SupaBrainz

SupaBrainz

No Brain, No Gain! Nerd Nation

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 06/07/2024

Intelligence never goes out of style 🧠💖

06/07/2024

Brains and beauty, a perfect combo 💖🧠

05/05/2024

Check profile

05/05/2024
Photos from SupaBrainz's post 05/05/2024

Play the game like a pickup, we collect the loot 🧠

04/05/2024

“Embrace the challenges, trust your abilities, and remember, you’ve got this! Keep pushing forward with unwavering determination and self-belief. Your journey is unique, but your strength is undeniable. Let’s conquer the day together! 💪 ”

04/05/2024

“In a world quick to label, being called ‘crazy’ can sometimes be the ultimate compliment. It’s about daring to see possibilities others overlook, having the courage to challenge the status quo, and possessing the foresight to envision what’s yet to come. So here’s to those who are deemed ‘crazy’ for their ideas, because often, they’re just ahead of their time. Embrace the madness, for it’s the mark of true visionaries shaping the future. 💡 ”

03/05/2024

“Remember, the only thing standing between you and success is self-doubt. You’ve got this! 💫 ”

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 19/04/2024

Grow at your own pace 💠

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 05/04/2024

Grow at your own pace 💠

30/03/2024

She wants to make appointments like I’m a doctor 🩺💕

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 22/03/2024

Xoxo

22/03/2024

What is oxytocin?

Oxytocin is a natural hormone that manages key aspects of the female and male reproductive systems, including labor and delivery and lactation, as well as aspects of human behavior. Your hypothalamus makes oxytocin, but your posterior pituitary gland stores and releases it into your bloodstream.

Hormones are chemicals that coordinate different functions in your body by carrying messages through your blood to your organs, muscles and other tissues. These signals tell your body what to do and when to do it.

Your hypothalamus is the part of your brain that controls functions like blood pressure, heart rate, body temperature and digestion.

Your pituitary gland is a small, pea-sized endocrine gland located at the base of your brain below your hypothalamus.

22/03/2024

What is serotonin?

Serotonin, also known as 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), is a monoamine neurotransmitter. It also acts as a hormone.

As a neurotransmitter, serotonin carries messages between nerve cells in your brain (your central nervous system) and throughout your body (your peripheral nervous system). These chemical messages tell your body how to work.

Serotonin plays several roles in your body, including influencing learning, memory, happiness as well as regulating body temperature, sleep, sexual behavior and hunger. Lack of enough serotonin is thought to play a role in depression, anxiety, mania and other health conditions.

Most of the serotonin found in your body is in your gut (intestines). About 90% of serotonin is found in the cells lining your gastrointestinal tract. It’s released into your blood circulation and absorbed by platelets. Only about 10% is produced in your brain.

Serotonin is made from the essential amino acid tryptophan. An essential amino acid means it can’t be made by your body. It has to be obtained from the foods you eat.

22/03/2024

The nerd is the solution, to start the revolution 🎶

21/02/2024

“We don’t see things as they are, we see things as they are.”

19/01/2024

Creators create 🎤 ⭐️

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 18/01/2024

•🤔 ”Truth does not mind being questioned, but a lie does not like being challenged.”

•Science joke: “What is the brains favorite TV channel? The Neural Network”

16/01/2024

It allows scientists to consider all possibilities and systematically question all information in the course of an investigation. 🧪

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 01/01/2024

Time doesn’t heal, it’s what you do with it ⚡️

28/12/2023

🧱 by 🧱…

24/12/2023

🧱 by 🧱 …

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 18/10/2023

🩺📚

17/09/2023

🧠 🪞

10/09/2023

Don’t waste your potential🧠🧬

•What is a neuron?

•Neurons (also called neurones or nerve cells) are the fundamental units of the brain and nervous system, the cells responsible for receiving sensory input from the external world, for sending motor commands to our muscles, and for transforming and relaying the electrical signals at every step in between. More than that, their interactions define who we are as people. Having said that, our roughly 100 billion neurons do interact closely with other cell types, broadly classified as glia.

Photos from SupaBrainz's post 25/08/2023

If you truly love nature, you will find beauty everywhere🪴