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gum sum plum plumbago
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gum sum plum plumbago - 09-28-2007, 01:35 PM

When plants ooze excessive amounts of gum, these are symptoms of certain ensuing disease for sickly plants. On the other hand, when some bear delicious plums, these are signs for thriving healthy plants. However, when plants die under extreme of temperature and pressure most likely they will quickly or surely but gradually approach the physical state of plumbago (graphite 1).
Could gumming is to plants as bleeding is to animals? It is possible for an animal to bleed to death. But can this also happen to a plant? Animal’s gum disease, at worst is losing teeth and chewing gums. For plants, it is no sweat, since no rubber trees ever die of exhausted rain. But human brain drain is just bypassing Crain when the creative juices dried up into complacency and indifference. Healthy plants enjoy bearing fruits but sickly plants barely tolerate gummy bears, even those cute tree hugging teddy bears, panda bears, or ferocious grizzly bears.
Although both plants and animals share the same precious substance of life namely water or H2O, plants use it to grow deep and tall as those giant sequoias in the Californian redwood forest. Animals use it to go far and wide as the much anticipated manned mission to the red planet Mars, foretold in the Martian chronicles.
Nonetheless, in the final analysis, both plants and animals merely chosen different straight or crooked means to reach the absolute state of plumbago destined for everything in a galaxy far, far away and long, long time ago. It is the destiny of all plants to stand completely still, a state of absolute rest. It is the destiny of all animals to move or to think at the speed of light.


Time independence: [∂E(g)]²=[∂F(a)×∂r(a)]·[∂F(b)×∂r(b)] and Mass independence: a(tr(t)=c²
  
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