I am certainly worried about our finances since we depend on all of you to keep us going and running the lighthouse and if any of you suffer financially, we also are looking at hard times. But, for as long as we are able, we'll keep going, keep the faith, and work on that ecstasy!

Do to mounting social pressure we decided this past Monday to close our clinic down for 2 weeks, reassess and hopefully reopen on March 30th. Our patients were very supportive of our decision and generally praised us for being so responsible, so I think it was a good decision from a "go along and get along" perspective.

Unfortunately its looking more and more, especially if things here go the way they're going in Denmark:

Each day so far, we have been waking up to a new press conference and new measures to stop the Coronavirus: Tuesday night they announced that hair dressers, physiotherapists, dentists and similar along with ordinary shops had to close for the moment until the end of June

I wouldn't be surprised if it goes that way, my friend is a teacher and he says he expects them to announce that they're done for the year soon (that would be mid June). So that's not good for us financially because we both work at the clinic.

Now for the good news:
  1. We put a decent amount of money aside in the past ~18 months since we bought the business so we are not in dire straights.
  2. Even if we can't resume normal business operations we might be able to reopen in some limited capacity seeing "low risk" patients on March 30th and that would lessen the blow considerably.
  3. Even if we do end up closed down until mid June or longer we have lots of ideas for generating income in other ways, or I can go get a job at Whole Foods selling toilet paper and canned goods 😉 (tongue in cheek).
So long story short, this is not ideal for us financially but I think we'll be okay and I'll keep sending at least something every month. I'm also here for you guys if you need herbal consults and that kind of thing.
 
So let us:

* be extra-excellent to each other
* be extra-generous
* be extra-compassionate
* pray to the DCM to help us see our hidden errors and enable us to correct them
* not run away from suppressed feelings and memories but face them
* get a grip on any feelings of jealousy or resentment, conscious or unconscious, and act against those impulses
* feel and show love to others, and act based on love and knowledge and courage

This seems like a good list of how to be a good christian, thanks @luc
 
The medicine act like the sodium bicarbonate by changing the pH.

Well, if that's the case, it just confirms that sodium bicarbonate would work just fine. Did it not occur to anyone 'in the know' that sodium bicarbonate also changes the PH, and therefore it would be a much more accessible remedy for the people rather than a more expensive manufactured drug? Probably yes, but then some pharma company would not be making an extra load of cash, and governments wouldn't be having so much fun with their draconian measures, would they?
 
The governor of California just ordered the entire state to stay home. 40 million people on a "shelter in place" order.

 
A few illustrations that offer perspective:
From this Tweet
1584669669203.png
Here there was:
1584669645814.png
Here there was

1584669732778.png
The challenge is that although many governments have instituted Covid-19 sanctions against their own citizen, and while they so far with great poker faces made them stricter by each coming day, and while this process has led to several warmongering countries to reduce their injustices, it is not guaranteed these government will be able to maintain them. So far they can control by fear, but if that bubble bursts? And as the above drawing indicates, their are other influences on our world both those that want humanity enslaved and those that support free will. The Universe is creative, it expresses itself everywhere, both inside us and outside.
 
My mum and I were discussing these anti-viral drugs earlier. She has taken them for malaria. She says their side effects were so bad, she would prefer the malaria symptoms. It makes me think how sodium bicarbonate would probably be more gentle on the system.
 
At this point, we're mulling over these two (broad) scenarios:

1.) Chinese authorities were spooked by a new viral outbreak, they didn't know which way it would go, they recalled the SARS outbreak in 2003, they perhaps suspected a leak or some vaccine trial-related connection from their BSL-4 lab there in Wuhan, then they 'overreacted' out of an abundance of caution. Crucially though, the Chinese central govt took over the containment process and strategically facilitated the international broadcast of the worst possible scenes from Wuhan and Hubei Province. This was done to amplify panic across the world and force Western govts, particularly the US, to attempt to mimic the Chinese response, in the expectation that Western govts would be nowhere near as organized, authoritarian and equipped as China was to 'contain the virus'. Stock markets crash, business is lost (and much of it is not regained after things 'return to normal'), and Chinese companies move in to take over market share vacated by Western interests. Thus, China 'strikes back' economically against US-led anti-Chinese trade sanctions and quickens its supplanting of the US at the head of the table of 'world government'.

