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#10.15 Fortune
kent-farm · 11 months
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Uh, Lois, if you're watching this 20 years from now, just know that you are the love of my life… and you always will be. Um… I'm really feeling this.
—Clark Drunk-on-Zatanna's-Magic-Champagne Kent, Smallville, "Fortune"
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fyeahchlark · 2 years
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kiddstellas · 2 years
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CLARK KENT SMALLVILLE | 10.15 Fortune
#baby’s first hangover
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One day in Farmer Julian's life:
6:00 am - 6:20 am: Wake up, make the bed, go to the toilet, take a shower.
6:20 am - 6:30 am: Check incoming calls, messages on mobile phone.
6:30 am - 6:50 am: Prepare and eat a quick breakfast (scrambled eggs and vegetables), feed Orion (dog) and Midnight (cat). Pet both animals.
6:50 am - 6:55 am - Pet Orion and Midnight some more.
6:55 am - 7:00 am: Check the weather and the fortune teller for today. Get upset because the spirits are annoyed today. Oh well...
7:00 am - 8:30 am - Water all the crops, feed and pet all coop and barn animals. Play with the calves for ten minutes. Treat all animals with cave carrots. Feed Luna (the horse), clean and brush her. Give Luna a few delicious apples as a treat.
8:30 am - 8:40 am: Pour food into the bird feeders. Listen to birdsong and enjoy the sound of rustling dry leaves and beautiful trees (it's autumn). He also sad now because autumn reminds him about his parents. Autumn was their favourite time of year... He missed them so much...
8:40 am - 9:25 am: Process all crops and animal products (wine, jams, mayonnaise and cheese). Rest for five minutes.
9:25 am - 9:30 am: Narrow a bouquet of sunflowers for a present (it's Claire's birthday!).
9:30 am - 9:40 am: Pick some more ripe apples. Take a backpack with a sword and pickaxe (still need to go to the Mines, even if the spirits don't favour him today).
9:40 am - 9:55 am: Grab everything needed, head towards Pelican Town. Greet the locals and treat them to an apple (Pam, Harvey, Evelyn, Robin, Lewis and Alex).
9:55 am - 10:00 am: Stop by JojaMart and give Claire some sunflowers (she's so happy!). Listen for five minutes to Morris about another Joja discount. Pretend to be very interested.
10:00 am - 10:15 am: Use the minecart, quickly getting to the Mines. Meet Marlon near the entrance, promise to find him the diamond (for Magnus).
10.15 am - 1:00 pm: Spend some time in the Mines below level 100, find only 15 pieces of gold ore, one diamond and one topaz (such a loot...). Return to the surface, because the elixirs have run out (there was only one bottle, and it was half empty).
1:00 pm - 1:10 pm: Give Marlon the diamond. Listen some mocking from jerks (unfamiliar adventurers from the Castle Village). Marlon barked at them, but Julian didn't care anymore, he's leaving already.
1:10 pm - 1:25 pm: Use the minecart again to get home. Use the ore to melt into the bars.
1:25 pm - 1:30 pm: Get a fishing rod. Head to the beach to fish.
1:30 pm - 1:35 pm: Come to the beach. Check the crab traps (trash, trash, trash, Joja cola, trash .... And some mussels. Well, at least enough for soup).
1:35 pm - 2:30 pm: Go fishing (five sardines, two anchovies and one sea cucumber. Yeah...). Sell Willy the catch (well, at least the fish is gold quality). Remember to give Lola the topaz for her request. Good thing the topaz is already there!
2:30 pm - 3:00 pm: Headed to Ridgeside Village. Met locals (Louie for demanding to be his butler again), Maddie ("I don't have much time") and Freddie (he said Lola was sitting outside the hotel).
3:00 pm- 3:40 pm: Giving Lola the topaz. Received praise, reward and a slice of blackberry pie (Delicious! And Julian just missed his lunch... again).
3:40 pm - 4:20 pm: Pick up some lava lilies before leaving. Give a few to passers-by (Corinne and Pika). The rest are for sale.
4:20 pm - 4:40 pm: Return home, put all items for sale in a bin (mayonnaise, three gold bars, lava lilies, and a couple of heads of cheese. Not much, but at least something).
4:40 pm - 6:30 pm: Fish again in the Cindersap forest river. Catch 13 fish (hey, that's pretty good already). Get a call from the... in-laws? It was Julian's aunt... Listen for a full minute about how selfish their nephew is and won't lend them money, which they'll pay back later (they won't).
6:30 pm - 6:40 pm: Another ten minutes passed, he was already talking in raised tones. Out of anger over the narcissistic aunt dropped the net with all the catch accidentally. Fuck... Hung up the phone and blocked the number (and why hadn't he done that before?).
6:40 pm - 7:30 pm: Went back to the farm tired and angry. Still, fed all the animals again. Dropped all tools in the chest nearby the shipping bin.
7:30 pm - 7:35 pm: Took a quick shower.
7:35 pm - 7:45 pm: Ate a simple sandwich and some tea (no energy for dinner).
7:45 pm - 8:20 pm: Read a book about gardening. Didn't warm up the fireplace (not enough logs).
8:20 pm - 8:40 pm: Fed Orion and Midnight.
8:41 pm: Fuck! He forgot to re-seed the fields with pumpkins!
8:41 pm - 10:20 pm - Planted all seeds.
10:20 pm - 11:00 pm - He forgot about slime hutch too! UUUUUGH!
11:00 pm - 11:30 pm: Some time in the social media.
11:30 pm - 11:40 pm: He tried to sleep. Without success (damn insomnia again).
11:40 pm - 11:50 pm: Took a walk not too far from farm house. Enjoyed the cold and breezy weather. Came home again.
11:50 pm - 11:55 pm: Played with Orion and Midnight for a bit as they climbed on the bed.
11:55 pm - 12:15 am: Finally fell asleep.
