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Four seniors walk into a café. Splash. ☕ 👴👴👴👵 Ever wondered how grumpy you’ll be when you’re old? Charles, Lina, Philip, and Roger — brought to life with ultra‑realistic silicone masks by #siliconemask #unmasking #disguise

16,103 views • 3 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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Coffee and a kitten! You can snuggle up with a feline friend at this N.J. cat café. | Paige Britt, NJ dot com Ben Hudes, 21, and Dora Gorvorko, 23, are making it their mission to bring a cat café to South Jersey. The couple are DIYing a space in Oaklyn that will feature self-serve coffee, packaged food items, and most importantly, cats. Calico Cat Café will offer a space for people to escape to, whether that be to study, read, play boardgames, or do crafts all while surrounded by feline friends. A recent graduate from Rowan University in Glassboro, Hudes is using his entrepreneurship degree and previous marketing experience to guide the pair through this journey they’ve embarked on together. Calico Cat Café has quickly garnered a following on Instagram by posting daily videos of updates to the building. Since launching on July 1, their account has grown to over 6,000 followers. Before the couple was flooded with messages of people willing to volunteer their time and services, they planned on doing all the construction themselves. They began by ripping up the carpet and cleaning up the floors, a task they admit they would still be doing if it weren’t for the help of others. Hudes noted they’ve probably had around 100 people in the space so far. From construction workers to artists, the unopened café sees volunteers coming and going throughout the day, devoting their time and energy to the mission. So far, the walls, ceiling, and tables are covered in various paintings of cats from local artists, marking each tile with a unique look and feel. Gorvorko explained that they plan on keeping about 10 to 12 cats in the space, dividing the café into a food and seating area and a lounge section where customers can interact with the cats. The couple partnered with Homeward Bound adoption, so all cats in the café will be available for adoption. Since the café will operate on a self-service model for beverages, Hudes wants to partner with local coffee shops to feature different weekly brews. The couple have two cats of their own, Couscous and Chicken. While Gorvorko has been a life-long lover of the cuddly creatures, Hudes converted a little later in life. After a trip to Hawaii where they visited a cat café, they fell in love with the idea. “When we moved in together and she brought her cat, I immediately fell in love with cats,” said Hudes. As a kid, Gorvorko only had the opportunity to see cats at places like PetSmart and would visit the stores just to hang out with them. She hopes through the café she will be able to teach kids how to interact with animals and the boundaries of interacting with some cats. “Because a lot of kids, they go and adopt a cat, and they don’t know how to interact with the cat properly and they expect to interact with it like a cartoon, like play with them and they can be as rough as they want,” said Gorvorko. “But I feel like in a cat café, they have the chance to learn and understand how a cat feels and how it reacts to them,” Hudes and Gorvorko encourage other people with ideas for small businesses to take the leap of faith like they did, even though they didn’t have it all figured out just yet. “I think so many people have plans and then they just let them fester and sit and then they don’t actually act on it because they don’t know how things are going to turn out,” said Hudes. “But we just kind of went into this knowing we had the ability and just started. We didn’t know anything. We don’t know how to cut holes into walls to make windows. We don’t know how to put floors down, take floors up. We’re not even good painters. “We really just said, you know what? We’re going to figure it out once we sign this lease and we’re just going to do it,” Calico Cat Café plans on opening their doors to the public on Sept. 1, and is located at 918 White Horse Pike. Read more:

Owen Gregorian

48,042 views • 11 months ago

.Naval: Look at reality the way it is. Try to take yourself out of the equation. “Labels like pessimist, optimist, cynic, introvert, extrovert—these are very self limiting. Humans are very dynamic. There are times when you feel like being introverted. There are times when you feel like being extroverted. There are contexts in which you’ll be pessimistic. There are contexts in which you’ll be optimistic. Leave all those labels alone. It’s better just to look at the problem at hand. Look at reality the way it is. Try to take yourself out of the equation, in a sense. Obviously you’re involved. But motivated reasoning is the worst kind of reasoning. You’re not going to find truth through highly motivated reasoning. You have to be objective. And objective means trying to take yourself out of it as much as possible, or at least your personality out of it as much as possible. And so to the extent you run with this thick identity and personality, it’s going to cloud your judgment. It’s going to try and lock you into the past. If you say, ‘I’m a depressed, unhappy person—I’m going to be unhappy.’ That’s a way of locking yourself into your past. Even saying, ‘I have trauma, I have PTSD,’ yeah, you feel something—there are memories, there are flashes, there are occasional bad feelings. But don’t define yourself by it because then you’ll lock it into your identity and you’re just going to loop on it. It’s better to stay flexible because reality is always changing and you have to be able to adapt to it. Adaptation is also intelligence, adaptation is survival. Adaptation is kind of how you’re here. You’re here because you’re an adapter and your ancestors were adapters. So to adapt you’ll have to see things clearly and if you’re seeing them through your own identity, it’s going to cloud your judgment.”

Arjun Khemani

251,772 views • 1 year ago

For four years, Karen has lived without the simple freedoms that the rest of us take for granted every single day. Think about YOUR last four years How many birthday parties did you attend? How many graduations, weddings, or family births did you celebrate? How many times did you jump in the car without a second thought, head to work, earn a paycheck, plan a vacation, or host a holiday with your family? Karen hasn’t had any of that. Not one normal day. Not one chance to just live. Instead, her reputation has been dragged through the mud. She has been treated as guilty in the court of public opinion before ever stepping foot in a real courtroom. Her career? Gone. Her ability to earn a living? Stripped. Her name? Tarnished beyond recognition by a case built on shifting stories, missing evidence, and political games. So ask yourself, what price can be put on four stolen years of your life? On your reputation? On your freedom? Because when Karen finally decides who to bring a lawsuit against, the question won’t be if there are damages, it will be how many millions of dollars those damages will rightfully add up to. And at what level should that accountability fall state or federal? If you’re reading this right now, you’ve had four years of your life that Karen hasn’t. Four years of memories, milestones, and moments she’ll never get back. So the next time you sit down at a birthday, a holiday, or a family dinner remember this... Karen has had none of it. And that loss has a cost. A cost that the people and institutions who put her through this nightmare will eventually be forced to pay. Think about that when you lay yourself down on your king size beautyrest mattress each night

Dixie Normus

42,055 views • 10 months ago

Tim Dillon: “This is one of the bleakest periods I’ve ever lived through.” “You’re more alone.” “You have less hope.” “We’re in multiple wars.” “And it’s the most technologically advanced time that we have.” “But in order to enjoy it, you have to be a sociopath.” “You have to be unbothered by seeing a 2-year-old that Israel lit on fire, and you have to swipe without thinking about it and go right to DoorDash.” “We are all being trained to be sociopaths.” “No one believes life is better than it was in 2010.” “People had a social life.” “Young people felt more hope about the future.” “They haven’t been fully sucked into phones.” “People aren’t quite addicted to rage yet. Social media hasn’t programmed our minds.” “People can still go on a date and talk to a woman.” “They don’t have to goon for eight hours in their room and then read about Hitler.” “Nobody looks at 2010 and goes, whoa, that time sucked.” “None of these advancements make anyone’s life better.” “The Palantir thing is that everybody’s gonna join the military.” “We’re all gonna fight a bunch of wars.” “We’re gonna make the country safe, but we’re gonna do it in a way that takes away all of your personal autonomy and freedom.” “As soon as you’re 18 years old, you’ll be in the military and you’re gonna fight who we want you to fight.” “The jobs available are gonna be the ones we tell you that you qualify for.” Tim Dillon

Holden Culotta

395,538 views • 2 months ago