In this scenario, Russia appears to 'get the game' early on by closing its territorial border to China and preventing any Chinese from even flying into the country. China quietly reports that it has no problem with that, but the rest of the world is reinforced with the message that 'this is really serious'. Amidst this, Russia unexpectedly disagrees with Saudi Arabia and OPEC to discontinue oil production cutbacks, sending oil prices plummeting, thereby hammering the US domestic oil market. Apparently completely unrelated to the 'pandemic', this move would thereby be a complementary economic action taken as part of a broader 'Chinese-Russian strategic partnership'.

Heck, in this scenario, maybe even Iran was doing its part to amplify the scare.

2.) One major assumption in the above scenario is that the West is being genuinely hurt economically by this 'shutdown'. Yes, production will plummet for a period, many tens or hundreds of thousands of workers in service sectors will be laid off, and tax receipts to govt coffers will briefly shrink. But are the fundamentals really affected to such an extent that Western elites cannot shuffle things around and manage them, thereby avoiding 'blood on the streets'? Cross-border trade is continuing as normal, supermarket shelves will remain stocked (despite initial panic-buying), all workers have been promised compensation, all companies (major, 'connected' ones anyway) have been promised remuneration in the form of favorable loans, tax cuts, etc.

So you ask 'How does a govt pay for all that, when they've been telling us for years that they're broke and we must all tighten our belts?' Because that isn't true! Govts will just do what they always do; issue bonds against future tax receipts, thereby leveraging future generations. $1.5 trillion injected here, €2 trillion injected there... whatever, they just print money when they have to. So long as the real economy of people and infrastructure remains functional, the 'fake economy' of the casino stock markets and banking system, which is fundamentally decoupled from the real world, can be massaged and 'restructured'. So long as crises aren't really crises, govts love them! 'Finally, we're relevant to people again!'

So if they're not worried about imminent economic collapse, are they then worried about this virus? No, they have realized by now as we have that it's a nothing-burger. BUT, individual, national govts are using the crisis to suppress incipient rebellions (France, for example), and stave off power transfers (Netanyahu in Israel, for example, or Sinn Fein being kept out of govt in Ireland) - and overall, collectively, they will use the crisis to 're-set' or reconfigure things such that greater 'medical martial law' can be instituted and so that greater centralization of the levers of the Western banking system/economy can be instituted.

They'll later say, in a few months or whenever they're looking back at what everyone by then knows was a nothing-burger, 'well, it was good to stress-test the system in the event of a real pandemic', and 'so many good laws have been introduced thanks to the non-crisis that we're all now better off for it'.

In sum, the net result will have been that the elites simply took their greed for money and control over people up a notch or two, and that the increased controls in people's lives - which is really draconian right now, and will presumably lessen in the months ahead, but will likely retain many of its psychological if not its actual features - will produce increased suffering and misery, though not necessarily of the physical kind (assuming govts want to keep their heads and not see food riots in the streets).

The Cs said the creative energy of the universe is transduced by humans as they go about the ordinary 'psycho-drama' of their lives. That which is not expressed outwardly 'goes within', apparently into the planet itself, producing or contributing to such natural phenomena as earthquakes. The significant stoppage of (and/or reduction in) human creative expression is the wildcard in all of this. What if, for example, the suppression of human activity produces or contributes to that 'Big One' earthquake they talk of in California? Something like that would then give the US govt a REAL crisis for which no amount of shuffling numbers around on central bank computer screens can fix. Goods will not move from A to B because the highway is destroyed. In this scenario, only then would China 'step up' as a 'new hegemon'.

As such then, in this second scenario, what's going on now is more of the same - manipulated crises and manipulated solutions to effectively lock things down even more. But in their hubris, the elites have likely gone too far and broken not 'the economy' but something more akin to 'the people's spirit', thus bringing us closer to catastrophe because they don't understand that humans are not robotic resources to be endlessly poked and prodded - they have a human-cosmic connection that brings a higher power into 'the equation', one which will smash their 'eternal global economic lockdown' to pieces.

