🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- Diving In The Philippines & S.E. Asia./World Post #311- Diving In The Philippines & S.E. Asia./World. Three Dives : Dives at Tribird today with fundivers. "It's a good day to dive". 🤿 🤿 "Something wicked this way comes" Pura Vida 🏝️ "Pure signal,no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️ #dive #scuba
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- For centuries, the world wasn’t driven by gold or oil — it was driven by flavor. And the race for spices didn’t just build fortunes… it built the first global economy. Before Wall Street, before central banks, before modern capitalism, the global financial system was forged through pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, sugar, and the brutal corporate empires that controlled them. This video reveals how spices became currency, how monopolies shaped nations, how early corporations weaponized scarcity, and how today’s supply chain battles echo the same patterns. From Venice to the VOC to the rise of the Atlantic economy, this is the hidden financial history behind the world we live in — and the blueprint for how money and power still operate. Key Facts & Insights • Pepper was once worth more than gold, becoming one of the earliest global financial assets. • Venice built a medieval monopoly by controlling trade routes rather than production — an early model of logistical dominance. • The Dutch East India Company (VOC) became the world’s first multinational corporation, issuing shares, paying dividends, and waging corporate warfare. • Nutmeg and cloves generated some of the highest profit margins in economic history, fueling the early stock market in Amsterdam. • Sugar plantations created the first mass-consumer commodity boom, shifting global wealth toward the Americas and building financial dynasties in Europe. • The Atlantic system linked Europe, Africa, and the Americas into a single economic orbit, driven by commodities, forced labor, and capital flows. • Modern supply chain conflicts — from tech monopolies to rare mineral battles — follow the same patterns established during the spice trade. • The first global economy created the foundations of modern capitalism, from corporate power to financial speculation to geopolitical choke points. #FinancialHistory​ #EconomicHistory​ #HowMoneyWorks​ #GlobalTrade​ #SupplyChains​ #HistoryOfMoney​ #FinancialEducation​ #MoneyAndPower​ #WorldEconomy​ #CapitalismExplained​ #EconomicBubbles​ #GlobalCrisis​ #FinancialSystem​ #RealWealth​ #HistoryDocumentary​ #FinancialHistorian​ #thefinancialhistorian​ "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- What If Your Body Ran on Just One Daily Meal? (Science Explained) What actually happens inside your body when you shift from eating three meals a day to relying on just one? This video takes you deep into the surprising science behind intermittent fasting, revealing how your metabolism, hormones, and brain respond when food becomes less frequent but more intentional. You’ll discover why many people practicing intermittent fasting report sharper focus, steadier energy, and improved insulin sensitivity—benefits rooted in human evolution and modern physiology. As your body switches from glucose to fat as its primary fuel, you enter a state that supports cellular repair, autophagy, and long-term metabolic health. We break down what this transition feels like hour by hour, why hunger changes over time, and how intermittent fasting may reduce inflammation while protecting brain function. But this isn’t a miracle method; we also highlight the risks, limitations, and who should avoid extreme fasting schedules. Whether you're curious about weight loss, energy stability, or longevity, this video gives you a balanced, science-backed look at intermittent fasting and what really happens when your body runs on just one daily meal. Join us as we uncover the hidden biology behind intermittent fasting and the fascinating ways your body adapts. #intermittentfasting​ #onemealaday​ #autophagy​ #fastingbenefits​ #fastingscience​ "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image Most People Will Miss This (Again) History doesn’t repeat. It whispers. It gives you clues. Patterns. Moments that feel… familiar. And if you listen close enough? You start to see it coming before it hits. Because this moment? It’s not new. The disbelief. The “it’s too early” energy. The mockery. We’ve seen it before: Amazon in the 90s Apple when it almost died The internet before broadband ₿ Bitcoin at $0.10, then $100, then $1K… Each time, most people missed it. Not because it was invisible. But because it looked too boring. Too volatile. Too different. image And right now? It’s happening again. → Sats are cheap → Inflation is accelerating → Institutions are loading up → Sovereignty is under attack But the crowd? Still distracted. Still skeptical. Still waiting for “confirmation.” They’re too busy to notice the gates are closing. Too scared to trust their instinct. Too slow to act. image But you? You’re not most people. Because stacking 1 million sats now isn’t about being rich. It’s about being early. Being awake. Being done with missing it again. This is your signal. Don’t wait for headlines. Don’t wait for permission. Don’t wait to be average. Because when the price explodes, and the door locks… Most people will say: “I saw it coming…” But few will be able to say: “I acted.” Be one of them. Stay alert, stack sats. Anarko image "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image Parga, Greece..🇬🇷 "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image Olga Beliaeva Born (1967) “Tarot Reader Girl - Optical Illusion Skull “ Watercolor on Paper. 45.7 W x 55.9 H x 0.3 D cm Russian artist. "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image Old Town Square, Prague, Czech Republic 🇨🇿 Photographer: @iwanicki.artur #archidesiign #architecture #design #travel #photography #europe #prague #czechrepublic "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image The four masted iron barque Falls of Halladale was built in 1886 by Russell & Co. Greenock for owners Wright & Breakenridge, her final owners were T. Law & Co. The photos show her wrecked at Peterborough, near Warrnambool, Victoria on November 14th. 1908. image Her anchor is on display at Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum, the wreck site is a favourite for divers. "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image In the 1960s, Harvard graduate student Jean Briggs made a remarkable discovery about human anger. At age 34, she traveled beyond the Arctic Circle and lived in the tundra for 17 months. No roads. No heating systems. No grocery stores. Winters dropped below –40°C. Briggs convinced an Inuit family to “adopt” her so she could observe their life in its natural rhythm. Soon, she noticed something extraordinary: the adults had an almost superhuman ability to control their anger. They never lost their temper. One day, someone spilled a boiling kettle inside an igloo, damaging the ice floor. No shouting. No blame. Just a calm, “Too bad,” before fetching more water. Another time, a fishing line — painstakingly woven for days — snapped on the very first cast. The only response? “Let’s make another one.” Next to them, Briggs felt like an impulsive child. So she began asking: How do Inuit parents teach their children this emotional mastery? One afternoon, she found her answer. A young mother was playing with her angry two-year-old son. She handed him a small stone and said, “Hit me with it. Again. Harder.” When he threw it, she covered her eyes and pretended to cry: “Ooooh, that hurts!” To Briggs, it seemed bizarre — until she realized it was a powerful lesson. The Inuit believe you never scold a small child or speak to them in an angry voice. Instead, they use gentle play to teach empathy and self-control. Even if a child hits or bites you — you respond with calm, not rage. Maybe the rest of us could learn something from a culture where anger isn’t feared… because it’s understood. "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️
🌊 SURF 'N TURF 🏝️ -THE BORACAY ISLAND LIFE- image The Tree of Life in Matera is a famous bronze sculpture by Andrea Roggi, located near the Chiesa di San Francesco d'Assisi in Piazza del Sedile. The sculpture depicts an olive tree growing from a globe, symbolizing strength, peace, and the interconnectedness of nature and humanity across generations. It serves as a tribute to the ancient city's deep history and enduring spirit, blending the themes of life's continuity with Matera's rich legacy. "Pure signal, no noise" Credits Goes to the respective Author ✍️/ Photographer📸 🐇 🕳️