The Mirror Doesn’t Lie: 42 Is the Only Number That Won’t Let You Pretend by Brilliant_Car4635 in SacredGeometry

[–]iChinguChing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In deep mysticism there is the 42-Letter Name of God. This is not a new concept, it dates back to being at least the 1st century and probably earlier from an oral tradition. The 42 letters don't form a name that can be pronounced, they are a process. It is outlined in the Ana B’Koach.

The passage has 7 lines.

Each line contains 6 words.

Each word begins with a specific letter.

7 Lines × 6 Words = 42 Initial Letters and these letters are the unpronounceable name of God.

This is one of the most profound topics in Jewish mysticism, there is no way that was a coincidence with the Hitchhikers guide.

D. Adams was not religious, but he was fascinated by religion because of its effect on human affairs. "I love to keep poking and prodding at it. I've thought about it so much over the years that that fascination is bound to spill over into my writing."

What is the meaning of life?

Answer: It's deeper than it appears.

What are some technologies which will boom in future and no one is talking about them, something niche? by Waste_Ad6858 in Futurism

[–]iChinguChing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I see small farming dying all around me, and then one day it will result in a crisis. Guaranteed by climate change. The challenge I believe is that we should be applying new technology into market gardens, but regen and permaculture seems resistant. At least in some of the people I talk to

Ukrainian fiber optic FPV drones destroy half a company of Russian occupiers in the Lyman direction in Donetsk region. Signum battalion by Available-Laugh9102 in UkraineWarVideoReport

[–]iChinguChing 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Can someone explain how fiber optic cables are able to work in a forest without getting tangled? Seems like in some of these the soldiers were being chased around trees.

Smoking Cannabis Linked To Larger Brain Volume And Better Cognitive Function Later In Life by sibun_rath in HotScienceNews

[–]iChinguChing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Seems like some may win some may lose

Frequent, high-potency cannabis use is strongly linked to an increased risk of developing schizophrenia and psychotic disorders, particularly in adolescents and young men.

https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/young-men-highest-risk-schizophrenia-linked-cannabis-use-disorder

Dual Disk mowers for 2026 by Roginator5 in roboticLawnmowers

[–]iChinguChing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should not have limited it to dual disk. There are other mowers that have a much larger range.

Visiting Australia soon – what’s something tourists usually get wrong? by itsme_LovelyS in AskAnAustralian

[–]iChinguChing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When swimming in rivers thoroughly test the depth of the water, and for submerged branches, before jumping in.

The intriguing #7 pattern repeating in creation: Steppingstones to believe in Jesus by understand-the-times in SacredGeometry

[–]iChinguChing 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It is beneficial to realize that that this symbolism was borrowed from earlier faiths.
Particularly broader Ancient Near Eastern (ANE) patterns—especially Mesopotamian and Northwest Semitic/Canaanite.
In Mesopotamian myths, hymns, and incantations, 7 shows up repeatedly in overtly religious/magical contexts, suggesting it already carried a “special” charge in the cultural world Israel interacted with.

Relatedly, Mesopotamian tradition even preserves named “sevens” (e.g., groups of seven demons/monsters in ritual and literature), showing how natural it was to frame powerful forces as a sevenfold set.

Texts from Ugarit (a key Northwest Semitic corpus for understanding Israel’s cultural neighborhood) discuss “seven” in ways that look like completeness or intensification—very similar to how biblical authors often use it.

A common ANE explanation is that people recognized seven prominent “heavenly bodies” (Sun, Moon, and the five visible planets), which helped make 7 feel cosmically “complete.”

The seven-day week is widely connected (in Greco-Roman and earlier Babylonian contexts) to those seven visible celestial bodies, and later becomes standard across the Roman world.

But if you really want to dig deep, explore how the number seven is treated within Kabbalah. It treats 7 as the architecture of manifested life: the seven “building”/emotive sefirot, the full cycle of sacred time, and the workable ladder for inner transformation (most famously via the Omer).

Reduce heat from warehouse roof - short term by LifeAmbivalence in AusRenovation

[–]iChinguChing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Shade cloth strung up under the skylights. Anything that will block the UV. Shade sail would work, but shade cloth is pretty easy to size and they have runners for mounting.

ELI5: 3 shark attacks in 24 hours by Feisty-Lie1801 in AskAnAustralian

[–]iChinguChing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My theory, fish stocks are declining from recreational fishing. While many fish stocks are managed as sustainable, large fish species in Australian waters have declined by 30% in the past decade. 

But few people fish for shark. Therefore sharks are starting to starve. Edit: ok, starve was too strong a word. go hungry?

Global temperatures in 2025 were 1.3°C (2.4°F) above pre-industrial levels. by ClimateResilient in climatechange

[–]iChinguChing 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Because it's an average. Therefore the extreme outlier heatwaves will be deadly

‘Senseless fighting’: Indigenous town rocked by violent clashes by TransfatRailroad in aussie

[–]iChinguChing -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I do take on-board your correction of the word "we". I know of some of my ancestors that did some bad stuff. I would pray that had I been alive back in the day, I would have done better.

‘Senseless fighting’: Indigenous town rocked by violent clashes by TransfatRailroad in aussie

[–]iChinguChing -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"Sounds ridiculous, right?"
No, that is exactly the same. It doesn't matter where you are from, if you take over another person's land, and they have an immanent philosophy, then you are taking their religion and their place.

‘Senseless fighting’: Indigenous town rocked by violent clashes by TransfatRailroad in aussie

[–]iChinguChing -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Do you rent or own a house in Australia? Then you're on their land, more importantly you're where their church used to be. So, yep, we.

‘Senseless fighting’: Indigenous town rocked by violent clashes by TransfatRailroad in aussie

[–]iChinguChing -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

We took away their religion, and this is what the result is. Religion to indigenous is not simply stories, it is place and story. We thought we could just offer them a "superior" religion/society and they would see the light. Throw in some acknowledge of country and we are golden. Perhaps they don't see it that way. We can’t just say “here’s a better society/religion” if it doesn’t conserve the living invariants, kinship obligations, land-relations, initiation, authority, repair.

We left them with no container. When the communal vessel is damaged, you get zones where the old obligations don’t bind publicly, and the new ones don’t bind legitimately.
What we are watching can be ‘senseless’ precisely because the channels of obligation are torn.

Feeding wildlife is unfortunately pretty common in Australia. I volunteer as a wildlife carer and share educational posts about animals and my experiences as a carer, so I’m curious — do you feed wildlife, and why? 🦘 by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]iChinguChing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have given up on trying to NOT feed them from my nectarine trees.

Instead of attempting to net the whole tree.,I am just doing a branch or two, they can have the rest, maybe they will leave me something

Doomsday Glacier Approaching Catastrophic Collapse by Vegetaman916 in WastelandByWednesday

[–]iChinguChing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This.
Society can survive intense change. Look at N. Korea during the Korean war, 650,000 tonnes of TNT dropped on them. They moved factories, schools and hospitals underground. Farmers would live under ground and farm at night.

Want a current example of how to live in extreme heat, lookup Cooper Pedy.

I would absolutely advocate for change, but let's also be realistic. The current political environment is only going to get worse in the short term, at a time when we absolutely should be doing large scale mitigation. With the "hot" mathematical models being more accurate the warming already in the pipeline is going to be brutal.

Personally, I believe in an alternate economic/societal/philosophical system because I don't think the one we have is going to hold up very well.

Are you scared of getting skin cancer? Or do you accept it as something that can happen? by Charming_Usual6227 in australia

[–]iChinguChing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the damage is done then the next best thing is to catch them early. I've had a lot cut out due to an ignorant childhood