FWIW I think this idea is going mainstream. A friend sent this article to me today:

The Coronavirus Could Reshape Global Order

The Coronavirus Could Reshape Global Order
China Is Maneuvering for International Leadership as the United States Falters
By Kurt M. Campbell and Rush Doshi March 18, 2020

With hundreds of millions of people now isolating themselves around the world, the novel coronavirus pandemic has become a truly global event. And while its geopolitical implications should be considered secondary to matters of health and safety, those implications may, in the long term, prove just as consequential—especially when it comes to the United States’ global position. Global orders have a tendency to change gradually at first and then all at once. In 1956, a botched intervention in the Suez laid bare the decay in British power and marked the end of the United Kingdom’s reign as a global power. Today, U.S. policymakers should recognize that if the United States does not rise to meet the moment, the coronavirus pandemic could mark another “Suez moment.”

It is now clear to all but the most blinkered partisans that Washington has botched its initial response. Missteps by key institutions, from the White House and the Department of Homeland Security to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), have undermined confidence in the capacity and competence of U.S. governance. Public statements by President Donald Trump, whether Oval Office addresses or early-morning tweets, have largely served to sow confusion and spread uncertainty. Both public and private sectors have proved ill-prepared to produce and distribute the tools necessary for testing and response. And internationally, the pandemic has amplified Trump’s instincts to go it alone and exposed just how unprepared Washington is to lead a global response.

The status of the United States as a global leader over the past seven decades has been built not just on wealth and power but also, and just as important, on the legitimacy that flows from the United States’ domestic governance, provision of global public goods, and ability and willingness to muster and coordinate a global response to crises. The coronavirus pandemic is testing all three elements of U.S. leadership. So far, Washington is failing the test.

As Washington falters, Beijing is moving quickly and adeptly to take advantage of the opening created by U.S. mistakes, filling the vacuum to position itself as the global leader in pandemic response. It is working to tout its own system, provide material assistance to other countries, and even organize other governments. The sheer chutzpah of China’s move is hard to overstate. After all, it was Beijing’s own missteps—especially its efforts at first to cover up the severity and spread of the outbreak—that helped create the very crisis now afflicting much of the world. Yet Beijing understands that if it is seen as leading, and Washington is seen as unable or unwilling to do so, this perception could fundamentally alter the United States’ position in global politics and the contest for leadership in the twenty-first century.

In the immediate aftermath of the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, which causes the disease now referred to as COVID-19, the missteps of Chinese leaders cast a pall on their country’s global standing. The virus was first detected in November 2019 in the city of Wuhan, but officials didn’t disclose it for months and even punished the doctors who first reported it, squandering precious time and delaying by at least five weeks measures that would educate the public, halt travel, and enable widespread testing. Even as the full scale of the crisis emerged, Beijing tightly controlled information, shunned assistance from the CDC, limited World Health Organization travel to Wuhan, likely undercounted infections and deaths, and repeatedly altered the criteria for registering new COVID-19 cases—perhaps in a deliberate effort to manipulate the official number of cases.

As the crisis worsened through January and February, some observers speculated that the coronavirus might even undermine the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party. It was called China’s “Chernobyl”; Dr. Li Wenliang—the young whistleblower silenced by the government who later succumbed to complications from the COVID-19—was likened to the Tiananmen Square “tank man.”

Yet by early March, China was claiming victory. Mass quarantines, a halt to travel, and a complete shutdown of most daily life nationwide were credited with having stemmed the tide; official statistics, such as they are, reported that daily new cases had fallen into the single digits in mid-March from the hundreds in early February. In a surprise to most observers, Chinese leader Xi Jinping—who had been uncharacteristically quiet in the first weeks—began to put himself squarely at the center of the response. This month, he personally visited Wuhan.

Even though life in China has yet to return to normal (and despite continuing questions over the accuracy of China’s statistics), Beijing is working to turn these early signs of success into a larger narrative to broadcast to the rest of the world—one that makes China the essential player in a coming global recovery while airbrushing away its earlier mismanagement of the crisis.

A critical part of this narrative is Beijing’s supposed success in battling the virus. A steady stream of propaganda articles, tweets, and public messaging, in a wide variety of languages, touts China’s achievements and highlights the effectiveness of its model of domestic governance. “China’s signature strength, efficiency and speed in this fight has been widely acclaimed,” declared Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian. China, he added, set “a new standard for the global efforts against the epidemic.” Central authorities have instituted tight informational control and discipline at state organs to snuff out contradictory narratives.

