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radekllundain.bsky.social
raDECK THE HALLS 🎄
@radekllundain.bsky.social
"The kinship between work and stuff is that work is like unto weight, manifolded by the fourside of the haste of light."

Welsh-Brazilian in London
Cymro Brasilaidd yn Llundain
I did a STOP DOING joke! 🤓
December 2, 2025 at 5:07 PM
December 2, 2025 at 8:06 AM
December 2, 2025 at 1:31 AM
gente acho que as únicas palavras em português no meu word cloud são "gente" e "acho"
December 2, 2025 at 1:25 AM
Hey I touched grass for TWO WHOLE DAYS
December 2, 2025 at 1:23 AM
Is it good to have below average quotes?
December 2, 2025 at 1:23 AM
I'm acing this
December 2, 2025 at 1:23 AM
This is so fucking weird
December 1, 2025 at 9:13 AM
follow-up:

The much smaller Proxima Centauri has a known planet. From there you'd be able to see the binary Alpha Centauri system as two ordinary stars very close to each other, but definitely not as a striking as someone looking up from an Alpha Centauri planet.
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
A perfectly ordinary star in the sky… yet blinding when seen from your new home. Visually not very large, but brilliant enough to bathe the land in a ghost-silver glow, bright enough to make the stars themselves feel suddenly shy.
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
But you wouldn’t be paying much attention to that faint ember of home, because your nights would belong to another sun: Alpha Centauri’s sister star.
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
The constellations would still feel familiar,the cosmos not yet warped enough to redraw them: after all, you haven't travelled very far. From vantage, the Sun would seem to slot into the pattern we call Cassiopeia.
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
Stand on a planet there and look back: our Sun would be only a modest, unremarkable star in the sky. Not special. Not dominant. Just another pale point of light lost among thousands.
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
If you boarded a spaceship moving at light-speed, in just over four years you’d reach Alpha Centauri, our nearest neighbouring star. Four years of flight, and the scale of home would already begin to dissolve into something both tiny and strange, but weirdly familiar. 1/7
December 1, 2025 at 8:47 AM
And over decades, slowly, almost imperceptibly, you’d watch the two suns dance, circling each other in a gravitational waltz across the velvet backdrop of the Milky Way. B would be your sun and A a star smaller but much brighter than your old earthly moon. 7/end
December 1, 2025 at 2:21 AM
The constellations would still feel familiar, the cosmos not yet warped enough to redraw them: you haven't travelled very far after all. From that vantage, the Sun would seem to slot into the pattern we call Cassiopeia.
December 1, 2025 at 2:21 AM
Stand on a distant world there and look back: our Sun would be only a modest, unremarkable star in the sky. Not special. Not dominant. Just another pale point of light lost among thousands.
December 1, 2025 at 2:21 AM
November 30, 2025 at 9:26 PM
🙄
November 28, 2025 at 11:45 PM
Anglish is the name of a "version" of English that uses only Germanic words, avoiding Latinate words borrowed from the Normans or scientific Greek and Latin. It can be fun to translate "Norman" English into Anglish

'Unwilled might' of over-wealthy is reshaping British rikescraft, reckoning says
November 28, 2025 at 1:43 PM
two vast and trunkless legs
November 28, 2025 at 2:39 AM
According to the Guardian, this counts as "political" news
November 26, 2025 at 8:43 PM
Any British news, issue, policy, or debate:
November 26, 2025 at 8:41 PM
This sort of journalism is so petit bourgeois, it's on those moments when you realise the Guardian can't escape bring British. The questions about cars didn't even start with "do you have a car?"

But anyways I want my 5 quid back!
November 26, 2025 at 8:39 PM
I need a journalist to ask Elliot Page what he feels now that Bolsonaro is in prison. They met once and Page said the experience was horrible.

Or ask Stephen Fry, who had this to say after meeting Bolsonaro:

www.brasilwire.com/stephen-fry-...
November 26, 2025 at 2:29 PM