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brookston · 1 year
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Holidays 10.7
Holidays
Ageism Awareness Day
Armed Forces Day (Egypt)
Bathtub Day
Battle of Lepanto Day
Bay Day (San Francisco Bay Area)
BOL Foundation Day (Laos)
Expulsion of Fascist Settlers Day (Libya)
Four O’Clock Flower Day (French Republic)
Ghatasthapana (Nepal)
If At First You Don't Succeed Day
International Day of Peaceful Communication
International Newspaper Carrier Day
International Trigeminal Neuralgia Awareness Day
Italian Evacuation Day (Libya)
Lepanto Day (Greece)
Love Your Bookshop Day (Australia)
Nagasaki Kunchi begins (Japan)
National Beat Poetry Day
National Castle Day (Portugal)
National Dark Poetry Day
National Flower Day
National Forgiveness & Happiness Day
National Inner Beauty Day
National Jonathan Day
National LED Light Day
National Mariners Day (Peru)
National Personal Safety Day
National Propane Day
Poodle Day
Teachers’ Day (Laos)
Team Margot Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Registration Day
Territory Day (Christmas Island)
Try To Start An Argument Over Which Is The Best Muppet Day
Victoria, Our Lady of Victories’ Day
World Cotton Day
World Day for Decent Work
World Metropolitan Day
World Zombie Day
You Matter To Me Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Bacon-Wrapped Scallops Day
Festival of Food
International Chicken and Waffles Day
International Scottish Gin Day
National Chocolate Covered Pretzels Day
National Frappé Day
National Mussel Day (Scotland)
Ripe Pumpkin Day
Ziua Vinului (Wine Day 1 of 2; Moldova)
1st Saturday in October
Bed & Breakfast Inn Mascot Day [1st Saturday]
Cadet Day (Nova Scotia) [1st Saturday]
Cephalopod Awareness Day [1st Saturday]
Dachshund Day [1st Saturday]
Datil Pepper Day (Florida) [1st Saturday]
Digital Scrapbooking Day [1st Saturday]
Inter-American Water Day [1st Saturday]
International Frugal Fun Day [1st Saturday]
Lumberjack Day (Calaveras County, California) [1st Saturday]
Madonna del Lume Celebration (a.k.a. Blessing of the Fleet; San Francisco, California) [1st Saturday]
National Blind Sports Day [1st Saturday]
National Bookshop Day [1st Saturday]
National Bowhunting Day
National Family Fire Drill Day [1st Saturday]
National Healthcare Entrepreneurs Day [1st Saturday]
National Ostomy Awareness Day [1st Saturday]
National Play Outside Day [1st Saturday of Every Month]
Satyr's Day (Silenus, Greek God of Beer Buddies and Drinking Companions) [1st Saturday of Each Month]
Take a Kid Mountain Biking Day [1st Saturday]
Tarantula Festival and Barbecue (Morgan Hill, California) [1st Saturday]
World Card Making Day [1st Saturday]
World Hoop Day [1st Saturday]
Yakima Fresh Hop Ale Festival (Washington) [1st Saturday]
Independence Days
Angyalistan (Declared; 2000) [unrecognized]
Latitudia (Declared; 2013) [unrecognized]
Nedland (Declared; 2014) [unrecognized]
South Bages (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Ereshkigal’s Day (Pagan)
Feast of Ma’at (Ancient Egypt)
Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary (Roman Catholic)
Justina of Padua (Christian; Saint)
Henry Muhlenberg (Lutheran Church, Episcopal Church of the USA)
Jean-Paul Riopelle (Artology)
Justina of Padua (Original Date; Christian; Saint)
Long John Tutter (Muppetism)
Marcellus and Apuleius (Christian; Martyrs)
Mark, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Navaratri begins (Hinduism) [thru 10.15]
Nones of October (Ancient Rome)
Odin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Osgyth (a.k.a. Osith; Christian; Saint)
Our Lady of the Rosary (Christian; Saint)
Mozart (Positivist; Saint)
Pallas Athena (Old Roman Goddess of Triumph)
Quob Day (Pastafarian)
Rosalba Carriera (Artology)
Sergius and Bacchus (Christian; Martyrs)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [41 of 53]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [54 of 71]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 46 of 60)
Premieres
Amsterdam (Film; 2022)
Arthur (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Bandstand (later American Bandstand; TV Series; 1952)
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Film; 1971)
A Bug’s Land (Disneyland Attraction; 2002)
Canary Row (WB MM Cartoon; 1950)
Cats (Broadway Musical; 1982)
Charmed (TV Series; 1998)
The Code of the Woosters, by P.G. Wodehouse (Novel; 1938) [Jeeves #7]
Don’t Stand So Close To Me ’86, by The Police (Song; 1986)
Everything Will Ne Alright in the End, by Weezer (Album; 2014)
The Flash (TV Series; 2014)
The French Connection (Film; 1971)
The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein (Children’s Book; 1964)
Good Night, and Good Luck (Film; 2005)
Hawaiian Eye (TV Series; 1959)
Hey Arnold (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Howl, by Alan Ginsberg (Poem; 1955)
Imagine: John Lennon (Documentary Film; 1988)
Iron Man, by Black Sabbath (Song; 1971)
Journey by Moonlight, by Antal Szerb (Novel; 1937)
Little Deuce Coupe, by The Beach Boys (Album; 1963)
The Little Lion Hunter (WB MM Cartoon; 1939)
Lyle, Lyle Crocodile (Film; 2022)
Naughty Neighbors (WB LT Cartoon; 1939)
Never Say Never Again (Film; 1983) [James Bond non-series]
Oh, God! (Film; 1977)
Over the Rainbow, recorded by Judy Garland (Song; 1938)
Pillow Talk (Film; 1959)
Pleasures of the Flesh (Album; 1987)
Punchline (Film; 1988)
Save Me the Waltz, by Zelda Fitzgerald (Novel; 1932)
The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner (Novel; 1929)
Spotify (Music Streaming Service; 2008)
Stardust, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song; 1940)
The Tin Drum, by Günter Grass (Novel; 1959)
Tom and Jerry: Santa’s Little Helpers (WB Animated Film; 2014)
Touchdown Mickey (Disney Cartoon; 1932)
Voyage of Time (Animated Documentary Film; 2016)
Waiting…. (Film; 2004)
We Are the Champions/We Will Rock You, by Queen (Song; 1977)
We Shall Overcome, by Pete Seeger copyrighted (Song; 1963)
Today’s Name Days
Jörg, Justina, Markus, Rosa Maria (Austria)
Marija, Ruža (Croatia)
Justýna (Czech Republic)
Amalie (Denmark)
Asso, Ats, Atso, Hasso (Estonia)
Birgitta, Pipsa, Pirita, Piritta, Pirjo, Pirkko (Finland)
Gustave, Serge (France)
Denise, Jörg, Justina, Marc, Rosa Maria (Germany)
Bakhos, Polychronios, Sergios (Greece)
Amália (Hungary)
Maria, Rosario (Italy)
Daumants, Denise, Druvvaldis (Latvia)
Butrimas, Eivina, Justina, Renatas (Lithuania)
Berit, Birgit, Birgitte (Norway)
Amalia, Justyna, Marek, Maria, Rościsława, Stefan, Tekla (Poland)
Serghie, Vah (Romania)
Eliška (Slovakia)
Justina, Rosario (Spain)
Birgitta, Britta (Sweden)
Serhly (Ukraine)