These messages are helped by the implicit contrast with efforts to battle the virus in the West, particularly in the United States—Washington’s failure to produce adequate numbers of testing kits, which means the United States has tested relatively few people per capita, or the Trump administration’s ongoing disassembly of the U.S. government’s pandemic-response infrastructure. Beijing has seized the narrative opportunity provided by American disarray, its state media and diplomats regularly reminding a global audience of the superiority of Chinese efforts and criticizing the “irresponsibility and incompetence” of the “so-called political elite in Washington,” as the state-run Xinhua news agency put it in an editorial.

Chinese officials and state media have even insisted that the coronavirus did not in fact emerge from China—despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary—in order to reduce China’s blame for the global pandemic. This effort has elements of a full-blown Russian-style disinformation campaign, with China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman and over a dozen diplomats sharing poorly sourced articles accusing the U.S. military of spreading the coronavirus in Wuhan. These actions, combined with China’s unprecedented mass expulsion of journalists from three leading American papers, damage China’s pretensions to leadership.

Xi understands that providing global goods can burnish a rising power’s leadership credentials. He has spent the last several years pushing China’s foreign policy apparatus to think harder about leading reforms to “global governance,” and the coronavirus offers an opportunity to put that theory into action. Consider China’s increasingly well-publicized displays of material assistance—including masks, respirators, ventilators, and medicine. At the outset of the crisis, China purchased and produced (and received as aid) vast quantities of these goods. Now it is in a position to hand them out to others.

When no European state answered Italy’s urgent appeal for medical equipment and protective gear, China publicly committed to sending 1,000 ventilators, two million masks, 100,000 respirators, 20,000 protective suits, and 50,000 test kits. China has also dispatched medical teams and 250,000 masks to Iran and sent supplies to Serbia, whose president dismissed European solidarity as “a fairy tale” and proclaimed that “the only country that can help us is China.” Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma has promised to send large quantities of testing kits and masks to the United States, as well as 20,000 test kits and 100,000 masks to each of Africa’s 54 countries.

Beijing’s edge in material assistance is enhanced by the simple fact that much of what the world depends on to fight the coronavirus is made in China. It was already the major producer of surgical masks; now, through wartime-like industrial mobilization, it has boosted production of masks more than tenfold, giving it the capacity to provide them to the world. China also produces roughly half of the N95 respirators critical for protecting health workers (it has forced foreign factories in China to make them and then sell them directly to the government), giving it another foreign policy tool in the form of medical equipment. Meanwhile, antibiotics are critical for addressing emerging secondary infections from COVID-19, and China produces the vast majority of active pharmaceutical ingredients necessary to make them.

The United States, by contrast, lacks the supply and capacity to meet many of its own demands, let alone to provide aid in crisis zones elsewhere. The picture is grim. The U.S. Strategic National Stockpile, the nation’s reserve of critical medical supplies, is believed to have only one percent of the masks and respirators and perhaps ten percent of the ventilators needed to deal with the pandemic. The rest will have to be made up with imports from China or rapidly increased domestic manufacturing. Similarly, China’s share of the U.S. antibiotics market is more than 95 percent, and most of the ingredients cannot be manufactured domestically. Although Washington offered assistance to China and others at the outset of the crisis, it is less able to do so now, as its own needs grow; Beijing, in contrast, is offering aid precisely when the global need is greatest.

Crisis response, however, is not only about material goods. During the 2014–15 Ebola crisis, the United States assembled and led a coalition of dozens of countries to counter the spread of the disease. The Trump administration has so far shunned a similar leadership effort to respond to the coronavirus. Even coordination with allies has been lacking. Washington appears, for example, not to have given its European allies any prior notice before instituting a ban on travel from Europe.

China, by contrast, has undertaken a robust diplomatic campaign to convene dozens of countries and hundreds of officials, generally by videoconference, to share information about the pandemic and lessons from China’s own experience battling the disease. Like much of China’s diplomacy, these convening efforts are largely conducted at the regional level or through regional bodies. They include calls with central and eastern European states through the “17 + 1” mechanism, with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s secretariat, with ten Pacific Island states, and with other groupings across Africa, Europe, and Asia. And China is working hard to publicize such initiatives. Virtually every story on the front page of its foreign-facing propaganda organs advertises China’s efforts to help different countries with goods and information while underscoring the superiority of Beijing’s approach.

