Conscious Expansion

Conscious Expansion Our target is to find as easy tools as possible to change anything in your life.

Why you should consider avoiding methylene blue dye and what to do instead.
27/05/2026

Why you should consider avoiding methylene blue dye and what to do instead.

And why nature has been outperforming synthetic chemistry since long before Heinrich Caro picked up a dye vat

Are you willing to allow the universe to become the (or a) conscious responder?
17/05/2026

Are you willing to allow the universe to become the (or a) conscious responder?

Inviting “Meaningful Coincidences” into Everyday Life We all know someone who seems to “live a charmed life.” The right people appear, doors open, and timing somehow favors them.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GzSu1STsZ/
06/05/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GzSu1STsZ/

A teacher in Spain has garnered widespread praise after introducing a highly creative method for teaching human anatomy. During a recent science lesson, she utilized an educational anatomical bodysuit to help her students visually understand the human body's structure, including muscle placement and organ positions, in real-life proportions.
This hands-on teaching approach turned a traditional lesson into an interactive experience, making complex biological concepts more accessible and memorable. The bodysuit allowed students to see the human body’s components in a unique, engaging way, helping them grasp difficult topics with ease.
The innovative lesson quickly went viral online, with many people lauding the teacher for her creativity and dedication to improving science education. The use of such tangible learning tools highlights the growing trend of incorporating interactive methods into classrooms to foster deeper understanding and student engagement.

23/03/2026

What if it can be this simple?

What marvels and miracles are possible today? What if miracles are not only possible but even doable if you keep on goin...
19/03/2026

What marvels and miracles are possible today? What if miracles are not only possible but even doable if you keep on going and never give up?

Ps. The title of the video is misleading. It all started with a boy from Netherlands.

https://youtu.be/Yj8KD9frqQ8

What if one teenager’s underwater shock sparked the biggest ocean plastic cleanup in history? Discover how Boyan Slat and The Ocean Cleanup defied experts an...

17/03/2026

You cannot think aware, you can only be aware. Be with that, don't think about that!

04/03/2026

What if the heart is so so much more than most people can imagine?

* Key anatomical discovery: Helical Ventricular Myocardial Band
Reference to Dr. Francisco Torrent-Guasp, a Spanish cardiac researcher who dissected thousands of hearts. He found the heart is not a simple pump but a single continuous muscle band folded into a spiral. This structure functions as a vortex generator, creating suction and torque rather than pressure.

* Blood flow arises from pressure differentials, electromagnetic flow, and coherent resonance — leading to natural spiraling of blood. The heart lacks the strength to push thick blood through ~60,000 miles of vessels.

* Blood moves before the heart even forms in the embryo (a documented fact). Movement is driven by frequency, resonance, and electric charge. The body is an energetic field, not a mechanical factory. The heart generates a toroidal electromagnetic field extending ~6 meters, syncing with Earth, Sun, and other beings.

* The heart acts as a resonator, tuner, and conductor — aligning cellular rhythms. It feels, remembers, emits, and responds to emotion, thought, light, sound, and breath. Love, grief, fear, or peace are transmitted via this field, making the heart the primary frequency modulator of biology (not a pump).

* The HeartMath Institute has measured these fields for decades, confirming the heart has more neuronal cells than some brain parts (making it a "second brain"). Heart coherence transforms the nervous system. Yet textbooks still teach William Harvey's 400-year-old pump model without updates.

https://www.facebook.com/reel/4137161109830518

What if a (or the right) question is the answer to everything?
22/02/2026

What if a (or the right) question is the answer to everything?

Fantastic information. AND what if you can remove either pains or stiffness or feeling cold by getting stung?https://www...
17/02/2026

Fantastic information. AND what if you can remove either pains or stiffness or feeling cold by getting stung?

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=pfbid02XN5NEk2v1SS8DZe4uDEGt1rp1JAsMPAyAxe8Hod1iaBtN287AnkaHjswJZvS88ipl&id=61556084813154

SHE ISN’T A W**D. SHE IS A NITROGEN ALARM.

