
Good night folks.

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You’re welcome, I have a brother-in-law that’s an O as well.Thanks, Troyer, that was interesting.![]()
I just seen this on FB. Did you post it there as well? My mom had the rare 0 That is a universal donor but can only receive the same type.She needed it a few times and it took a couple days to get it to her.The Mystery of Blood Type O: America's Ancestral Code
Between the mountains of the Andes, the dense Amazon forests, and the vast deserts of North America, flows an enigma that connects the original peoples: Type O blood. This blood type, devoid of antigens A and B, is not only the oldest in mankind, but in America appears to be an almost universal common legacy, a biological echo of an ancestral past.
In the 1980s, scientists were surprised to discover that 99% of Arizona's Navajo people shared this blood type. Years later, at the heights of the Peruvian Andes, something even more shocking was documented: 100% of the Quechua community possessed O type blood! Similar stories are replicated in the Brazilian jungles, where 92% of Yanomami share this trait, and in the indigenous communities of Oaxaca, Mexico, where it reaches an astonishing 98%.
What mystery does this genetic uniformity hide? Is it the footprint of a mother civilization or a millennial adaptation to the environment? Type O blood is more than a trait; it's a living symbol of identity, a code that tells a story of resilience, unity, and connection across the centuries.
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I am part of this clanThe Mystery of Blood Type O: America's Ancestral Code
Between the mountains of the Andes, the dense Amazon forests, and the vast deserts of North America, flows an enigma that connects the original peoples: Type O blood. This blood type, devoid of antigens A and B, is not only the oldest in mankind, but in America appears to be an almost universal common legacy, a biological echo of an ancestral past.
In the 1980s, scientists were surprised to discover that 99% of Arizona's Navajo people shared this blood type. Years later, at the heights of the Peruvian Andes, something even more shocking was documented: 100% of the Quechua community possessed O type blood! Similar stories are replicated in the Brazilian jungles, where 92% of Yanomami share this trait, and in the indigenous communities of Oaxaca, Mexico, where it reaches an astonishing 98%.
What mystery does this genetic uniformity hide? Is it the footprint of a mother civilization or a millennial adaptation to the environment? Type O blood is more than a trait; it's a living symbol of identity, a code that tells a story of resilience, unity, and connection across the centuries.
View attachment 4089742
I'm up, but hopefully going to get some real needed sleep. I've had a horrible day. Pretty bad. My head. I wish they could do something about this. My BP was up again, but it didn't cause the real woozy. Only thing I can do is lay around. I never know what the next day will be like.IDK how Im still up. 5 hrs of broken sleep just don't get it.
Gnight H20 and any others. Sweet dreams