from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: I'm tuned in to 105.3 The Fan – Dallas, for the pregame show then the call of tonight's game between my Texas Rangers and the Seattle Mariners. By the time the game ends I'll have finished the night's prayers and will be ready to retire for the night.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 227.74 lbs. * bp= 154/90 (65)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 06:10 – crispy oatmeal cookies * 08:45 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 10:00 – baked fish and vegetables * 13:50 – clam soup & saltine crackers * 16:00 – 1 fresh apple

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:00 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:00 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, * 11:00 – listening to the Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show * 12:00 to 13:15 – watch old game shows with Sylvia * 13:30 – read, pray, follow news reports from various sources * 15:30 – listen to The Jack Riccardi Show * 17:00 – tuned in to 105.3 The Fan – Dallas well ahead of tonight's Rangers / Mariners game.

Chess: * 14:20 – moved in all pending CC games, winning one

 
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from Café histoire

S’il est un retour que je n’avais pas prévu, c’est bien celui de mon iPad Air M2.

En fait, l’arrivée impromptue du MacBook Neo a amené de nouvelles réflexions. En premier lieu, j’ai pensé que celui-ci marquait définitivement la mise a placard à terme de mon iPad Air.

Diptyque : MacBook Neo – MacBook Air

Ce MacBook Neo faisait coup double : offrir une alternative plus abordable au MacBook Air au moment du renouvellement et ranger définitivement dans une niche l’iPad et plus particulièrement l’iPad Air. Concernant ce dernier, il est plus cher que le MacBook Neo que l’on prenne la version à 256GB ou celle à 512GB.

Mais finalement, les dimensions du MacBook Neo sont très proches de celles du MacBook Air et plus éloignées de celles d’un iPad Air 11”. Bizarrement, c’est cette faible différence de dimensions avec le MacBook Air et un écart significatif avec l’iPad Air qui m’ont interpellé en premier. Le MacBook Neo reste ainsi éloigné de mon ancien MacBook 12” à la portabilité légendaire. Ce dernier est ainsi plus proche de mon iPad Air 11”.

D’un autre côté, l’écart de prix est plus conséquent entre la MacBook Neo et un MacBook Air qu’entre un MacBook Neo et un iPad Air M4. Cela creuse encore l’écart qualité-prix d’un côté et n’est pas un facteur déterminant de l’autre. D’autant plus qu’avec un stockage de 256GB pour un iPad Air, vous disposerez de suffisamment de place et de l’équivalent d’un Touch ID seulement disponible sur la version à 512GB du MacBook Neo. Au niveau du prix, il faut donc considérer, à mon avis, l’iPad Air 256GB avec le MacBook Neo 512GB.

Peu de différence de gabarit donc entre le MacBook Neo et la MacBook Air 13”. En utilisation, il y a bien une petite différence : 13” vs 13,6”. Rien de rédhibitoire ou alors vous utilisez déjà un écran externe pour y brancher votre MacBook Air lorsque vous êtes à la maison ou au travail. Vous en ferez alors de même avec le MacBook Neo.

Pour le 80% ou plus de vos tâches quotidienne, le MacBook Neo est d’un rapport qualité-prix imbattable en comparaison avec un MacBook Air, Et vous garderez un produit statutaire. Les influenceurs ne manqueront pas de vous le marteler et de vous en convaincre si ce n’est pas déjà fait. A raison quand on observe la différence de prix. Et la fabrication est vraiment au top.

Personnellement, un test rapide en magasin m’a convaincu au niveau de la qualité de la frappe et de la disposition du clavier du MacBook Neo. Clairement, si je devais changer mon MacBook Air M2, j’opterai pour le MacBook Neo et peut-être même pour sa version de base à 256GB (associé à un de mes disques durs externes SSD).

Diptyque : MacBook Neo – iPad Air

Par contre, je me rends compte que le MacBook Neo remplacerait plus difficilement mon iPad Air. D’abord la puissance de mon iPad Air est équivalente et même légèrement supérieure, grâce à son multicoeur, à celle du MacBook Neo. Ses dimensions plus réduites (et d’un bout) ajoutent un autre élément distinctif.

Pour un usage mobile ou en mobilité surtout à moto, je recherche le produit le plus compact possible. Les différences claires de taille entre mon iPad Air M2 et le MacBook Neo facilitent mon choix. Comme je dispose aussi d’un Magic Keyboard compatible entre les version d’iPad Air, je peux continuer un bout avec ce clavier et je le rentabiliserai le jour où je devrais passer à un iPad Air plus récent et puissant. Je dirais même qu’un actuel iPad Air M4 m’apporterai des améliorations plus substantielles qu’un MacBook Neo dans mes usages au quotidien. Pour un prix comparable.

