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You know this. And I would never have had to sully my hands with Madara.
(via naruhina-namikaze)
Posted on January 31, 2011 via ... with 22 notes
Source: fc06.deviantart.net
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2011 preview: Crunch time for stem cells
Something cool before I head off to bed. Stem cells are amazing and I really can’t wait to hear how all these clinical trials do.
Posted on January 12, 2011 via Memoirs of a Tissue Engineer? with 13 notes
Source: wanderson8903
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hppy:
An Orochi card from a cousin. I like this card not because I like Orochimaru; it’s because I like calling him Orochi, a nickname I picked up from a Crunchyroll buddy. Wherever you are LaLa, I want you to know it was fun to be your friend. For some reason, we got busy with life and abandoned staying up late watching animes in Crunchyroll—our only connection. Thank you, it was fun while it lasted.
Posted on December 13, 2010 via perish with 3 notes
Source: i-n-n
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Posted on December 13, 2010 via Ms.Adventures with 6 notes
Source: msadventures
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Hum, post número 100… … uuuueh xD
Posted on December 12, 2010 via one wish. with 3 notes
Source: bloodynurse
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Hum, post número 100… … uuuueh xD
Posted on December 12, 2010 via one wish. with 3 notes
Source: bloodynurse
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Such soft skin…
Posted on December 12, 2010 via [Insert Blog Title Here] with 6 notes
Source: poetryscribbles
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Such soft skin…
Posted on December 12, 2010 via [Insert Blog Title Here] with 6 notes
Source: poetryscribbles
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Naruto on Orochimaru and Sasuke:
“You think he’s gonna give it to you for free? All he wants is to use your body like a new suit of clothes!”
EWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW T_T
What a tasteless way of putting it. I for one would have described it as something along the lines of, say, a new car. A suit of clothes is far too trivial an analogy for a treasure like my Sasuke.
Posted on December 12, 2010 via my ♡ is nuclear with 2 notes
Source: joekage
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You don’t have to be an athlete to notice how ruthlessly age hunts and how programmed the toll seems to be. We start losing wind in our 40s and muscle tone in our 50s. Things go downhill slowly until around age 75, when something alarming tends to happen.
Exercise has been shown to add between six and seven years to a life span (and improve the quality of life in countless ways). Any doctor who didn’t recommend exercise would be immediately suspect. But for most seniors, that prescription is likely to be something like a daily walk or Aquafit. It’s not quarter-mile timed intervals or lung-busting fartleks. There’s more than a little suffering in the difference.
Here, though, is the radical proposition that’s starting to gain currency among researchers studying masters athletes: what if intense training does something that allows the body to regenerate itself?
(via Olga Kotelko, the 91-Year-Old Track Star - NYTimes.com)
Hm? You’re telling me that Rock Lee could -possibly- live longer than me?
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