Sometimes greatness is simply refusing to give up

Ely Room

Sometimes courage is not lifting a trophy.
Sometimes courage is standing in front of impossible odds and refusing to quit.
That is exactly what Eloy Room did.
At 37 years old, the Curaçao goalkeeper delivered one of the most extraordinary performances ever seen on football’s biggest stage. Facing a relentless Ecuador attack at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Room spent nearly the entire match under pressure as wave after wave of chances came crashing toward his goal.
Most goalkeepers would have cracked.
Room did the opposite.
Save after save, he kept his team alive.
Shots from close range.
Powerful strikes.
Dangerous headers.
Every time Ecuador thought they had found a way through, there was Eloy Room standing in the way.
By the end of the match, he had made an astonishing 15 saves, one of the greatest goalkeeping displays World Cup fans have ever witnessed.
Yet the statistics only tell part of the story.
Because behind every save was a veteran goalkeeper carrying the hopes of an entire nation.
A player who had spent years working for moments like this.
A man who refused to surrender no matter how difficult the challenge became.
As the final whistle blew, the scoreboard showed a hard-earned draw.
For Curaçao, it felt like a victory.
For Ecuador, it felt like a missed opportunity.
And for Eloy Room, the emotions became impossible to contain.
The goalkeeper collapsed to the ground in tears.
Not because he had won a trophy.
Not because he had broken a record.
But because he had given absolutely everything he had.
Football can be cruel.
It can break hearts.
It can expose every mistake.
But every so often, it also produces moments that remind us why we love the game.
Moments where determination matters more than talent.
Where resilience matters more than fame.
Where one person refuses to stop fighting, even when the odds seem overwhelming.
Eloy Room may never score the winning goal.
He may never be the most famous player at the World Cup.
But on that day, with 15 saves and tears in his eyes, he showed the world something just as important.
That sometimes greatness is not about winning.
Sometimes greatness is simply refusing to give up.

Great News! Fungi vs PFAS Chemicals

Fungi vs PFAS Chemicals

The “forever chemical” met something older.

PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — are the most stubborn pollutants humans have invented. They don’t break down in sunlight, water, soil, or human bodies. They accumulate in blood, in liver tissue, in groundwater, and they stay there for decades. Maine’s farm soils were contaminated by sludge spreading, firefighting foam, and industrial discharge. The state had thousands of acres where PFAS levels exceeded safety thresholds, and conventional remediation was a joke. You can’t filter what doesn’t degrade. You can’t dig up what has already spread through the soil profile.

Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection funded a project using wood-rot fungi mycelium to biologically break down PFAS. The mechanism is enzymatic. White-rot fungi — species like Phanerochaete chrysosporium — evolved to decompose lignin, one of the most complex and resistant organic polymers on Earth. Their enzymes, called laccases and peroxidases, cleave carbon-fluorine bonds that other organisms can’t touch. The mycelium in this photo, spreading through mulch in a contaminated Aroostook County field, is literally digesting PFAS molecules and converting them into harmless byproducts.

The turkey in the background, foraging in the mist, is the proof. Before the mycelium treatment, this soil was too contaminated for agricultural use. Wildlife avoided it. The fungi broke down the PFAS over 18 months of managed treatment, and the soil now tests below detection thresholds for the most common PFAS variants. The turkey doesn’t know about enzymatic degradation. It just knows the ground is safe to scratch again.

The second-order effect is agricultural. Maine’s dairy industry was devastated by PFAS contamination in feed crops grown on sludge-amended soils. Farmers faced bankruptcy, herd culling, and permanent land loss. The mycelium treatment offers a path to recovery. It’s not fast — it takes one to two growing seasons — but it’s permanent. The fungi don’t just bind PFAS. They destroy it. And the byproduct is improved soil structure, increased organic matter, and restored microbial diversity.

Other states are watching because Maine proved that the oldest technology on Earth — fungal decomposition — might be the only one capable of undoing our newest mistake.

Dai Lee Asks, PM Answers By Non-Answering

Dai Lee

Independent MP Dai Le rattled Albanese in Question Time after asking him to give Australians a straight assurance that no government MP, and no close relation of a government MP, used prior market-sensitive knowledge of Labor’s capital gains tax and negative gearing changes for private financial benefit.
It was a basic integrity question. Dai Le was not asking for theatre. She was asking whether anyone close to the government had the chance to position themselves ahead of major tax changes that could affect property decisions, investments, market behaviour and household finances across the country.

Albanese did not give the assurance. He stood up, snapped back at her, and tried to turn the whole thing into a personal jab by telling her this was not a local council, this was serious government, a clear shot at her former role as a councillor instead of a direct answer to the actual question.

Dai Le raised a point of order and asked him to be direct, but Albanese still refused to answer the substance. That is why the moment matters. Not because Dai Le asked something outrageous, but because the Prime Minister was given a chance to simply say no one benefited from inside knowledge and he chose to attack her instead.

Dai Le hit a raw nerve, and she deserves credit for asking the question every Australian should want answered.

Quote of the Day

“Rest satisfied with doing well, and leave others to talk of you as they will.”
Pythagoras – Mathematician (582 – 497 BC)

Quote of the Day

“Peace cannot be kept by force; it can only be achieved by understanding.”
Albert Einstein – Physicist (1879 – 1955)