Minerva, Miranda, Sargent, Sergeant, Sergio (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 280 of 2024; 85 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 6 of week 40 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Gort (Ivy) [Day 5 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Xin-You), Day 23 Wu-Xu()
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 22 Tishri 5784
Islamic: 22 Rabi I 1445
J Cal: 10 Shù; Threesday [10 of 30]
Julian: 24 September 2023
Moon: 39%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 28 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Mozart]
Runic Half Month: Gyfu (Gift) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Autumn (Day 14 of 89)
Zodiac: Libra (Day 14 of 30)
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brookstonalmanac · 1 year
Text
Holidays 10.7
Holidays
Ageism Awareness Day
Armed Forces Day (Egypt)
Bathtub Day
Battle of Lepanto Day
Bay Day (San Francisco Bay Area)
BOL Foundation Day (Laos)
Expulsion of Fascist Settlers Day (Libya)
Four O’Clock Flower Day (French Republic)
Ghatasthapana (Nepal)
If At First You Don't Succeed Day
International Day of Peaceful Communication
International Newspaper Carrier Day
International Trigeminal Neuralgia Awareness Day
Italian Evacuation Day (Libya)
Lepanto Day (Greece)
Love Your Bookshop Day (Australia)
Nagasaki Kunchi begins (Japan)
National Beat Poetry Day
National Castle Day (Portugal)
National Dark Poetry Day
National Flower Day
National Forgiveness & Happiness Day
National Inner Beauty Day
National Jonathan Day
National LED Light Day
National Mariners Day (Peru)
National Personal Safety Day
National Propane Day
Poodle Day
Teachers’ Day (Laos)
Team Margot Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Registration Day
Territory Day (Christmas Island)
Try To Start An Argument Over Which Is The Best Muppet Day
Victoria, Our Lady of Victories’ Day
World Cotton Day
World Day for Decent Work
World Metropolitan Day
World Zombie Day
You Matter To Me Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Bacon-Wrapped Scallops Day
Festival of Food
International Chicken and Waffles Day
International Scottish Gin Day
National Chocolate Covered Pretzels Day
National Frappé Day
National Mussel Day (Scotland)
Ripe Pumpkin Day
Ziua Vinului (Wine Day 1 of 2; Moldova)
1st Saturday in October
Bed & Breakfast Inn Mascot Day [1st Saturday]
Cadet Day (Nova Scotia) [1st Saturday]
Cephalopod Awareness Day [1st Saturday]
Dachshund Day [1st Saturday]
Datil Pepper Day (Florida) [1st Saturday]
Digital Scrapbooking Day [1st Saturday]
Inter-American Water Day [1st Saturday]
International Frugal Fun Day [1st Saturday]
Lumberjack Day (Calaveras County, California) [1st Saturday]
Madonna del Lume Celebration (a.k.a. Blessing of the Fleet; San Francisco, California) [1st Saturday]
National Blind Sports Day [1st Saturday]
National Bookshop Day [1st Saturday]
National Bowhunting Day
National Family Fire Drill Day [1st Saturday]
National Healthcare Entrepreneurs Day [1st Saturday]
National Ostomy Awareness Day [1st Saturday]
National Play Outside Day [1st Saturday of Every Month]
Satyr's Day (Silenus, Greek God of Beer Buddies and Drinking Companions) [1st Saturday of Each Month]
Take a Kid Mountain Biking Day [1st Saturday]
Tarantula Festival and Barbecue (Morgan Hill, California) [1st Saturday]
World Card Making Day [1st Saturday]
World Hoop Day [1st Saturday]
Yakima Fresh Hop Ale Festival (Washington) [1st Saturday]
Independence Days
Angyalistan (Declared; 2000) [unrecognized]
Latitudia (Declared; 2013) [unrecognized]
Nedland (Declared; 2014) [unrecognized]
South Bages (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Ereshkigal’s Day (Pagan)
Feast of Ma’at (Ancient Egypt)
Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary (Roman Catholic)
Justina of Padua (Christian; Saint)
Henry Muhlenberg (Lutheran Church, Episcopal Church of the USA)
Jean-Paul Riopelle (Artology)
Justina of Padua (Original Date; Christian; Saint)
Long John Tutter (Muppetism)
Marcellus and Apuleius (Christian; Martyrs)
Mark, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Navaratri begins (Hinduism) [thru 10.15]
Nones of October (Ancient Rome)
Odin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Osgyth (a.k.a. Osith; Christian; Saint)
Our Lady of the Rosary (Christian; Saint)
Mozart (Positivist; Saint)
Pallas Athena (Old Roman Goddess of Triumph)
Quob Day (Pastafarian)
Rosalba Carriera (Artology)
Sergius and Bacchus (Christian; Martyrs)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [41 of 53]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [54 of 71]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 46 of 60)
Premieres
Amsterdam (Film; 2022)
Arthur (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Bandstand (later American Bandstand; TV Series; 1952)
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Film; 1971)
A Bug’s Land (Disneyland Attraction; 2002)
Canary Row (WB MM Cartoon; 1950)
Cats (Broadway Musical; 1982)
Charmed (TV Series; 1998)
The Code of the Woosters, by P.G. Wodehouse (Novel; 1938) [Jeeves #7]
Don’t Stand So Close To Me ’86, by The Police (Song; 1986)
Everything Will Ne Alright in the End, by Weezer (Album; 2014)
The Flash (TV Series; 2014)
The French Connection (Film; 1971)
The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein (Children’s Book; 1964)
Good Night, and Good Luck (Film; 2005)
Hawaiian Eye (TV Series; 1959)
Hey Arnold (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Howl, by Alan Ginsberg (Poem; 1955)
Imagine: John Lennon (Documentary Film; 1988)
Iron Man, by Black Sabbath (Song; 1971)
Journey by Moonlight, by Antal Szerb (Novel; 1937)
Little Deuce Coupe, by The Beach Boys (Album; 1963)
The Little Lion Hunter (WB MM Cartoon; 1939)
Lyle, Lyle Crocodile (Film; 2022)
Naughty Neighbors (WB LT Cartoon; 1939)
Never Say Never Again (Film; 1983) [James Bond non-series]
Oh, God! (Film; 1977)
Over the Rainbow, recorded by Judy Garland (Song; 1938)
Pillow Talk (Film; 1959)
Pleasures of the Flesh (Album; 1987)
Punchline (Film; 1988)
Save Me the Waltz, by Zelda Fitzgerald (Novel; 1932)
The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner (Novel; 1929)
Spotify (Music Streaming Service; 2008)
Stardust, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song; 1940)
The Tin Drum, by Günter Grass (Novel; 1959)
Tom and Jerry: Santa’s Little Helpers (WB Animated Film; 2014)
Touchdown Mickey (Disney Cartoon; 1932)
Voyage of Time (Animated Documentary Film; 2016)
Waiting…. (Film; 2004)
We Are the Champions/We Will Rock You, by Queen (Song; 1977)