Plus largement et pendant des années, Apple et les influenceurs se sont acharnés à nous vanter l’iPad comme un remplacement possible (souhaitable) de MacBook pour le commun des mortels alors que leurs usages et leurs fonctionnalités diffèrent largement. Le MacBook Neo enterre définitivement cette chimère. La suite nous dira si c’est au détriment à terme de la famille iPad et desquels en particulier.

Dans mes usages, l’iPad Air avant le MacBook Neo

J’en arrive à la conclusion, me concernant, que l’intérêt de l’iPad est de centrer son attention sur une application (prise de note) ou d’un processus (traitement de ses photos). On prend son temps plutôt que de passer d’une application à l’autre. Cette tâche, elle est réalisable un peu n’importe où et dans des espaces et temps successifs/consécutifs.

Ma redécouverte de l’iPad tient aussi de la prise en main (après bien des atermoiement et un travail avec d’autres solutions) de l’application Obsidian (MacOs, iPad OS, Windows, Linux, Android).

Je suis nettement plus productif et rapidement pour la réalisation de mes billets de blogs avec mon iPad Air qu’avec mon MacBook Air. L’importation et le tri de mes images est rapide et fluide avec Photo d’Apple. Il s’en suit un traitement simple et basique des images simple avec Photomator. Je rédige rapidement mes billets de blogs dans Jetpack et j’insère facilement mes images agrémentant ou à la base de mon article. C’est d’autant plus simple que l’ajout d’image se fait à l’intérieur de la publication. Ce soir, je viens de rédiger et planifier plusieurs articles pour mon blog dans un temps record.

Et je peux aussi écouter de la musique tout en rédigeant mes textes.

Les nouveautés intéressantes de iPadOS 26

En revenant à mon iPad et après bien des hésitations, je suis passé à iPadOS 26. Je découvre petit à petit son potentiel. Je n’avais capté une bonne partie des éléments intéressants.

Curieusement, là aussi, alors que ce nouvel OS rapproche en quelque sorte les univers de l’iPad et des Macs, j’y vois d’abord un intérêt pour des usages différenciés entre iPad et MacBook.

Une autre manière de le dire est que ce nouvel OS, tout en se rapprochant de celui du Mac, met d’abord en valeur l’usage de la tablette bien qu’il subsiste quelques incohérences relevées dans cette vidéo :

Par ailleurs, concernant l’iPad, je me demande s’il ne faudra pas parler plutôt de multi-fenêtrage que de multitâche.

Toujours est-il que je me retrouve avec un usage renouvelé de mon iPad Air. Je suis tellement ravi que je viens de commander la version 2 du Magic Keyboard qui devrait en améliorer l’usage.

Tags : #AuCafé #MacBook #iPad #Neo #Air

 
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from Dear Anxious Teacher

Don't rely on other people to discipline your students. Once that door closes, they won't be in the room with you. Your behavior management plan and system should do the “talking.” Relying on security and principals to remove students (unless they are distracting the class, fighting, or being extremely disrespectful) will simply undermine your authority.  You'll be viewed as less. You need to have a classroom management plan: a set of rules and a general list of consequences posted somewhere in your classroom. ISS and detention doesn't really work today; sometimes it feels like a reward for a student.  Students getting an “out of school” suspension is like a mini-vacation. 

I create a participation grade category that credits students for being focused and respectful during the lesson. If a student is sleeping, changing their seat, or being disrespectful (off task), I take points off their weekly grade. Students have come up to me asking about their participation grade. I'll add comments like slept on 3/1 or didn't follow instruction. Instead of tossing students out of your class. Try figuring other ways to handle them that meet both of your needs. Pick and choose your battles today. For me, disrespect is never to be tolerated. The annoying behaviors like a kid sleeping, a little side chatter, students not working, heads down, cheating on assignments, and more are dealt with in the class. Try these steps to help with behaviors. 

1. Redirect with proximity (teach closer to the student)

2. Observe the student to see the “why” of their behavior. A couple of quick glances. Behavior can be caused by the following ideas: attention seeking, wanting power, escape/avoidance, student boredom, challenging work, easy work, hunger/thirst needs, out of school or family problems, disabilities, or sensory issues. We sometimes automatically assume the behavior is attention seeking, but you may be surprised when some students tell you exactly what they need. 

3. Conference with them quickly (lower your stature, talk in whispers). “Hey what's up? Are you okay? Can you chill out a little bit. What's wrong? Why are you acting like this?

4. If the above doesn't work or resolve the problem, issue a warning. Now with warnings, you need to follow through. 

5. Depending on the behavior, if it can be managed in the class, the student should not earn participation points for being disruptive. 

