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B
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Bookworm and lover of stories
Replying to Avatar Gigi

GM

Beauty in the ordinary 🩵🤍

I haven’t seen or heard that word in years!!! Love it! 💜😂

Thanks for the update! I’ve never heard of that before. TIL 😊

This sounds weird but try doing maths problems in your head that get progressively harder. Or require more of your memory. It may help stop your mind wandering all over the place and focuses it until it gets too tired and you fall asleep. It sounds counterintuitive but it might help.

It’s a form of mindful diversion.

It also helps if you do the same maths problem every night or at least every night you have trouble sleeping. It then trains your brain. It can help people that struggle with doing meditation. 🫂

Replying to Avatar Gigi

GN

be still, my book girls heart! 💜💛

Replying to Avatar B

Palm cove?

Beautiful place. And that restaurant is lovely.

Replying to Avatar Ben Justman🍷

Three corporations control over half of the wine sold in the U.S.

That number climbs closer to 70% if you add their private labels.

So when you’re staring at a wall of wine in the store…

You’re not choosing between hundreds of options.

You’re choosing between clones.

E. & J. Gallo

The Wine Group

Constellation Brands

Together, they own or produce dozens of brands and you’d never guess many were related.

Different labels. Same playbook.

This matters because it changes how wine is made.

At that scale, winemakers aim for consistency.

Not character.

A Cabernet is supposed to “taste like a Cabernet,” no matter what year it is or where the grapes came from.

To get there, they use tools that shape the final product:

• MegaPurple for Color

• Excessive Sulfites for Preservation

• Acid, alcohol, and sugar adjustments

These tools aren’t unusual.

and when the goal is volume, they’re essential and used excessively.

The result: most wines on the shelf start to taste the same.

And for some people, the chemical tweaks may be the cause of your headaches or other side effects.

This kind of standardization is most visible in the U.S. especially in California, where industrial winemaking is most developed.

While there are boutique wines sprinkled around, there wasn't a long enough wine tradition to keep corporate profit interests out of the production process.

If you want to find wine that tastes unique, here are a few ways to start:

• Ask your local shop for small producers

• Try local wines when you travel

• Or default to French and Italian wines, which often use fewer additives and standardizations

Most wine drinkers aren’t thinking about this and that’s the point.

Once you start noticing, the whole shelf looks different.

If this gave you value, please zap or reNOST.

I'll be sharing more soon!

We have a similar issue here in Australia with both Treasury Wine Estates and Accolade (which I think are linked to constellation wines).

Thankfully we still have a lot of boutique wineries close to Adelaide so we can escape them and buy direct from locally owned winemakers.

…. I read that in a daleks voice… and now I can’t stop giggling 🤭

Do not retaliate!

I agree with your sister-in-law. The book is definitely grittier and also has darker moments that are kind of skimmed over in the movie.

I saw the movie first and then read the book. I remember after reading that I’d wished it was the other way around but like you, I didn’t realise there was a book.

Definitely worth a read though. 😊

Replying to Avatar Gigi

GM

Photo or painting again?! 💜🩵

Replying to Avatar Contra

🤣

Love it!!

I was thinking more about the effect of the sun on my skin 😊

Little sun good, too much sun bad.

Maybe it’s just the ladies you know. Either that or I am an anomaly. I always know where my keys are.