We Shall Overcome, by Pete Seeger copyrighted (Song; 1963)
Today’s Name Days
Jörg, Justina, Markus, Rosa Maria (Austria)
Marija, Ruža (Croatia)
Justýna (Czech Republic)
Amalie (Denmark)
Asso, Ats, Atso, Hasso (Estonia)
Birgitta, Pipsa, Pirita, Piritta, Pirjo, Pirkko (Finland)
Gustave, Serge (France)
Denise, Jörg, Justina, Marc, Rosa Maria (Germany)
Bakhos, Polychronios, Sergios (Greece)
Amália (Hungary)
Maria, Rosario (Italy)
Daumants, Denise, Druvvaldis (Latvia)
Butrimas, Eivina, Justina, Renatas (Lithuania)
Berit, Birgit, Birgitte (Norway)
Amalia, Justyna, Marek, Maria, Rościsława, Stefan, Tekla (Poland)
Serghie, Vah (Romania)
Eliška (Slovakia)
Justina, Rosario (Spain)
Birgitta, Britta (Sweden)
Serhly (Ukraine)
Minerva, Miranda, Sargent, Sergeant, Sergio (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 280 of 2024; 85 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 6 of week 40 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Gort (Ivy) [Day 5 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Xin-You), Day 23 Wu-Xu()
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 22 Tishri 5784
Islamic: 22 Rabi I 1445
J Cal: 10 Shù; Threesday [10 of 30]
Julian: 24 September 2023
Moon: 39%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 28 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Mozart]
Runic Half Month: Gyfu (Gift) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Autumn (Day 14 of 89)
Zodiac: Libra (Day 14 of 30)
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Pitambari Neelam (Blue Sapphire):-Benefits, Healing Property & Uses
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Introduction Malachite is a copper carbonate mineral, with the chemical formula Cu2CO3(OH)2. It is often found in large crystals, but can also be found as granular or massive aggregates. The name comes from the Greek words for "mallow" (malache) and "green" (chiton). Malachite has been used since ancient times to make jewellery and ornamental objects such as vases, cups and statues. It was also used as a pigment in paintings by artists such as Titian until about 1800 CE when it was replaced by synthetic green pigments like cobalt blue and emerald green. Healing Properties Malachite is a stone of physical healing. It can help to heal broken bones, sprains and injuries. Malachite also helps to detoxify the body by removing toxins from the blood stream. Malachite has strong emotional healing properties as well. It can be used to help with depression and anxiety, as well as any other mental health issues that you may be experiencing such as PTSD or OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder). Malachite is also a great stone for spiritual growth because it helps us connect with our higher self or soul purpose in life! Meaning of Malachite Gemstone Malachite is a stone of transformation. It helps us to release what no longer serves us and move forward into the next phase of our lives with grace and ease. Malachite also provides protection against negative energies, especially those directed at you by others. It helps you stay balanced in the midst of chaos, so that you can see things clearly and make wise decisions about your life path. Malachite has been used throughout history as an amulet for protection against evil spirits or bad luck; it was also thought to bring good fortune if worn around the neck or carried in a purse. Uses of Malachite Gemstone Malachite is a beautiful stone that can be used to create jewelry, home decor, and meditation tools. Malachite has been used as a healing stone for thousands of years. It's believed to have the ability to boost your energy levels, improve your mood and help you overcome depression or anxiety. How to Choose the Right Malachite Gemstone When you're looking for a malachite gemstone, there are several things to consider. The first is color; green is the most common but it can also be found in shades of blue and brown. If you want to make sure that your stone has not been dyed or treated with heat, then look for one with a vibrant green hue. You should also consider size and cut when purchasing your stone; larger pieces will cost more but they can also be used as an investment piece because they hold their value well over time. Smaller pieces are easier to wear every day so if this is something you'd like to do regularly then go ahead and purchase one that's small enough not to get lost in amongst other jewelry items (but still large enough so people know what it means). Finally, when selecting between cut options keep in mind whether or not any imperfections will show up on either side of where light hits them since these may affect how much light reflects off each side differently depending on where those imperfections are located within each faceted surface area. Instagram Gallery 4500 416 5908 809 5653 420 5193 84 9525 736 9816 296 4228 307 5338 814 6778 344 7784 781 9658 228 4464 477 6151 916 2422 321 1822 295 1686 809 6599 6 1415 395 Recent Posts - What to know before wearing a Garnet stone? - What is Blue Sapphire? Why Blue sapphire is the most Powerful Gemstone? - Can I wear Emerald stone (Panna) without consultation? - Unheated Ruby vs. Heated Ruby Malachite For you - Natural Malachite Gemstone 10.15 Carat Lab Certified ₹4,000.00 ₹2,030.00 - Natural Malachite Gemstone 8.90 Carat Lab Certified ₹3,400.00 ₹1,780.00 - Natural Malachite Gemstone 8.25 carat Lab Certified ₹3,200.00 ₹1,650.00 Contact Us FIND YOUR BEST STONE FROM BELOW COLLECTION Blue Sapphire Yellow Sapphire Emerald Ruby Opal Amethyst Catseye Blue Topaz Yellow Topaz Feroza Garnet Malachite Pearl Red Coral Akik White Coral Peridot Citrine Aquamarine Round CVD Cushion CVD Oval CVD Princess CVD Heart CVD Emerald CVD Radiant CVD Asscher CVD Baguette CVD Pear CVD Marquise CVD Round HPHT Cushion HPHT Oval HPHT Princess HPHT Heart HPHT Emerald HPHT Radiant HPHT Asscher HPHT Baguette HPHT Pear HPHT Marquise HPHT 1 Mukhi 2 Mukhi 3 Mukhi 4 Mukhi 5 Mukhi 6 Mukhi 7 Mukhi 8 Mukhi 9 Mukhi 10 Mukhi 11 Mukhi 12 Mukhi 13 Mukhi 14 Mukhi 15 Mukhi 16 Mukhi 17 Mukhi 18 Mukhi 19 Mukhi 20 Mukhi 21 Mukhi Gauri Shankar Garbh Gauri Shankar Savaar Sidhha Mala Jaap Mala Indra Mala Ganesha Ganesha Read the full article
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drsohinisastri · 2 years
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We are excited to announce that Dr. Sohini Sastri will be joining us on Facebook Live on 19th March, Sunday within 10.15 PM to 10.30 PM to discuss on a very interesting topic: চৈত্রের নবরাত্রিতে ১২টি রাশির জাতক / জাতিকাদের ভাগ্যের পরিবর্তনের কেমন সম্ভাবনা আছে? 