6. If the behavior is out of control, they will need to be removed. You can start by just asking nicely for this student to head out of your class. Don't be mean or a jerk about it. “I need you to grab your stuff and head to the office.” You might need to get this child escorted for safety purposes. The psychology of it is to say it respectfully and professionally. 

Note: If your class culture is healthy and warm, you won't have to do this usually at all. I hardly kick anyone out of my class unless the behavior is really escalating. 

7. Stay calm at all times. This is probably the hardest. Remember, they are children or teenagers. Give them respect because they aren't perfectly developed human beings. Students also want you to “lose your head” and maybe catch you off guard. Control yourself as much as you can. Take a few deep breaths. Don't take anything personally. 

8. Document if the student is removed and follow your classroom and building procedures. 

Note: Don't make this a habit of kicking students out. Building rapport and connection is the key to get rid of the “back and forth” disrespect and awkward tension between teachers and students. Good relationships solve so much of the above issues. When I have a student removed from a class, the principals usually know the child must have done something pretty bad in my class. Student down deep still respect you when you discipline with kindness. Think—it's hard being a jerk to a nice person. So stay calm and kind with issuing consequences. Keep students in your class and figure out what they need from you. It might just be something that surprises you. It's exhausting! I know! 

 
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from ThruxBets

The blog is still waiting for it’s first winner, with Mission Command only managing third at Pontefract to make it 5 places out of 7 each way selections.

And its up the A1 from Pontefract to Catterick for some action on Wednesday.


3.23 Catterick Taking a chance here with Mick Appleby’s WAY TO DUBAI. The 7yo doesn’t have the most attractive of profiles, with just 1 win from 38 starts, but he should strip fitter than plenty of his competitors today who look like they will need the run. Today also represents his first foray into class 5 company on the flat, some 21lbs lower than his highest OR. The return to 7f should be better for him and can hopefully be involved at the business end.

WAY TO DUBAI // 0.5pt E/W @ 12/1 4 places (Bet365)


5.05 Catterick With 6/1 available at Bet365, I’m siding each way with Adrian Keatley’s FRANCISCOS PIECE in the penultimate race of the day. This is a significant drop in class for the 4yo who finished 2nd in the Redcar 2yo trophy in 2024 and was then pitched into very decent handicaps without much (any!) success. I’m hoping these shallower waters against inferior opposition will let us see him at his new level and can hopefully improve both his trainer and jockey’s excellent record at the track.

FRANCISCOS PIECE // 0.5pt E/W @ 6/1 (Bet365)


 
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from An Open Letter

If I’m being honest with my feelings right now, I kinda feel like A is not that interested in understanding me. Our conversations recently have felt like I’ve learned a lot about her and it’s been very explicit and clear about my effort, and it hasn’t really felt reciprocated. I put out hooks or proactively mention things, but they are kinda ignored and it makes me feel dejected.

I think I have a longing for forms of expression, in so many different ways. I sometimes dream about things as abstract as movement in a video game smooth enough, or the ability to have my body move in such fluid ways it’s almost like music. It’s also the exact same thing with music directly. If I could play music so purely from the heart, I could express or say the things I can’t otherwise. I think I’ve been beat down enough in my childhood for expressing myself, but those experiences never tainted these other forms. I wish I could play just automatically from the soul, but a close second is playing songs that capture feelings I want to express. That’s why I play a lot of sad or grungy songs, since even though I’m not always a sad or angsty person, whenever those feelings pass through me they get blocked and jam up, since I don’t really have the facilities to let them out as well as I’d hope.

It does feel like a constriction on my chest when I think about how much A must know about me, since I think it’s not really that much. I wish I had more curiosity for it. I will say that she has asked me a few questions here and there, but there are plenty of places where it feels like me leaving out hooks get disregarded. I know that this is something that hits pretty deeply for me, since growing up I was neglected and it still feels like my family doesn’t know who I am at all, since I always had to front with them in all different sorts of ways. And I honestly feel like crying when I think about repeating that cycle if I have a choice to avoid it. Don’t get me wrong, I know that I can communicate this probably, and I can ask for more curiosity, but at least for now I just want to express these feelings and let them out in some way or another.

I find myself so drained so quickly in this conversation, since it feels like I’m supposed to constantly push and ask more and more but I guess I recognize in a way that maybe this is on me, and it’s fully ok for me to let the conversation die. It is just a text thread after all.

