July 25, 2025 (Gregorian calendar/Day 205)
Friday, Hamle 18, 2017 (Ethiopian calendar/11th month)
Karar ררכ 1 (Enochian calendar/5th month/heat of summer)
July 10, 2025 (International Fixed calendar)
Day Moon Out of Time (13 Moon calendar/New Moon)
Holly Moon: July 8 – August 4
Day 3, 6th lunation at 4-9%, 6012 (lunisolar calendar)
13.0.12.13.19 1 Cauac 17 Xul (Mayan Long Count calendar)
National Get Gnarly Day, National Talk In An Elevator Day
photo of the day

One thing people need to understand about extremely kind, nice,
and loving people, is that their other side is just as extreme.
It’s the hell they survive that makes them gentle.
Don’t mistake their self-control for weakness.
The beast in them is sleeping, not dead.
*photo is mine
hope you have a great day!
thanks for stopping by!!
How Your Clothes Could Save Your Life in the Next Crisis: ask a prepper …“In an uncertain world, shaped by natural disasters, power grid failures, and civil unrest, you might be left with nothing more than the clothes on your back! While shelf-stable food, water purification, and shelter often take the spotlight, in most preparedness strategies, one often-overlooked asset in an emergency is the clothing you already own. Beyond their basic function, you might be surprised at all the different ways everyday clothes can be adapted for dozens of life-saving purposes. With a little knowledge, the clothes in your closet can be considered a high-value resource in your prepping strategy.” …t-shirts (makeshift water filters, improvised tourniquets, shredded into fire-starting tinder, and more), jeans (create durable cordage, create knee pads or shin guards, create makeshift sandals and shoes), jackets and hoodies (serve as bags, containers, or even be modified into a makeshift bucket, use the hood to carry food or kindling or even fill the sleeves with dry leaves for insulation), wool sweaters (use the fibers as lightweight cordage or string), socks (stuffed with rice or beans and left safely near a fire they become heating pads, filled with charcoal or sand, they can be used to make water filters), bandanas (dust mask, a sling, a water filter, a bandage, or even a fire starter), belts (tourniquet, a strap for carrying firewood or a way to secure splints, self-defense), scarves and headcovers (sun protection, water filter, bandages, improvised bags, baby carrier), gloves, underwear, and more

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