(What are the chances of changing the fortunes of 12 zodiac signs Jataks / Jatikas on this Chaitra Navratri?).During this session, you'll have the opportunity to ask Dr. Sastri any questions you may have about astrology, and learn more about the different aspects of this fascinating field. 
You'll also discover how astrology can help you gain a deeper understanding of yourself, your relationships, and the world around you.Don't miss this chance to enhance your knowledge from one of the most respected and knowledgeable astrologers in the world. 
Join us on 19th March 2023, Sunday within 10.15 PM to 10.30 PM for an engaging and informative Facebook Live session with Dr. Sohini Sastri!
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nahasmachines · 2 years
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How to find emojis on mac
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HOW TO FIND EMOJIS ON MAC HOW TO
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HOW TO FIND EMOJIS ON MAC MAC
HOW TO FIND EMOJIS ON MAC MAC
Using emoji symbols on a Mac is very easy. You need to know a simple combination of three keys on keyboard and you will get access to all collections of emoji 🥰😱👍🏻👩🏻‍💻🦄🌸💎, and you will also have access to additional symbols: Punctuation ( Pictograms ( ♛⚧⚢⚣⚖︎☯︎🃟), Parentheses ( 〔〗⎤⟨❩), Math Symbols ( ∬∜≱⨋∏), Letterlike Symbols ( ®№™℃©), Latin ( ÄǦⱤ), Currency Symbols ( $€¥), Bullets/Stars ( ❆✻❀❖❤︎) and Arrows ( ☞➳⇝).
HOW TO FIND EMOJIS ON MAC HOW TO
If you like to use emoji symbols as much as I love, but unfortunately have a Mac computer without a touch bar, then I have good news for you, I know how to find Emoji symbols on Mac 😀. Double-click an emoji to insert it into your document. Click on each section in the second column to see different emoji categories, such as Food & Drink. To open the hidden full-size Mac emoji menu, click the button in the top-right corner. The smaller emoji keyboard for Macs will appear.
HOW TO FIND EMOJIS ON MAC PRO
Fortunately, I already knew how to find Emoji on my MacBook Pro, so I have successfully published a post and since then I use my MacBook Pro more often to post to social media, than iPhone or iPad Pro 😀. Use the command-control-space Mac keyboard shortcut. I use MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014) with macOS Catalina 10.15 without touch bar. Luckily I had a MacBook Pro with 100% battery power :) I needed to publish a post on Twitter with Emoji symbols and I decided to use MacBook Pro. Unfortunately, that day I did not take with me the power supply for the iPhone and I also left the power bank at home and therefore I had to save battery power. I found out this at that moment when I was already in a cafe, during breakfast 🥐☕️. Leaving home in the morning, I did not pay attention to the fact that the battery of my iPhone is discharged to 18%. Position your cursor in any text field where you’d like to add an emoji. Click on it 1 time to type it in a tweet. To make things even faster, you can even type : (colon) followed by the emoji name, just like in Slack The little-known shortcut for adding emojis on Mac and Windows How to add emojis on Mac (keyboard shortcut): CTRL + CMD + Space 1. Click on the globe icon and select the desired emoticon from the emoji block that appears. I started thinking about using emoji symbols on my MacBook Pro several years ago. To find and type emojis on Twitter using the Apple keyboard, you need to: Log into the Twitter app and click on the Tweet button. I use Emoji symbols whenever I write messages, emails, SMSs, posts in Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, as Emoji make messages more alive 🤗👍. In this article I will show you how to find Emoji on your MacBook, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro or iMac, if it don’t have a touch bar. I love to use Emoji symbols whenever it’s possible :) I can write message, email, post in social media with Emoji even when I use a MacBook Pro which does not have a touch bar.
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yotb0ka · 7 years
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random gifs per ep series: Smallville - 10.15 - Fortune
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To the summit in a skirt: Lucy Walker, pioneering Victorian Alpine mountaineer
The stories of women just weren’t written, so people tend to think they didn’t happen. There have always been women who have had the courage to step out into the unknown, and that’s what Lucy Walker did. The fortitude, the bravery, the commitment to the goal - women’s power was not invented yesterday.
- Rebecca A. Brown, Women on High: Pioneers of Mountaineering
Leaving behind a quiet life of croquet and cream teas, Lucy Walker became one of Britain’s finest early Alpine mountain climbers. Her climbing career spanned some 21 years, totalling 90 or so different summits, many being first ascents by a woman. Walker was the first woman to summit the Matterhorn and the Eiger - in a billowing Victorian dress no less - but she nearly vanished from history. 