China’s chief asset in its pursuit of global leadership—in the face of the coronavirus and more broadly—is the perceived inadequacy and inward focus of U.S. policy. The ultimate success of China’s pursuit, therefore, will depend as much on what happens in Washington as on what happens in Beijing. In the current crisis, Washington can still turn the tide if it proves capable of doing what is expected of a leader: managing the problem at home, supplying global public goods, and coordinating a global response.

The first of those tasks—stopping the spread of the disease and protecting vulnerable populations in the United States—is most urgent and largely a question of domestic governance rather than geopolitics. But how Washington goes about it will have geopolitical implications, and not just insofar as it does or does not reestablish confidence in the U.S. response. For example, if the federal government immediately supports and subsidizes expansion of domestic production of masks, respirators, and ventilators—a response befitting the wartime urgency of this pandemic—it would both save American lives and help others around the world by reducing the scarcity of global supplies.

While the United States isn’t currently able to meet the urgent material demands of the pandemic, its continuing global edge in the life sciences and biotechnology can be instrumental in finding a real solution to the crisis: a vaccine. The U.S. government can help by providing incentives to U.S. labs and companies to undertake a medical “Manhattan Project” to devise, rapidly test in clinical trials, and mass-produce a vaccine. Because these efforts are costly and require dauntingly high upfront investments, generous government financing and bonuses for successful vaccine production could make a difference. And it is worth noting that despite Washington’s mismanagement, state and local governments, nonprofit and religious organizations, universities, and companies are not waiting for the federal government to get its act together before taking action. U.S.-funded companies and researchers are already making progress toward a vaccine—though even in the best-case scenario, it will be some time before one is ready for widespread use.

Yet even as it focuses on efforts at home, Washington cannot simply ignore the need for a coordinated global response. Only strong leadership can solve global coordination problems related to travel restrictions, information sharing, and the flow of critical goods. The United States has successfully provided such leadership for decades, and it must do so again.

That leadership will also require effectively cooperating with China, rather than getting consumed by a war of narratives about who responded better. Little is gained by repeatedly emphasizing the origins of the coronavirus—which are already widely known despite China’s propaganda—or engaging in petty tit-for-tat rhetorical exchanges with Beijing. As Chinese officials accuse the U.S. military of spreading the virus and lambaste U.S. efforts, Washington should respond when necessary but generally resist the temptation to put China at the center of its coronavirus messaging. Most countries coping with the challenge would rather see a public message that stresses the seriousness of a shared global challenge and possible paths forward (including successful examples of coronavirus response in democratic societies such as Taiwan and South Korea). And there is much Washington and Beijing could do together for the world’s benefit: coordinating vaccine research and clinical trials as well as fiscal stimulus; sharing information; cooperating on industrial mobilization (on machines for producing critical respirator components or ventilator parts, for instance); and offering joint assistance to others.

Ultimately, the coronavirus might even serve as a wake-up call, spurring progress on other global challenges requiring U.S.-Chinese cooperation, such as climate change. Such a step should not be seen—and would not be seen by the rest of the world—as a concession to Chinese power. Rather, it would go some way toward restoring faith in the future of U.S. leadership. In the current crisis, as in geopolitics today more generally, the United States can do well by doing good.

Added: Much of Tucker Carlson's show tonight was also about China

 
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The governor of California just ordered the entire state to stay home. 40 million people on a "shelter in place" order.

How will this go considering:
The Cs said the creative energy of the universe is transduced by humans as they go about the ordinary 'psycho-drama' of their lives. That which is not expressed outwardly 'goes within', apparently into the planet itself, producing or contributing to such natural phenomena as earthquakes. The significant stoppage of (and/or reduction in) human creative expression is the wildcard in all of this. What if, for example, the suppression of human activity produces or contributes to that 'Big One' earthquake they talk of in California? Something like that would then give the US govt a REAL crisis for which no amount of shuffling numbers around on central bank computer screens can fix. Goods will not move from A to B because the highway is destroyed. In this scenario, only then would China 'step up' as a 'new hegemon'.
 