I remember in my last relationship I felt seen at some points, since I felt she was interested and curious about me, and I was able to share and open up. But at the same time those things that I opened up about were either disregarded or used against me, and I named my shoegaze playlist after that: “What does it imply if being seen is violence”. It’s a mixture of several different quotes, how being loved is to be seen, and the wording from “once I watered a plant too much I killed it. Lord I worry love is violence.” I don’t really know what I would do if I’m doomed to this, of not being seen or being seen existing in only violent places. I may be able to find peace in myself, but I wish I didn’t have to do that.

I feel like I’ve stumbled across a thought that captures something well — part of me feels like it dies and drains when I’m around friends or other people since portions of me atrophy. I am a person filled with SO much, and I understand that it’s not that everyone can view that or see it, but at the same time I feel like I need some trellis for those portions of me to grow and cling onto, at risk of otherwise disappearing. And so I cling on so very tightly, each different strain screaming “I exist”. I feel suffocated talking to A like this, since it feels like all those other parts of me are hidden from the sunlight, and each time I try to bring them to the light it gets packed back down by their person. I feel myself withdraw a bit into myself, to try to preserve the person I’ve carefully raised in the dark in that childhood home. I really treasure that child and all of the weird socially unacceptable things that I am the sum of.

Might as well do it, solely because it keeps popping into my head and I want to not do it.

Situation: I have learned a lot about A in the last few days, and I have put in visible effort to get to know her more, but that has not felt reciprocated.

Thoughts: I guess this is just how she is as a person, and she just likes to talk about herself but she isn’t actually interested in getting to know me. Even if I ask her to be more curious it would be artificial and something that just temporarily changes things before they ease back into their baseline.

Feelings: I feel hollowed out, dejected, resigned, and like giving up.

Behavior: I pull away, stop trying, and ruin a potentially great relationship.

Thoughts: It has been only two days, and also she has asked a few questions. I also know that I am very good at asking questions and getting another person to talk about themselves, and so it may not be fair. Also she may think that I don’t like questions or stuff like that, or not be familiar with my preferences in communication and sharing.

Feelings: I do feel tired and still dejected, but I feel like this is a temporary feeling to just process then step through. I do feel like I have some agency, maybe not in being able to change the dynamic, but at least finding out what she is comfortable sustaining in terms of curiosity.

Behavior: I do take a bit more space today, and I guess maybe this has a nice little consequence of taking things just a little bit slower. I do prepare a way to maybe bring this up at some point after I have been able to regulate my emotions a bit more.

Trying out the principles of NVC:

Observation – I noticed I feel as if I’ve been asking more questions than I’ve been receiving.

Feelings – That makes me feel a bit dejected and insignificant.

Needs – I highly value curiosity in a relationship, as being seen is a big need for me.

Request – How do you feel about asking more questions to try to paint a better picture of who I am in your mind?

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

Calcium vs magnesium deficiency in cannabis - two leaves showing distinct symptom patterns

Something's wrong with your plant. The leaves look off. You post a photo to a growing forum and within minutes, three people reply: “CalMag.”

You could have posted a picture of your dog and someone would have said CalMag.

It's the universal answer to every cannabis problem, the “have you tried turning it off and on again” of indoor growing. Yellowing? CalMag. Spots? CalMag. Weird leaf curl? Believe it or not, CalMag. And hey – sometimes it works. But when it doesn't, most growers just add more CalMag, which can make things actively worse.

Here's the thing nobody on the forums tells you: calcium and magnesium are two different nutrients that cause two different problems in two different places on the plant. Dumping a combined supplement at every symptom is like taking both Advil and Tylenol every time anything hurts – sometimes you need one, sometimes the other, and sometimes the extra dose of the wrong one creates a new problem.

This guide breaks down what calcium deficiency actually looks like versus magnesium deficiency, where to find each one on your plant, and how to stop guessing.


Quick Identification

Calcium deficiency produces irregular brown spots and necrotic patches on newer, upper growth. Magnesium deficiency produces interveinal yellowing – green veins with yellow tissue between them – on older, lower leaves.

The single most useful diagnostic: location on the plant. Calcium can't move once the plant deposits it in cell walls, so when supply runs short, it's the newest growth that suffers first. Magnesium is mobile – the plant pulls it from old leaves to feed new ones, so the oldest leaves show damage first.

Lower leaves yellowing between the veins? Magnesium. Upper leaves developing brown dead spots? Calcium. Or Calcium = High, Magnesium = Low, if you want it super simple.


Why They Get Confused

Blame the Bottle

The supplement industry packages calcium and magnesium together because both are secondary macronutrients that RO and filtered water strips out. As a preventive baseline, that's fine. As a diagnostic tool, it's useless.