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Her story as a female pioneering mountaineer has always inspired me in my mountaineering sojourns to the Alps and other mountainous places. During my time in the army flying combat helicopters I enjoyed free weekends that did come my way to take off to the Alps with like minded friends and climb together. 
Mountains are so special; they have such magic to them. Maybe it is the fact they are can be so dangerous or maybe it is because they make us feel so small. Even if you don’t even climb them they call to you.You might find that all the problems in your life dissolve when you are around them or that life slows down a bit. All that I can tell you is that after spending time surrounded by them or climbing them you will feel the urge to come back.
Climbing a mountain is the furthest thing from easy. Long stretches of constant vertical climbing can be the most exhausting and hardest thing you do. Not only the physical difficulties but also the mental difficulties will also test you. Exposed and tricky climbing and route finding can get the best of your mental abilities.
The classic quote that tells you “not to look at the whole mountain take it one piece at a time” is something you will come to understand. You will learn to never give up; to know that the reward will be worth the work it takes.
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Lucy Walker possessed great strength, endurance and determination and was an inspiration, especially for other women climbers. Indeed she paved the way for a wave of other - largely forgotten - women mountaineers to test the limits of their own mental and physical strength and courage against not only some of the hardest mountains to climb but also some the harshest social strictures against women seeking adventure.
Born in Liverpool in 1836, Lucy Walker was a British woman widely credited as being the first female alpine mountaineer. But this 19th century alpinist left behind no diaries, newspaper interviews, or personal accounts of any kind. And yet her presence haunts the annals of early mountaineering like a persistent ghost. Her serene, inscrutable face stares out from among men in Victorian-era expedition photos, and she lurks in a doorway in a renowned engraving of top 19th century alpinists - all male except for her. In journals, male climbers describe sightings of Walker briefly drying her sodden clothes at a hut or moving fast through deep snow and the astonishment of villagers after she became the first woman to climb the Eiger.
On Lucy Walker’s first trip to the Alps in 1858, she – unlike many people – was not content to remain in the valley but accompanied her brother and father into the high mountains. Whereas today climbers use cable cars or trains for the first part of an expedition, in the 19th century, several hours of steep walking was required. Lucy wanted to climb and at the sight of the Alps she began her life time obesession with mountain climbing.
Walker would go on to become one of the first and most prolific female mountaineers of the 19th century. Over the course of her 21-year career in the Alps, starting in 1858, Walker undertook 98 expeditions, including 28 successful attempts on 4,000-meter peaks. She holds first female ascents on 16 summits, including Monte Rosa, the Strahlhorn, and the Grand Combin, and a first ascent for either sex on the Balmhorn, which she completed in 1864.
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But it was perhaps the Matterhorn ascent that gained her the most fame. The Matterhorn was regarded as the most desirable trophy by both men and women mountaineers. Lucy Walker was not the only woman whose dream it was to reach the peak. Various women attempted the ascent, most notably Meta Brevoort (1825-1876), a New Yorker who had settled in England. Just like Miss Walker, Meta was making a name for herself in the mountaineering world in the late 1860s. In 1869, Meta undertook her first attempt to climb the Matterhorn and, approaching from the Italian side, reached an altitude of just under 4,000 metres before being forced to turn back due to severe weather conditions.
Two years later, however, Meta Brevoort decided to give it another go, setting out for Zermatt with the aim of attempting another ascent. Lucy Walker was already in Zermatt though and, on receiving word of Ms Breevort’s intentions, quickly assembled her own group in order to begin her ascent of the Matterhorn, a feat that would make her the most famous female mountaineer of the era.
Long before dawn on July 21, 1871, Walker woke up in a hut on the northeastern flank of the legendary mountain, surrounded by men. She wore her favorite long dress and hobnail boots as she, her father, their guide, and several other climbers set off on snowy slopes in the flickering gloom of candle lanterns.
The mountaineers were probably nervously aware that six years earlier, four men from the first expedition to stand on top of this 14,692-foot spire on the Swiss-Italian border fell and perished on their descent. But Lucy Walker was determined that the American Meta Brevoort would not be the first woman to reach the summit. Walker fully intended to beat her to it.
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As the sky brightened and smoke rose from breakfast fires in the village of Zermatt far below, the climbers ascended a skinny, ice-encrusted ridge with heart-palpitating exposure. One mindless step could have sent them plunging a thousand feet down to the valley below. But by midmorning, with willful determination and agreeable weather, they reached the summit. A tableau of rocky pinnacles, meadows, forests, streams, and villages unfurled in every direction - and Walker was the first woman ever to see it all from that iconic perch.
Meta Brevoort arrived just after Lucy‘s achievement to receive the shocking news that she had missed her chance to win the ultimate trophy. That very evening, the two women met each other in Zermatt. What Meta really felt on this occasion is anyone’s guess but contemporary sources state that “there were congratulations” – noblesse oblige.
This would be the only occasion that the two most prominent female Alpinists of the era would meet, somewhat unusual considering that they came from a similar background. Lucy Walker came from a wealthy merchant family in Liverpool and Meta Brevoort from a family of Dutch immigrants who made a fortune in New York as property owners.
Contrary to the strict notions of Victorian society, both women were outgoing and cheerful characters with a lively spirit. According to her obituary, Lucy was known for her “warmth, humour and buoyant personality” while, according to chronicler Cicely Williams, Meta stood out for her “astounding vitality and her exception gift of living life to the full”.
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Walker’s other great accomplishment - amongst the many she already had achieved -  was the Eiger. Mountaineers down the ages to the present will say hands down that it is the most dangerous of all Alpine mountains.
The Nordwand, or north face, of this peak in the Bernese Alps in Switzerland is an objective legendary among mountaineers for its danger. Reaching nearly 6000 feet, it is the longest north face in the Alps. Though it was first climbed in 1938, the north face of the Eiger continues to challenge climbers of all abilities with both its technical difficulties and the heavy rockfall that rakes the face. The difficulty and hazards have earned the Eiger’s north face the nickname Mordwand, or Murder Wall. Lucy Walker didn’t climb the north face but she did climb it all the same. Nothing daunted her.