That patch of stinging nettles emerging in the corner of your paddock or garden isn't a random invasion. It is a precise biological read-out of your soil chemistry, flagging up exactly where the land is overloaded.

The Myth: We view the Common Nettle (Urtica dioica) as an aggressive "thug" that ruins soil and crowds out delicate plants. We fight it with glyphosate and strimmers, assuming it is the enemy of a healthy ecosystem.
The Reality: Nettles don't cause bad soil; they are a symptom of it. In ecology, Urtica dioica is classified as a Nitrophilous (nitrogen-loving) and Phosphatophilous (phosphate-loving) species. It cannot thrive in poor, balanced, or undisturbed soils. When you see a dense, vigorous stand of nettles, the plant is telling you that the ground beneath it is saturated with phosphates—often from historical manure piles, over-fertilisation, sewage runoff, or decomposing organic waste.

The Scientific Reality: The Rhizome Network
The visible plant is just the tip of the iceberg.

The Underground Map: Beneath the surface, the nettle relies on a vast network of creeping yellow Rhizomes . These specialized stems allow the plant to colonise nutrient-rich patches laterally, stabilizing loose, disturbed soil (ruderal habitats).

The Phosphate Lock: Nettles are exceptionally efficient at absorbing heavy metals and excess minerals. They sequester these nutrients in their tissues. By growing rapidly in early spring, they act as a "nutrient sink," preventing nitrates from leaching into watercourses during heavy rain.

The Sting: The famous trichomes (stinging hairs) are actually hollow silica needles acting as hypodermic syringes. They inject a cocktail of histamine, acetylcholine, and serotonin. This expensive defence mechanism evolved because the plant is so nutrient-dense that, without protection, it would be grazed to extinction by herbivores.

Seasonal Context: The February Flush
Why is this relevant right now?

The First Flush: While the old stems from last year are brittle and dead, look at the base of the clump. You will see the first deep green or purple-tinged shoots of the new season emerging .

The Overwintering Nursery: This early growth is critical. The Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae) and Peacock (Aglais io) butterflies are currently hibernating as adults in sheds and hollow trees. When they wake up in the first warm weeks of March, they will need these specific young nettles on which to lay their eggs. The caterpillars are monophagous—they feed only on nettles. No nettles means no Peacocks.

Why This Matters Ecologically
By waging war on nettles, we are often shooting the messenger.
If you spray them, the nitrogen remains in the soil, often encouraging rank grasses or docks to take their place.
Furthermore, nettles support over 40 species of insect in the UK, including some of our most declining butterflies. A "nettle-free" countryside is a sterile countryside.

Your Action

Read the Land: Instead of just cutting them, ask why they are there. Is that corner an old compost heap? Is there runoff from a stable? The nettles are mapping the pollution for you.

Eat the Problem: The young February tips (the top 4–6 leaves) are at their culinary peak. They are packed with iron, calcium, and vitamins A and C. Pick them (with gloves), steam them like spinach, or make soup. Cooking destroys the sting instantly.

The "Sacrificial" Patch: If you must clear them, leave a patch in the sunniest spot for the butterflies. Nettles in the shade are ignored by egg-laying females; they need full sun to warm the developing larvae.

The Verdict
She isn't invading for fun. She is cleaning up a mess.
The nettle is an alarm bell ringing in green.
Don't silence the alarm; fix the soil.

Scientific references & evidence
Davis, B. N. K. (1991). Insects on Nettles. (The seminal comprehensive review of the biodiversity supported by Urtica dioica).

Olsen, C. (1921). The Ecology of Urtica dioica. (Establishing the link between nitrate/phosphate concentrations and nettle vigour).

Taylor, K. (2009). Biological Flora of the British Isles: Urtica dioica L.. Journal of Ecology. (Detailed physiology of rhizomes and nutrient uptake).

Butterfly Conservation. Gardening for Butterflies. (Highlighting the necessity of sun-exposed nettles for Vanessid species).

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Madrid

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