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Hey,

Did you know...You could be starving your brain to death?

Here's the thing - most of us feed our bellies but starve our brains. Sounds weird, but it's true.

Yale researchers found that 83% of adults’ brains are starving for more nutrients, and it's not in wild fish or grass fed burgers...

...It's a powerful little-known brain nutrient that you can't get from your diet.

Your brain needs to stay healthy, young, and vibrant.

Imagine going from a foggy brain to a clear sharp mind with a single morning dose of this brain nutrient booster!

No more stumbling trying to remember things...

No more brain fog...

No more forgetting why you walked into a room...

It works fast, and once you try it your brain's as quick and sharp as Elon Musk's (sorta).

>> Tap here to feed your brain THIS...










 






 
dasivan, during the development of the Hindu synthesis attributes of the Buddha were transferred by Brahmins to Shiva, who was also linked with Rudra. The Rigveda has 3 out of 1,028 hymns dedicated to Rudra, and he finds occasional mention in other hymns of the same text. Hymn 10.92 of the Rigveda states that deity Rudra has two natures, one wild and cruel (Rudra), another that is kind and tranquil (Shiva). The term Shiva also appears simply as an epithet, that means "kind, auspicious", one of the adjectives used to describe many different Vedic deities. While fierce ruthless natural phenomenon and storm-related Rudra is feared in the hymns of the Rigveda, the beneficial rains he brings are welcomed as Shiva aspect of him. This healing, nurturing, life-enabling aspect emerges in the Vedas as Rudra-Shiva, and in post-Vedic literature ultimately as Shiva who combines the destructive and constructive powers, the terrific and the gentle, as the ultim