At 10.15 am on 25 July,  1864, a group of 11 people arranged themselves gingerly on the narrow arête of the Eiger’s summit, and “proceeded to howl [themselves] hoarse” in celebration of their achievement. The merriment was more raucous than usual because 28-year-old Lucy had just become the first woman to climb the mountain.
Poor visibility, ice and difficult route-finding threatened to defeat them, but as fellow climber Adolphus Moore noted, in a typical example of middle-class Victorian pride:  “A repugnance to abandoning an undertaking once commenced…appears to be naturally inherent in the breasts of Britons, male and female alike.” When the party arrived back in the village, Moore noted that “the astonishment amongst the people, collected at the inn, at a lady having performed such an unusual feat, was immense and entertaining.”
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Lucy Walker was the person that made women visible in the Alps for the first time. She was the first woman to ascend most of the major alpine summits and crushed through the glass ceiling, making it easier for women to follow. And yet the details of Walker’s life remain largely unknown.
At the time, women were expected to stay out of the public eye, avoid celebrating their accomplishments, and conform to narrow notions of femininity that prized meekness and subservience. While newspapers glorified male exploits in the mountains, they often ignored or satirized women who climbed, painting them as weak and unfit—or sometimes just laughable eccentrics. Women mountaineers of the 19th century generally underplayed their accomplishments in letters and books so as not to appear unfeminine and risk ridicule. Many did not write about their expeditions at all. Walker might have kept quiet about her climbing so that she could continue doing it in peace, but she also didn’t let the inevitable jibes discourage her.
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“In those far-off mid-Victorian days, when it was even considered ‘fast’ for a young lady to ride in a hansom, Miss Walker’s wonderful feats in the mountains did not pass without a certain amount of criticism, which her keen sense of humor made her appreciate as much as anyone,” wrote Frederick Gardiner, a friend and mountaineer who climbed alongside Walker up the Matterhorn, in an obituary in the Alpine Journal in 1917.
Over the course of her climbing career, Walker proved herself a model of both skill and endurance, climbing mostly with her father and brother and possibly, as some scholars have suggested, outperforming them. She ascended the tallest technical peaks in Europe, braved spectacular exposure with unreliable ropes, and pioneered long, difficult routes through the high cols. According to friends who wrote about her, Walker was witty and lively and had a penchant for hydrating with champagne.
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She also went to great lengths to avoid offending delicate Victorian sensibilities and gender roles—at least until out of sight. While climbing, Walker would walk out of villages looking every bit the proper lady and then stash her petticoat behind a rock. Like a chameleon, she transformed from an elite athlete in the Alps to a prim Victorian Englishwoman at home in Liverpool, where her family ran a lead-dealing business. Walker tended to the family house; kept up with her needlework; read widely in French, German, and Italian; and hosted parties. (She chose not to marry, however, which would have been unusual at the time.) There are no records of her ever scaling a British peak or even partaking in any exercise more taxing than croquet.
Perhaps because she didn’t brazenly challenge social norms, Lucy Walker’s activities in the mountains were occasionally feted. International newspapers covered her Matterhorn climb, and the satirical English magazine Punch even published a poem celebrating her fortitude.
“No glacier can baffle, no precipice balk her,” it read. “No peak rise above her, however sublime. Give three cheers for intrepid Miss Walker. I say, my boys, doesn’t she know how to climb!”
Clare Roche, a historian on 19th-century women’s mountaineering, argued that this recognition likely encouraged other women to be more adventurous in the Alps. Katherine Richardson, Margaret Jackson, and Emily Hornby, three of the best women mountaineers of the late 19th century, started climbing within a couple years of Walker’s Matterhorn ascent. Meta Brevoort was also inspired by her example, according to her nephew and climbing partner.
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Even before that time, however, Walker was far from the only woman in the peaks. After examining historic führerbücher, books in which guides kept client testimonials, Roche discovered that from about the mid-1860s, women ventured into the mountains on technical expeditions in much greater numbers than previously thought. In the second half of the 19th century, women completed nearly 60 first ascents on Europe’s high peaks and more than 100 first female ascents. These include Brevoort’s first winter ascent of the Jungfrau in 1874 and Margaret Anne Jackson’s first ascent of the east face of Weissmies in 1876.
Letters suggest that while there were rivalries, women climbers also formed a sort of sisterhood in the mountains and helped each other out, Roche says. Even though women weren’t allowed to file papers in the Alpine Journal until 1889 and were excluded from the Alpine Club until 1974, some of their male counterparts welcomed them in the high country. These wild areas afforded rare freedom in a time of stifling social constraints. In coed expeditions, women climbed and slept alongside men, a practice that would have been unthinkable in the valleys and cities. In the late 1800s, women even led men on expeditions without guides, which had been customary earlier in the century.
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In later life Lucy continued to walk in the Alps and meet with friends, including Melchoir Andregg, who was the foremost Swiss mountain guide of his time and is still revered today. When asked why she had never married, her typically direct reply was: “I love mountains and Melchoir and Melchoir already has a wife!”
Walker continued to climb until her mid-forties, when a doctor advised her to stop for health reasons that are now unknown. She continued to walk in the Alps long after her climbing career and acted as a mentor to younger climbers, encouraging them to write about their experiences. Although Lucy was an extremely capable mountaineer, she was never allowed to join the male-only Alpine Club in London but did become the second president of the Ladies’ Alpine Club in which she was involved in the founding in 1907. 
Most Victorian doctors advised gentlewomen to refrain from any strenuous exercise; the demands of mountaineering went way beyond strenuous. It is a measure of Lucy’s character that she clearly ignored medical diktats. She was an educated woman, spoke several languages, knew her own mind and was not prepared to conform to any convention if it meant restricting her mountaineering.
In the Alps, she regularly climbed for more than 14 hours a day, tackled some of the most difficult summits and slept in barns high in the mountains, often close by the men in the party. Home life in Liverpool could not have been more different. There she played croquet, entertained and led the respectable life expected of a Victorian lady.
Even on the mountains, she was keen to maintain a feminine appearance whenever possible, always wearing skirts, but removing her crinoline once outside the village. Dresses were arranged so they could be shortened easily on steep or rocky slopes. Trousers didn’t become popular with women until the 1890s, long after Lucy’s climbing was over. She later said how envious she was of the easier conditions women experienced in the early years of the 20th century.