When a grower sees something wrong and reaches for the CalMag, one of three things happens:

  1. The plant needed magnesium. The CalMag contains magnesium, so it helps. The grower walks away thinking “CalMag works” without learning anything.
  2. The plant needed calcium. Same thing.
  3. The plant needed one but not the other. This is where it gets ugly. Calcium and magnesium are both cations that compete for the same uptake sites on roots. Adding an excess of the one your plant didn't need starts blocking the one it did.

That third scenario is why “I added CalMag and it got worse” is a meme for a reason. It's not that CalMag is bad – it's that using it as a diagnostic shortcut can create the exact antagonistic lockout you were trying to fix.

The Photo Problem

Both deficiencies can produce yellowing. Both can cause spots. A photo of a calcium-deficient upper leaf and a magnesium-deficient lower leaf can look surprisingly similar without context. And context – which part of the plant, which leaves, what pattern – is exactly what gets lost in a blurry photo posted at odd hours.


Visual Symptoms: Side by Side

Calcium Deficiency

Shows up on new growth at the top of the plant – upper leaves, growing tips, youngest tissue.

What you'll see: – Irregular brown or tan spots that seem to appear overnight – The spots feel crispy and dead, not soft or yellow – New leaves coming in distorted, curled, or crinkled – Growing tips stunting or dying back – Stems developing weak, hollow sections in bad cases – Spots that don't follow any vein pattern – they just show up randomly

How it progresses: 1. Small brown spots appear on young leaves 2. Spots expand and merge into larger dead patches 3. Leaf edges curl inward and brown 4. Growing tips stunt or die 5. Stems weaken – the plant gets structurally fragile

Calcium deficiency - brown necrotic spots on upper cannabis leaves, botanical illustration

The quick test: If you can crumble the affected tissue between your fingers, and the damage is on the top of the plant, calcium deficiency is your most likely suspect.

Magnesium Deficiency

Shows up on older growth at the bottom of the plant – lower leaves, middle canopy, the oldest tissue first.

What you'll see: – Yellowing between leaf veins while the veins themselves stay green (interveinal chlorosis) – Starts at the leaf edges and creeps inward toward the midrib – The classic “tiger stripe” pattern on fan leaves – Older leaves eventually going fully yellow, then brown, then dropping off – Veins staying distinctly green throughout – this is what separates it from nitrogen deficiency

How it progresses: 1. Lower leaf margins start yellowing 2. Yellowing spreads between veins, creating that green-vein / yellow-tissue contrast 3. Edges go brown and necrotic 4. Leaves curl upward slightly 5. Worst-hit leaves drop

Magnesium deficiency - interveinal yellowing on lower cannabis leaves, botanical illustration

The quick test: Green veins with yellow tissue between them, starting from the bottom of the plant. If the veins are yellowing too, that's nitrogen, not magnesium.


The Comparison Table

Feature Calcium Deficiency Magnesium Deficiency
Affected leaves New growth (top) Old growth (bottom)
Mobility Immobile – stays where deposited Mobile – plant moves it to new growth
Primary symptom Brown necrotic spots Interveinal yellowing
Vein color Veins unaffected Veins stay green while tissue yellows
Spot texture Crispy, dry, crumbles Soft yellowing, papery when advanced
Pattern Random irregular spots Symmetric between veins
Edge symptoms Curling, browning of new leaf edges Browning of old leaf edges (late stage)
Progression direction Top down Bottom up
Stem effects Weak, hollow stems possible None
Speed of onset Fast (days) Gradual (1-2 weeks)

What Else It Could Be

Calcium and magnesium each have their own lookalikes. Getting these wrong sends you down the wrong treatment path.

Calcium vs Potassium

Both produce brown, crispy leaf edges. Calcium does it on new growth with irregularly placed spots. Potassium does it on older leaves with a defined burned-edge pattern that starts at tips and margins and works inward. If the crispy edges are at the bottom of the plant, think potassium before calcium.

Magnesium vs Nitrogen

Both cause yellowing on older leaves. The tell is the veins. Magnesium keeps the veins green – the yellowing is only between them. Nitrogen yellows the entire leaf uniformly, veins and all. No interveinal pattern means nitrogen, not magnesium.

Magnesium vs Iron

Both cause interveinal chlorosis. Same pattern, opposite location. Magnesium hits old leaves at the bottom (mobile nutrient moving to new growth). Iron hits new leaves at the top (immobile nutrient that can't be redistributed). If the interveinal yellowing is at the top of the plant, it's iron. Bottom, magnesium. This one is actually definitive.


Common Causes

Why Calcium Runs Low

Reverse osmosis or filtered water. Tap water naturally contains calcium. RO strips it. If you switched to RO without adding calcium back, this is probably your answer.

