Luraivin - Free AI Image Generator Logo
AI generated: How to save your heart?

SHOULD:
Never expect.
Never demand.
Never assume.

KNOW:
You limits.
Where you stand.
Your role.

DONT:
Get affected.
Get jealous.
Get paranoid.

JUST:
Go
3 views

How to save your heart? SHOULD: Never expect. Never demand. Never assume. KNOW: You limits. Where

Prompt

How to save your heart? SHOULD: Never expect. Never demand. Never assume. KNOW: You limits. Where you stand. Your role. DONT: Get affected. Get jealous. Get paranoid. JUST: Go with the flow And stay happy.

Tags

save
your
heart?
should:
never
expect.
never
demand.
never
assume.
Model
FLUX.1 Schnell (Free)
Size960 × 1440
Created11/10/2025
0

Create Your Own

Generate stunning AI images like this one with Luraivin

Related Images

How to save your heart?

SHOULD:
Never expect.
Never demand.
Never assume.

KNOW:
You limits.
Where you stand.
Your role.

DONT:
Get affected.
Get jealous.
Get paranoid.

JUST:
Go with the flow And stay happy.
Here is your AI Prompt, adjust it as necessary to match your specific needs:
Role: Expert Environmental Consultant
Task: Provide a comprehensive analysis of the pollution affecting rivers, focusing specifically on plastic pollution, oil pollution, air pollution, and microplastics.
Output Format:

1. Introduction (brief overview of river pollution)


2. Detailed sections on each type of pollution (plastic, oil, air, microplastics)



Definition and sources

Environmental and health impacts

Current statistics or findings (if available)


3. Potential solutions or mitigation strategies


4. Conclusion summarizing the key points
Tone: Formal, informative, and authoritative.
Constraints:



Maintain a maximum word count of 800 words.

Use credible sources and cite them appropriately.

Avoid overly technical language; ensure clarity for a general audience.
Example: If discussing plastic pollution, provide examples of common sources (e.g., single-use plastics) and their impact on aquatic life.
Feel free to modify any parts of the prompt to better suit your requirements., cinematic
Here is my script and your work is create multiple image according to script 




🌿 THE PEOPLE WHO NEVER POST — A Heart-Touching Motivational Story

In a suburb outside Chicago, there lived a quiet high-school boy named Evan.
He wasn’t the type who posted selfies, shared achievements, or talked about his goals online.

In fact, most people didn’t even know he had goals.

While others posted about gym progress, new clothes, parties, or their “grind,” Evan quietly walked to the public library every evening. He sat in the same corner, with an old laptop and a notebook full of scribbles.

He wasn’t chasing likes.
He wasn’t chasing validation.
He was chasing improvement.

One day, his friend asked,
“Why don’t you post what you do? People should see your work.”

Evan smiled and said,
“I don’t work for attention. I work for results.”

Months passed.
People still thought he was “inactive,” “boring,” or “offline.”
But in reality, he was building something powerful:

He learned editing

He learned coding

He learned how to turn ideas into projects


Then one morning, the school announced a national competition for young innovators. Evan submitted a project he had been quietly building for five months.

A few weeks later, his name was announced as one of the national finalists.

Everyone was shocked.

“How did he do it?”
“When did he do all this?”
“He never posted anything!”

Evan didn’t say much.
He just continued working—calm, focused, consistent.

Because some people don’t need an audience.
They don’t need praise.
They don’t need to show their journey.

They grow in silence
—and let their success make the noise.


---

✨ Moral

Not everyone making progress shows it online.

Some people are building their future, not their feed.

Silence doesn’t mean inactivity.

Consistency beats attention.
IMPORTANT: Generate with all text in Hindi script only. Changing your life isn't a one-day task; it's the result of consistent, small efforts. Everyone wants to improve their life, be happy, be successful, and fulfill their dreams. But often, people fail to take action in the right direction. If you truly want to change your life, changing a few key habits and thinking patterns can take you to new heights.

The first and most important step is setting goals. A life without goals is like a ship without direction. You must clearly know what you want in life—whether it's a good job, financial stability, good health, or self-confidence. When your goal is clear, your mind automatically starts working in that direction.

The second step is discipline. This is a common quality found in every successful person in the world. Discipline means doing something every day to achieve your goal. Whether it's studying for 20 minutes, doing some exercise, or practicing a new skill. Consistency is what brings about big changes.

The third important step is to change your mindset. Negative thinking prevents anyone from moving forward. If you think, "I can do this," before every task, your energy will increase. Positive thinking boosts self-confidence and gives you the strength to face challenges.

Fourth Step: Focus on improving yourself. Try to learn something new every day. Read good books, learn new skills, and watch interviews with inspiring people. The world is changing rapidly, so it's important to keep learning. This increases your knowledge and opens up opportunities.

