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“Bachon… aaj main tumhein ek pyari si kahani sunata hoon… Ek dafa ka zikr hai, ek chhota s

2026-04-06

“Bachon… aaj main tumhein ek pyari si kahani sunata hoon… Ek dafa ka zikr hai, ek chhota sa larka tha jo hamesha sach bolta tha. Ek din usay raste mein ek purse mila, jisme bohat saare paise thay… Ab uske paas do raaste thay… ya to wo paise apne paas rakh leta, ya phir uske asal malik tak wapas pohanchata… Bachon, tum batao… tum kya kartay? (Thoda rukna…) Us larkay ne dil mein socha… “Allah sab dekh raha hai…” Is liye us ne imandari ka faisla kiya, aur purse uske malik tak pohanchaya… Jab malik ko apna purse wapas mila, to wo bohat khush hua… aur us ne larkay ko dua di… Bachon… yaad rakho… Sachai aur imandari hamesha insaan ko izzat aur kamyabi deti hai… Is liye hamesha sach bolna… chahe mushkil hi kyun na ho…”

ID: 919d8a07-7168-4fdf-ad09-0e70ca314d5c

Created: 2026-04-06T12:02:23.511Z

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When a physical injury occurs, the local stem cell population is expected to rush to the site to begin the reconstruction of muscle, skin, or bone. In an older system, these cells may have entered a state of quiescence, a deep biological sleep that makes them slow to respond to the call for help. The chemical "alarm" sent by the injured tissue might be just as loud as it ever was, but the receivers on the stem cells have become less sensitive. This delay is why a simple bruise or a small cut that would have vanished in days during childhood might linger for weeks in later life. The environment surrounding these cells also changes, becoming more rigid and less supportive of growth. This niche degradation means that even a healthy stem cell might find it difficult to function if the "soil" it lives in has become depleted of the necessary growth factors. Scientists have observed that the signaling molecules passing between cells become muffled by a rising tide of molecular noise. This is built for bedtime listening, a way to understand the quiet slowing of our internal engines. Exhaustion eventually reaches the genomic level, where the repeated demand for new cells finally takes its toll on the stem cell's own DNA. Every time a repair cell divides to create a new tissue cell, it risks a small error in its genetic code. To protect the body from these errors, the stem cell may simply stop dividing altogether, choosing permanent dormancy over the risk of passing on a mutation. This self

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