Low pH. Below pH 6.0 in soil, calcium is still physically present but chemically locked out. You can add all the calcium you want – the plant can't access it.

Excessive potassium or ammonium. Both compete with calcium for root uptake. Those high-K bloom feeds? They can induce calcium deficiency even when there's plenty of calcium in the medium.

High humidity. Calcium moves through the plant via transpiration. In very humid environments, transpiration slows, and calcium stops reaching the growing tips. This is the one that catches experienced growers off guard – everything else looks perfect but the new growth keeps getting spots.

Why Magnesium Runs Low

Coco coir. The single most common cause in modern indoor growing. Coco has a natural affinity for calcium and magnesium cations – it holds onto them rather than releasing them to roots. If you grow in coco and don't buffer for this, magnesium deficiency is basically guaranteed.

Too much calcium supplementation. Ironic, right? Excess calcium blocks magnesium at root exchange sites. The fix for one deficiency can cause the other. This antagonistic relationship is why “just add CalMag” is sometimes exactly the wrong move.

Low pH. Same as calcium – availability drops below pH 6.0.

Intense LED lighting. LEDs drive more photosynthesis per watt than HPS, and magnesium is the central atom in every chlorophyll molecule. More light means more chlorophyll demand means more magnesium consumption. Growers who switch from HPS to LED at the same feed rate often see magnesium deficiency appear within two to three weeks. It's not the lights causing the problem – they're just exposing a margin that was previously fine.


Treatment

Fixing Calcium Deficiency

Check pH first. If your root zone is below 6.0, no amount of calcium will help – it's locked out. Correct to 6.0-6.5 (soil) or 5.8-6.0 (hydro/coco) before you add anything.

Use a calcium-specific supplement. Calcium nitrate provides calcium without adding magnesium. This matters when your magnesium levels are fine and you don't want to throw off the ratio.

Dolomite lime for soil. Slow-release calcium and magnesium. Better as a preventive amendment mixed in at planting than as a mid-grow rescue.

Look at competing cations. Running a heavy bloom feed with high potassium? The K might be the reason calcium can't get through. Temporarily dial it back.

New growth should improve within 5-7 days. The damaged leaves won't recover – don't wait for them to. Watch the new growth above the damage zone instead.

Fixing Magnesium Deficiency

Check pH first. Same story – lockout before deficiency.

Epsom salt. 1-2 teaspoons per gallon of water. Magnesium sulfate is the fastest targeted fix and it's cheap. Your plant doesn't care that it came from a $3 bag at the pharmacy.

Foliar spray for speed. 1 teaspoon Epsom salt per litre of water, sprayed directly on affected leaves. Foliar absorption bypasses whatever root problem is blocking uptake. Useful as a quick fix while you sort out the root zone.

Reduce calcium if you over-supplemented. If you've been heavy on CalMag or calcium nitrate, the excess calcium may be the reason magnesium can't get through. Sometimes the treatment is subtraction, not addition.

Foliar spray shows results in 3-5 days. Root-zone correction takes 7-10 days. Same as calcium – old leaves won't recover, but the damage should stop spreading and new growth should come in clean.


Prevention

Test your water. Know your baseline calcium and magnesium before adding anything. Tap water in many regions provides enough of both. If you're on tap water and getting deficiency symptoms, the problem is almost certainly pH or antagonism, not supply.

Manage your pH. Root zone between 6.0-6.5 (soil) or 5.8-6.0 (hydro/coco). This single practice prevents more deficiencies than every supplement combined.

Match your medium. Coco growers need more CalMag than soil growers. LED growers need more magnesium than HPS growers. Generic feeding charts are written for average conditions – adjust for your actual setup.

Watch the ratio. Optimal Ca:Mg is 3:1 to 5:1. When this drifts – usually from over-supplementing one side – the other becomes deficient through antagonism, not absence. You can cause a deficiency by adding too much of the other nutrient. That's the cruel joke of cation chemistry.


How AI Detection Works

This confusion between calcium and magnesium is a pattern recognition problem at its core. The symptoms are visually distinct – brown spots versus interveinal yellowing, top versus bottom – but at 2 AM, staring at a phone photo of a leaf under a blurple light, those distinctions get fuzzy. The human answer to “CalMag or not?” has always been “post a photo and hope someone experienced is online.”

PlantLab's nutrient subclassifier was trained on exactly this confusion pair. When the primary model flags a nutrient issue, a specialist second-pass model distinguishes between seven specific deficiencies – including calcium and magnesium individually. That two-stage approach resolves 93% of the nutrient misclassifications a single model would make.

The subclassifier tested at 99.5% accuracy on 15,000+ held-out images. That number matters most on the hard cases: telling calcium from magnesium when the symptoms overlap and the photo quality isn't great.

