • 1820 — King George III died at Windsor Castle (after a long reign and years of serious illness).
  • 1845 — Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven” was published (in the New York Evening Mirror).
  • 1861 — Kansas became the 34th U.S. state (a major milestone after the violent “Bleeding Kansas” era).
  • 1886 — Karl Benz applied for the patent that’s often called the “birth certificate” of the automobile (German patent no. 37435).
  • 1959 — Disney’s animated “Sleeping Beauty” was released (official Disney reference lists Jan. 29, 1959).
  • 1964 — “Dr. Strangelove” premiered (the Cold War doomsday satire that’s funny and horrifying at the same time).
  • 1979 — The Cleveland Elementary School shooting in San Diego (Brenda Spencer killed two and wounded others; the “I don’t like Mondays” line became infamous).
  • 1991 — The Battle of Khafji began (often described as the first major ground engagement of the Gulf War).
 

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