Fifth Step: Focus on your health. Good health is the foundation of life. Only if your body is healthy can you work with full energy. Take a short walk every day, practice yoga, and eat nutritious food. Reduce habits like using your mobile phone and staying up late.

Sixth Step: Use your time wisely. Time waits for no one. Only those who value time move forward. Create a daily timetable and avoid wasting time on useless things, such as unnecessary social media scrolling.

Seventh Solution—Associate with good people. The people you surround yourself with have a direct impact on your thoughts and habits. Try to surround yourself with positive, hardworking, and motivated people. Such people encourage you and show you the right direction.

And most importantly—believe in yourself. Every big change begins with belief. If you believe in yourself, nothing will be impossible.
IMPORTANT: Generate with all text in Hindi script only. Love God.
He will never break your heart.
Amen. flower
Hook And Introduction (1–2 minutes)

For as long as humans have dreamed of space, one problem has never gone away: rockets are loud, dangerous, and incredibly expensive.  
Every launch is like throwing away a skyscraper full of fuel, just to place a few tons of payload in orbit.[1][2]

But imagine a future where reaching space is as calm as taking a high‑speed lift in a skyscraper.  
No fire. No roar. Just a quiet cabin, smooth acceleration, and a window view as Earth slowly falls away beneath your feet.[1][3]

This is the story of how humanity built its first **space elevator**, and then a gigantic **spaceline** stretching all the way to the Moon.  
A pair of machines so ambitious that they turned space travel from a rare event into a daily commute.[4][5]

***

## Chapter 1: The Dream Of A Rope To Space (2 minutes)

The idea began as what many people called “impossible sci‑fi.”  
Scientists imagined an ultra‑strong cable fixed near Earth’s equator, reaching all the way up beyond geostationary orbit—about 35,786 kilometers above Earth—where satellites seem to hang motionless over the same point on the ground.[4][6]

At the top of this cable, they proposed a huge counterweight: a station or asteroid that would pull the tether outward, balancing the pull of gravity on the lower part of the cable.  
Earth’s rotation would keep the whole structure in tension, like a guitar string held tight by two pegs.[4][7]

For decades, the materials just weren’t strong enough.  
Steel would snap under its own weight; even advanced fibers could not handle the stress.[7][8]

But slowly, new nano‑materials and composite fibers appeared in labs.  
They were light, flexible, and stronger than anything humanity had ever made—finally strong enough, on paper, to imagine a real cable to space.[2][8]

Engineers stopped asking “Is this fantasy?” and began asking a scarier question:  
“What happens if we actually build it?”

***

## Chapter 2: Building The First Space Elevator (3 minutes)

The construction started far from cities, on a massive floating platform in the equatorial ocean.  
This location minimized storms, gave clear sky access, and, most importantly, sat directly under the point in the sky where the geostationary station would hover.[4][3]

The process began from space, not from the ground.  
A spacecraft carried a thin “seed cable” out to geostationary orbit, then slowly unrolled it—one end down toward Earth, the other up to the counterweight far above.[6][7]

For months, the cable looked delicate and terrifying.  
Every engineer knew that until it was thickened and reinforced, a single large meteor or debris hit could ruin the entire project.[2][9]

Robotic climbers crawled up and down the initial strand, carrying more material and layering it again and again.  
With each trip, the tether grew thicker, stronger, and safer, just like adding more and more threads to a rope.[3][6]

Finally, after years of patient reinforcement, the day came when the elevator could carry its first human passengers.  
The world watched as the **first orbital climber** docked at the ocean platform, doors sliding open like a futuristic train that somehow went straight up.[1][2]

***

## Chapter 3: The First Ride To Orbit (3 minutes)

You are one of the first passengers.  
You step into the cabin and feel the gentle vibration as the doors close and magnetic clamps grip the cable.[1][2]

Instead of a countdown, there is a soft chime.  
The car begins to rise—slowly at first, then faster, though you feel almost nothing thanks to careful acceleration control.[1][7]

Below you, the platform shrinks.  
The blue ocean turns into a circular patch, then a swirl on a spinning globe. The sky fades from blue to dark purple, and within a few hours, to deep black sprinkled with hard, bright stars.[1][7]

Inside the cabin, a display explains what is happening:  
You are not just going up; you are also gaining sideways speed because the cable rotates with Earth.  
By the time you reach geostationary height, you are circling the planet once every 24 hours, matching Earth’s rotation perfectly.[4][6]

Outside, other climbers crawl along the tether—some going up with satellites and station supplies, others coming down loaded with materials from orbital factories.  
Compared to rockets, these electric climbers use only a fraction of the energy per kilogram, paid back by years of cheap, repeated trips.[3][2]

When you finally dock at the geostationary station, there is no gravity for a moment—just a gentle drift as you push yourself through a hatch into a large rotating ring, where artificial gravity gives you your footing back.[3][2]