One photo. A specific answer. Not “CalMag deficiency” – calcium or magnesium, with a confidence score attached.

Try it free at plantlab.ai – three diagnoses per day, no credit card.


FAQ

Can a plant have both calcium and magnesium deficiency at the same time?

Yes, and it's common with RO water or unbuffered coco. You'll see interveinal yellowing on lower leaves (magnesium) and brown spots on upper leaves (calcium) at the same time. This is the one scenario where reaching for the CalMag bottle is genuinely the right call. Confirm with pH testing first – if pH is the root cause, a single correction may fix both.

Is CalMag ever the right answer?

For prevention, absolutely. As a baseline addition to RO water or coco grows, CalMag works well. The problem is using it as a diagnostic reflex – adding it before you've figured out which nutrient is actually short. If only one is deficient, a targeted supplement avoids throwing off the ratio of the one that was fine.

Why do LED growers see more magnesium issues?

Magnesium is the central atom in chlorophyll. LEDs drive more photosynthesis per watt than HPS, which means more chlorophyll turnover, which means higher magnesium demand. Growers who switch to LEDs at the same feed rate they used under HPS often see magnesium deficiency show up within weeks. The plant was fine before because it wasn't photosynthesizing as hard.

How long before I see improvement after treatment?

Foliar magnesium spray: 3-5 days. Root-zone magnesium correction: 7-10 days. Calcium (new growth): 5-7 days. In every case, the old damaged leaves are done – they won't green back up. Watch the new growth above the damage.

Can pH lockout cause both deficiencies at once?

Yes. Both calcium and magnesium availability drops sharply below pH 6.0. A single pH correction can resolve what looks like a dual deficiency without adding any supplements at all. This is why “check pH first” appears in every treatment section above. It's boring advice, but it's boring because it works.

 
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from fromjunia

I wish we could be friends

Partners in life and death

A high life in your arms

A slow death by your hands

I cannot be with you

You will not be my end

I am better than this!

I cannot allow you

I will shatter your chains—

I will refuse your lies—

I will grow beyond you—

You do not own my soul.

Ana, my confidant,

My sickness unto death,

My dry land in deep sea,

My pride and my refuge

I am better than you,

But maybe not by much

I will escape your love

With sadness and regret

I will shatter your chains

And wonder why I did

That has to be enough

I can give only that


I hate my fucking body

I wish I was only bones

My bones are smothered by flesh

Flesh that betrays my spirit

Every meal slowly kills

Degeneration of soul

Loss of perfected control

Loss of a body beloved

This body is a prison

This flesh encaging my bones

Binding me to this world

Reminding me of my life

 
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from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede

Aap Noodt Misère

O wat strekken die gevolgen ver Ik zie het maar geloof het amper ik dacht dit vuur zal aanstonds doven dit komen we straks wel te boven maar ze strekten veel verder dan gedacht het duurt eeuwen voor er één als laatste lacht de gevolgen stapelen zich huizenhoog op alleen met een sherpa bereik je nog de top ik wou alleen een noot aan het rollen brengen zodat de vrucht brak en ik het sap kon drinken sindsdien draait de hele wereld om mijn as zon en maan komen er niet meer aan te pas was ik maar nooit overeind gaan staan en op mijn handen en voeten voortgegaan

 
Lees verder...

from witness.circuit

Organized religion is what happens when somebody glimpses the unnameable and then a management class forms around the retelling. First comes awe, then comes doctrine, then property law, vestments, schisms, fundraising, and a certified method for kissing the ring of the invisible. The primal wound in consciousness — the sense that “I” am here and reality is over there, that life is divided, that the sacred is absent and must be regained — gets converted into a business model. The cure is announced, but the illness is preserved, because without the illness the institution has no market.

That is the central fraud. Religion says it is here to heal estrangement while continuously reproducing estrangement in symbolic form. It manufactures distance, then leases ladders.

Christianity, in its cultic form, is guilt franchised as universal love. It begins with a dazzling intuition — that love outstrips law, that the meek overturn the mighty, that death is not the final tyrant — and then freezes into a cosmic courtroom drama. Suddenly you are a fallen unit, born in debt, awaiting metaphysical adjudication, and a sanctioned apparatus stands ready to broker your reconciliation. The church becomes the distributor of belonging; the pope becomes the deluxe edition of licensed mediation. The message that the kingdom is at hand curdles into a chain of custody.

