Why 100 Bad Photos Can Save Your Photography

The fastest upgrade in photography comes from training perception: shooting 100 intentionally bad photos a day, then dissecting their failures like a daily lab report.

The fastest upgrade in photography comes from training perception: shooting 100 intentionally bad photos a day, then dissecting their failures like a daily lab report.

A migratory goose adopting orphaned ducklings exposes both the rigidity of imprinting circuits and the surprising flexibility of family bonds in animal cognition.
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Ice skating recruits nearly every major muscle group, drives oxygen demand through the roof, and can match or exceed the energy burn of many land sports.
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Wingsuit flying stays deadlier than Everest because tiny errors, hostile terrain, and human risk bias overwhelm even perfect glide physics.
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Plant relatives can act like metabolic rivals: some starch heavy organs spike blood sugar, while their fiber rich cousins from the same family help flatten the curve.
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Time in biodiverse, microbe‑rich fields lowers cortisol and improves attention via immune, endocrine and sensory pathways, even if it feels like doing nothing.
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Residents of smaller, slower cities often report higher life satisfaction than big city dwellers because social ties, time use, and stress levels outweigh income and career variety.
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Regular coffee intake tracks with lower risks of type 2 diabetes, Parkinson’s disease and liver cancer, likely through antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and metabolic effects.
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A single artwork or plant on a blank living‑room wall can alter perceived size, brightness and emotional warmth of a room through depth cues, luminance contrast and affective priming.
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High speed carving on snow stays controllable because skis create a tuned balance of edge grip, pressure distribution and micro‑melting that turns slippery ice physics into predictable traction.
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New research shows that missing breakfast measurably weakens attention, working memory and decision‑making within a single morning, as changes in glucose regulation and neural efficiency show up in lab tests.
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