Although Lucy wrote nothing about her climbing, others did, noting her penchant for champagne – a common tipple among mountaineers, especially those who made unprecedented climbs. Lucy would get through several bottles during the course of an expedition. She became a renowned personality in the Alps whom everyone wanted to meet because, as famous mountaineer Edward Whymper, claimed, “no candidate for election in the Alpine club… ever submitted a list of qualifications at all approaching the list of Miss Walker.” 
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Lucy Walker died, in September 1917, at 81. But in the century since her death, Walker has nearly vanished from the public record. How many other women quietly pulled off great feats of athleticism but fell through the cracks of history without so much as a whisper? Walker at least lives on in the words of those who knew her.
“Her energies were immense and she was a bold, inveterate and able sightseer,” wrote mountaineer Charles Pilkington in the Alpine Journal after Walker died. “We were often roused by her from our laziness and taken to some point of view or interesting place, which but for her insistence, we might have missed. Traveling in her company was always enlightened by her great vivacity.”
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kent-farm · 1 year
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Clark, your relationship is at a totally different level right now. Not to mention the fact that Lois knows that you are the proverbial one.
—Chloe, Smallville, “Fortune”
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fyeahchlark · 3 years
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Chlark Hugs
part 2
/part 1/
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kiddstellas · 2 years
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SMALLVILLE 10.15 Fortune
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hafael-archive · 5 years
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Smallville | 'Fortune' (10.15)
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brookston · 2 years
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Holidays 10.7
Holidays
Armed Forces Day (Egypt)
Bathtub Day
Bay Day (San Francisco Bay Area)
BOL Foundation Day (Laos)
Expulsion of Fascist Settlers Day (Libya)
Ghatasthapana (Nepal)
If At First You Don't Succeed Day
International Day of Peaceful Communication
International Trigeminal Neuralgia Awareness Day
Italian Evacuation Day (Libya)
Lepanto Day (Greece)
Nagasaki Kunchi begins (Japan)
National Beat Poetry Day
National Flower Day
National Forgiveness & Happiness Day
National Inner Beauty Day
National LED Light Day
National Personal Safety Day
Teachers’ Day (Laos)
Team Margot Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Registration Day
Territory Day (Christmas Island)
Try To Start An Argument Over Which Is The Best Muppet Day
Victoria, Our Lady of Victories’ Day
World Cotton Day
You Matter To Me Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Festival of Food
National Frappé Day
1st Friday in October
Barrel-Aged Beer Day [1st Friday]
Children’s Day (Singapore) [1st Friday]
College Radio Day [1st Friday]
Kids Music Day [1st Friday]
Manufacturing Day (a.k.a. MFG Day) [1st Friday]
National Body Language Day [1st Friday]
National Denim Day (a.k.a. Lee National Denim Day) [1st Friday]
National Diversity Day [1st Friday]
Plaidurday [1st Friday]
World Smile Day [1st Friday]
Feast Days
Feast of Ma’at (Ancient Egypt)
Justina of Padua (Christian; Saint)
Henry Muhlenberg (Lutheran Church, Episcopal Church of the USA)
Long John Tutter (Muppetism)
Marcellus and Apuleius (Christian; Martyrs)
Mark, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Navaratri begins (Hinduism) [thru 10.15]
Nones of October (Ancient Rome)
Odin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Osgyth (a.k.a. Osith; Christian; Saint)
Our Lady of the Rosary (Christian; Saint)
Mozart (Positivist; Saint)
Pallas Athena (Old Roman Goddess of Triumph)
Quob Day (Pastafarian)
Sergius and Bacchus (Christian; Martyrs)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fortunate Day (Pagan) [41 of 53]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [54 of 71]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 46 of 60)
Premieres
Arthur (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Bandstand (later American Bandstand; TV Series; 1952)
Cats (Broadway Musical; 1982)
Charmed (TV Series; 1998)
Don’t Stand So Close To Me ’86, by The Police (Song; 1986)
The Flash (TV Series; 2014)
The French Connection (Film; 1971)
The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein (Children’s Book; 1964)
Hawaiian Eye (TV Series; 1959)
Hey Arnold (Animated TV Series; 1996)
Howl, by Alan Ginsberg (Poem; 1955)
Iron Man, by Black Sabbath (Song; 1971)
Little Deuce Coupe, by The Beach Boys (Album; 1963)
Never Say Never Again (Film; 1983) [James Bond non-series]
Over the Rainbow, sung by Judy Garland (Song recorded; 1938)
Pillow Talk (Film; 1959)
The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner (Novel; 1929)
Stardust, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song; 1940)
We Are the Champions/We Will Rock You, by Queen (Song; 1977)
Today’s Name Days
Markus (Austria)
Marija, Ruža (Croatia)
Justýna (Czech Republic)
Amalie (Denmark)
Asso, Ats, Atso, Hasso (Estonia)
Birgitta, Pipsa, Pirita, Piritta, Pirjo, Pirkko (Finland)
Gustave, Serge (France)
Denise, Jörg, Justina, Marc, Rosa Maria (Germany)
Bakhos, Polychronios, Sergios (Greece)
Amália (Hungary)
Maria, Rosario (Italy)
Daumants, Denise, Druvvaldis (Latvia)
Butrimas, Eivina, Justina, Renatas (Lithuania)
Berit, Birgit, Birgitte (Norway)
Amalia, Justyna, Marek, Maria, Rościsława, Stefan, Tekla (Poland)
Eliška (Slovakia)
Justina, Rosario (Spain)
Birgitta, Britta (Sweden)
Serhly (Ukraine)
Minerva, Miranda, Sargent, Sergeant, Sergio (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 280 of 2022; 85 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 40 of 2022
Celtic Tree Calendar: Gort (Ivy) [Day 7 of 28]
Chinese: Month 9 (Júyuè), Day 12 (Gui-Si)
Chinese Year of the: Tiger (until January 22, 2023)
Hebrew: 12 Tishri 5783
Islamic: 11 Rabi I 1444
J Cal: 10 Shù; Twosday [10 of 30]
Julian: 24 September 2022
Moon: 93%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 28 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Mozart]
Runic Half Month: Gyfu (Gift) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Autumn (Day 15 of 90)
Zodiac: Libra (Day 13 of 30)
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