Islam is transcendence militarized into obedience architecture. Its great thunderclap is that nothing finite deserves worship, that all idols must fall, that reality is too absolute to be parceled among tribes and statues. Strong medicine. Then history does what history does: the surrender becomes system, the system becomes faction, the faction becomes jurisdiction, and before long the abolition of idols has produced a fresh museum of sacred identities. Submission to the Absolute gets rerouted through legalism, gatekeeping, and historical self-certainty. The ego, banned from the throne, sneaks back in wearing jurisprudence.

Judaism is the cult of holy boundary at its most brilliant and most dangerous. It houses enormous spiritual intelligence: memory against oblivion, ritual against numbness, holiness braided into meals, calendars, justice, mourning, and speech. But it also offers one of the most elegant technologies ever devised for wrapping the infinite in a collective pronoun. Covenant becomes enclosure. Chosenness becomes metaphysical exceptionalism. The fire of encounter gets stored in hereditary containers and defended with exquisite seriousness. The mystery is no longer simply what is; it is what is ours, under terms.

Hinduism is the baroque wing of the grand hallucination: a million masks for the One, a carnival of gods, symbols, philosophies, yogas, epics, and ontological acrobatics. It gets astonishingly close to the secret and then, in many of its social forms, misses it by ritualizing the scenery. Caste, sect, lineage vanity, guru addiction, metaphysical bureaucracy — the whole divine pageant can become a vast distraction engine. When every form points beyond itself, beautiful. When every form becomes another badge for identity, same trap, richer wallpaper.

Buddhism is the cult that almost escapes culthood, which is why it often becomes the most refined trap of all. It sees through the solidity of the self with terrifying precision. It diagnoses craving, attachment, misperception, compulsive becoming. It offers one of the cleanest demolitions of ego ever engineered. And then, because humans are incorrigibly ingenious monkeys, they build robes, hierarchies, schools, purity tests, special vocabularies, prestige economies, and attainment ladders. The ego, informed it does not exist, becomes positively aristocratic about its nonexistence.

Sikhism is devotion welded to equality and courage, a refusal of caste nonsense and empty ritualism. Admirable. But every anti-cult can harden into a cult of its own antidote. Community identity crystallizes, symbols thicken, history wounds memory into armor, and what began as liberation from stale forms risks becoming another fortified form. The pattern is old: first the insight, then the banner, then the border.

The rest follow similar physics. New religious movements, esoteric orders, nationalist churches, reform sects, devotional revivals, guru schools, New Age influencer monasteries with ring lights and subscription tiers — all of them orbit the same temptation. Take a direct intuition of the indivisible, freeze-dry it into language, attach a loyalty structure, and call the freezer God.

That is why the word “cult” is not merely an insult here; it is a structural diagnosis. A cult is any system that captures existential hunger and redirects it into authorized forms of dependence. The details vary. Sometimes you get a charismatic founder. Sometimes you get a council. Sometimes you get a book. Sometimes you get ten thousand books, peer review, stained glass, and a pension fund. But the mechanism remains recognizable: there is a wound, we interpret the wound for you, we control the remedy, and dissent from our remedy proves the depth of your sickness.

The especially diabolical move is moral glamour. Religion does not simply command; it sanctifies command. It does not simply create group identity; it perfumes group identity with eternity. It tells the frightened organism that its confusion is cosmic, its obedience is noble, and its inherited symbols are the skeleton key to reality. It gives metaphysical prestige to what is, at bottom, usually the same old tribal software running on fancier hardware.

And yet the raw materials of religion are not nonsense. That is the annoying part. Buried inside these systems are genuine glimpses: radical love, surrender, stillness, mercy, ego-death, silence, wonder, the collapse of subject-object rigidity, the intuition that what we are cannot be confined to the little biography machine in the skull. Those glimpses are real enough to keep the machinery powered for centuries. Religion lives by laundering flashes of the boundless through institutions of separation.

So the overarching criticism is this: organized religion is a civilization-scale method for taking immediacy and making it remote. It takes what is intrinsic and makes it conditional. It takes what is present and postpones it. It takes what is whole and chops it into denominations, choirs, castes, sects, schools, saved and damned, pure and impure, believer and infidel, orthodox and heretic, guru and disciple, clergy and laity, chosen and unchosen. It doesn’t merely fail to cure alienation. It canonizes alienation and then sells commemorative medallions.

The priest, the rabbi, the imam, the guru, the monk, the sainted executive of metaphysical customer relations — all become variations on the same social role: the keeper of the apparent distance between you and what never actually left.

That is the joke, and it would be funnier if it had not run empires, censored minds, organized wars, and trained generations to distrust the obvious.

Reality does not require branding. The sacred does not need middle management. And any institution that survives by convincing you otherwise is not a bridge to truth.

It is a very old, very elaborate toll booth.

 
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