***

## Chapter 4: How The Elevator Changes Everything (2–3 minutes)

Within a few years, the space elevator transforms human activity in orbit.  
What used to be the rare launch of a single heavy rocket becomes dozens of climber trips every day.[3][2]

Bulk cargo like fuel, water, and construction materials moves up the cable cheaply, allowing the creation of:  
- Giant space solar power stations beaming energy back to Earth.  
- Rotating habitats where thousands of people live and work.  
- Massive telescopes assembled in orbit instead of cramped rocket fairings.[3][9]

At the same time, valuable resources from space start coming down the cable.  
Metal from asteroid mining, lunar oxygen, and rare materials extracted in microgravity are shipped to Earth orbit and then gently lowered to the surface.[9][10]

The elevator becomes a **two‑way artery**: Earth feeding space with people and technology, and space feeding Earth with resources and energy.  
Space is no longer an exotic destination; it has become an extension of Earth’s economy.[3][9]

But for visionary scientists, the elevator is only the first step.  
Because once building vertically becomes routine, a new idea appears:  
“What if we built a cable that doesn’t just reach space—but all the way to the Moon?”

***

## Chapter 5: The Spaceline – Bridge To The Moon (3 minutes)

A group of astrophysicists propose something bold: a **Spaceline**, a cable anchored to the Moon and stretched toward Earth.[5][11]

Instead of attaching one end to Earth’s surface, which demands ultra‑extreme materials, this design anchors the cable on the Moon and lets it hang downwards, deep into Earth’s gravity well.  
The lower tip doesn’t touch Earth but floats tens of thousands of kilometers above it—close enough for spacecraft or even the space elevator to dock.[5][12]

Because the Moon’s gravity and orbital motion pull on the cable, and Earth’s gravity tugs on the lower end, the whole structure remains under tension and stable, like a tight string stretched between two moving hands.[5][13]

Engineers build the anchor on the Moon, near its equator, and slowly unfurl a long ribbon of advanced material.  
One end is fixed to the lunar surface; the other reaches toward a point between Earth and Moon, then even closer to Earth.[12][13]

At its lowest point, the Spaceline hovers in space, motionless relative to Earth’s center, waiting like a cosmic pier where ships can dock.  
From there, vehicles can ride up or down the cable to the lunar surface without huge fuel tanks.[5][11]

The first test is terrifying.  
A small robotic climber attaches near the middle of the cable and crawls toward the Moon. The whole world listens for news: Will the tether hold? Will the oscillations stay controlled?  
Hours later, the message arrives: **Success.** Humanity has just created its first permanent physical link between a planet and its moon.[5][13]

***

## Chapter 6: Life In The Age Of Elevators And Spacelines (2–3 minutes)

A decade later, a child born on Earth can describe a trip to the Moon not as a rocket launch, but as a two‑step journey:  
First, take the space elevator from the equator up to geostationary orbit.  
Then transfer to a Spaceline car and glide along the cable to the Moon’s surface.[4][5]

Students go on educational trips to lunar observatories, where they see the universe with crystal clarity through giant telescopes free from atmospheric blur.  
Construction crews work on Moon‑based solar farms, beaming clean energy back to Earth with almost no pollution.[12][14]

The Moon becomes humanity’s **shipyard**.  
Using local rock, metal, and ice, engineers build vehicles that never have to waste energy escaping Earth’s deep gravity well.[14][9]

From the Moon and the Spaceline hub, missions depart for Mars, the asteroid belt, and beyond.  
What was once a dead gray world now glows with lights along the terminator line—cities, laboratories, and ports, all fed by the quiet traffic along the Spaceline.[12][13]

Back on Earth, launches of massive chemical rockets become rare events.  
The sky is no longer scarred by constant plumes of fire. Instead, most activity happens along invisible paths: the cable to orbit and the bridge to the Moon.[1][2]

***

## Closing Narration (1–2 minutes)

Standing on the observation deck of the lunar anchor station, you look back at Earth.  
A thin line shimmers in the sunlight, stretching from the blue planet up into the blackness—a human‑made thread connecting two worlds.[12][13]

Once, oceans separated continents, and crossing them took courage and months of risk.  
Then railways and airplanes shrank the Earth, turning distant lands into neighbors.[15][2]

Now, space elevators and spacelines have done the same thing to the sky.  
They have turned low Earth orbit into the new “nearby city,” and the Moon into a reachable destination, not for a few heroic astronauts, but for anyone willing to buy a ticket.[3][5]

The narrator ends:

“Future historians may say humanity truly left its cradle not on the day of the first rocket launch,  
but on the day we built a road to the stars…  
and then, quietly, started using it every single day.”  

***

This text is already close to a 15‑minute script at normal narration speed (with pauses and visuals). If you want, the next step can be:  
- breaking this into **scene-by-scene segments** (with timestamps, e.g., 0:00–1:00, 1:00–3:00), and  
- adding **visual suggestions** for each scene (what AI images or stock clips to