Thank you to everyone for all of the posts, inspiration and information in this thread. I went to my credit union today to take out some cash. There was a green line drawn about 3 feet from the counter, not allowed to step over it. Someone came up and asked if I'd been out of the country in the last 14 days and if I had any symptoms?!?! The cashier had on rubber gloves. Went to hand me a pen to sign the chit and I pulled out my own that I've been using for years. Had to reach forward, couldn't step over the line doncha know! Then I went up the street to get my smokes and both of the major banks were shut down, dark, ATMs available. One has an inside lobby and several people were standing there waiting in line. The shop was out of my regular brand, I'd asked them to order me a carton, so I had to settle for a carton of another organic choice.

A couple of women walking their dog, older than me actually stopped and talked this while our dogs exchanged sniffs. Everyone else crosses the street or moves away. I live in suburbia, not densely populated. No need for attestations YET.

Thank you Gaby for your post. It was very heartening, as have been so many others. As others have said, keeping up with this thread is helping me keep my sanity, remain calm and choose my words carefully when I'm outside. I'm looking forward to a get together with friends on Sunday to celebrate some birthdays. I think it will help relieve some of the pressure.
 
What a thread, it's train thread, or TGV one.

So let us:

* be extra-excellent to each other
* be extra-generous
* be extra-compassionate
* pray to the DCM to help us see our hidden errors and enable us to correct them
* not run away from suppressed feelings and memories but face them
* get a grip on any feelings of jealousy or resentment, conscious or unconscious, and act against those impulses
* feel and show love to others, and act based on love and knowledge and courage

I created 3 very basic screensaver background. It's black with a +/- white text (and title in yellow)
3 files, PNG format, in the 3 following resolutions (2 for PC and 1 for smartphones)

BTW, could also add * avoid spending your energy in useless discussion
... could be said otherwise * spot and avoid the negative people and the ones who buy mass toilet paper 🤣

We might not be together physically, but we are together spiritually while watching this collective madness unfold in front of our eyes. Let us take good care and have faith in the process.
Does the cristal that a part of the community has plays a role in this ?
Thanks for this message
 

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On a lighter note, there are some positive things I'm witnessing with all this craziness going on. Here in Finland all the schools and I believe all universities and other educational facilities have closed, and us teachers and students are learning how to teach via the Internet. Our kids' school did a nice job transitioning to the new circumstances, and now they have a Zoom-meeting every morning at 9AM with their teacher, who will give them various assignments for the day.

One of the first assignments for our son was to fix and tidy up his wardrobe/cupboard (folding and arranging the clothes and other stuff inside nicely) and then take a picture and send it to the teacher. This was like straight from JBP:s 12 rules! Our daughter, who is in second grade, got the assignment to be at least one hour outside and choose and observe "4 nice things" and then write about them and draw a picture.

I have to hand it to the teachers at our kids' school, they are working very hard to make the kids feel like things are normal. They are working together as a team like never before. And as the circumstances don't allow to teach the normal way, they are coming up with all sorts of creative and frankly more STO-assignments. We're only a week into the 'lock down', so it's too early to say if things will stay as 'good' as they are now.

Since me and my wife are not allowed to go to our work places anymore either, our morning routines in the family have become quite different: after breakfast my wife goes into one room with her computer to have her meetings, I'll go to another room with my computer to guide my students, and the kids go to their rooms to have their meetings on the iPads the school has provided. We're so far taking this positively, but it does start to feel like you're in some kind of sci-fi movie! :lol:
 
The governor of California just ordered the entire state to stay home. 40 million people on a "shelter in place" order.
It's not enforced by police at the moment, so in my view it's a voluntary recommendation and not a mandatory order.

“I don’t believe the people of California need to be told through law enforcement to home isolate, protect themselves,” he said.
The order Newsom announced Thursday doesn’t prevent people from leaving their homes for “essential” work, going outside, walking their dogs or picking up groceries and medicine.
 
I have a lot of crystals.
Also a bag with pendants.
And I shake it, asking in my head, "what do I need now" and then blindly grab one.
Sometimes like in these situations I choose one, in this case pyrite, for when I leave home.
Because pyrite provides a protective shield against bacteria and viruses.

And for when i am home, I blindly grab one.
I grabed one 3 days ago, then cleaned it, and put it back in the bag.
I grabbed a new one, and it was the same one again.
I dont know the name of it anymore, and that's pretty annoying, because i really want to know what the properties will tell me.
 
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