dead dove do not eat in practice
idk who needs to hear this rn but suffering is not noble. take the tylenol
One time when I was younger I was refusing to take headache medicine and my mom said βthe person who invented that medicine is probably so sad you wonβt let them help youβ and now every time I find myself denying medicine I just imagine the saddest scientist making those big wet eyes like βwhy wonβt you let me helpβ and whoop then I take the medicine
scientist when you don't take the medicine they developed to help your pain
As long as you are taking a SAFE dose of it, then it's *good* for you. Pain is bad for the body. The inflammation from prolonged pain can worsen chronic issues and make it harder to heal.
Ibuprofen is best for pain that has inflammation, while acetaminophen doesn't help with inflammation but is more broadly effective on other types of pain. As long as you are taking the recommended dose, you can even take them TOGETHER, since they have different mechanisms of action.
You do need to be aware of how much and how often you are taking any pain medication. Overdoses can be very painful (even lethal.) And if you are in chronic pain often enough that you need more than the safe dose, then you need to look into other medications to manage that pain.
(Also, if you are specifically taking Acetaminophen/Tylenol for your go-to pain management, getting some NAC and taking that with it reduces the risk of overdose AND may strengthen the effect.)
One other thing: NSAIDS (ibuprofen, aspirin, and naproxen being the three big ones) can cause digestive issues with chronic use, including stomach ulcers. That doesn't mean "don't take them," it means "if you're at the point where you're on them all the time, every day, constantly, you should talk to a doctor about either reducing that risk or switching to another medication that doesn't have those side effects."
I donβt have the source for this table anymore but I felt it should be added to this post.
Also please please please consult your doctor if you are on any other type of medication that put large strains on your liver or kidneys before taking any kind of NSAIDs as they can recommend alternatives.
Yes Chronic Kidney Disease and liver disease prevent the use of NSAIDS entirely. Please remember this. Tylenol is the least harmful to these organs. If migraines are your problem, ask neurologist about the triptan drug family. Downside with these is nausea.
I feel that it is worth bringing up again:
As a scientist, this is the way I feel when people in pain don't take the medication that was developed to help with pain:
Especially because as a scientist, I know that pain sensitization is a thing, and that experiencing pain for long periods of time can even train your whole nervous system to be even more reactive to potential pain. So if at all possible, I want my friends who are experiencing pain to try to control that pain as much as possible.
So if you are in pain, and you do not have any massive kidney and liver strain that prohibits you from taking a NSAID or paracetamol/Tylenol?
Please take the pain medicine. Please. Pleeeaaaaaase. I'm a scientist.
yeah i'm a scientist who specializes in designing new pain meds. suffering is not noble, this is exactly how i look when y'all don't manage your pain:
take the meds! i became a scientist in this field explicitly to help people! i became a scientist because i too experience chronic pain and i failed out of literally all pain meds on the market. those of us in this field, we make these things to be used. be safe, follow doses, and if you have questions, ask your doc and pharmacist!
i love this because it's like. why did paleolithic peoples paint the hunt. perhaps to celebrate and honour brave deeds that kept the community alive. perhaps to bring luck for future hunts. perhaps to instruct those who came after how to slay the beast. perhaps to remind us we can: that the mammoth is not unkillable.
this graffiti, too, serves those purposes!
Kinda recontextualizes the hunt for mammoths though
Maybe it wasn't for food
Maybe mammoths are really fucking racist
girl unhinge ur jaw
UNCLENCH. I MEANT UNCLENCH
Ian McKellen says that all gay people should be trans allies
Sir Ian McKellen urges gay people to be better allies to the transgender community.
The legendary actor and Stonewall co-founder joined Itβs a Sin star Olly Alexander for a special LGBT+ History Month talk on TikTok on February 25, Pink News reports.
Sir Ian said:
βI do hear people β gay people β talk about transgender people in very much the same terms as people used to talk about your common or garden gay.
βThe connection between us all is we come under the queer umbrella β we are queer. I quite like being queer actually.
βThe problems that transgender people have with the law are not dissimilar from what used to be the case for us, so I think we should all be allies really.β
This is not the first time the actor has stood up to transphobes.
Speaking to lifestyle magazine Attitude, the veteran star talked about how happy he was about Elliot Page coming out as transgender.
He felt βso disappointedβ with himself for not recognizing the struggles that the then-teenage actor could have been facing when they worked together.
The actor talked about why it is important to be honest with oneself.
Top photo from The Talks.
1. KING SHIT
2. yes
3.βcommon or garden gayβ
girl where do u watch movies
um. online
At one point in film school my professor tried to legally rent a movie to show us and even though she had paid money, it wasn't working. So she went "I'm going to turn around and one of you will find the movie somehow".
Love wins
update: mr spain replied omg
βMe pillaronβ = βI got caughtβ
not to oversimplify an extremely complex discipline but if i had to pick one tip to give people on how to have more productive interactions with children, especially in an instructive sense, its that teaching a kid well is a lot more like improv than it is like error correction and you should always work on minimizing the amount of βno, wrongβ and maximizing the amount of βyes, and?β for example: we have a species of fish at the aquarium that looks a lot like a tiny pufferfish. children are constantly either asking us if thatβs what they are, or confidently telling us thatβs what they are. if you rush to correct them, you risk completely severing their interest in the situation, because 1. kids donβt like to engage with adults who make them feel bad and 2. they were excited because pufferfish are interesting, and you have not given them any reason to be invested in non-pufferfish. Instead, if you say something like βIt looks a LOT like a tiny pufferfish, youβre right. But these guys are even funnier. Wanna know what theyβre called?β you have primed them perfectly for the delightful truth of the Pacific Spiny Lumpsucker
I was in martial arts for years, and in particular I kinda specialized in working with the younger kids.
The two Big Rules when instructing younger students was- 1. Compliment before Critique 2. Donβt say βbutβ, say βnowβ
Praise kids on what they get right first, especially if they are struggling. Like OP said, kids donβt like to engage with people who make them feel bad. They need encouragement when learning new things.
Number two boils down to this. If you tell a kid a compliment, then say βbut you need to fix thisβ, that βbutβ completely negates your compliment. Itβs gone. It was canceled out like adding a negative to a positive. Using βhey, that punch is looking great, now letβs focus on your stanceβ doesnβt verbally cancel out the progress theyβve made. Itβs like theyβve checked off something on their list of stuff to work on.
Wording can absolutely make or break a childβs motivation and interest.
Rebloggling as itβs relevant in a Medical Education context
Honestly I use all of these to teach vet students too. I think people in general respond better to positivity in teaching. Not coddling, but acknowledging when a student got part way to the right answer, or had a good thought process, is something Iβve found keeps students engaged and builds confidence, which encourages them to keep going instead of shutting down and just βgetting throughβ a lab or a rotation
Advise we use at my work (teaching mostly younger kids with a hard time reading) is Specific Positive Support. If they read the word βbriskβ as βbricksβ you go β yeah, you got that first blend, nice job, those can be tricky!β before getting into what they struggled with. Just saying β good workβ or βnice jobβ starts to feel like a platitude and precursor to βhere is everything wrongβ if itβs not paired with proof that the kiddo /actually did do a good job on a thing/. Kids arenβt stupid, they can tell when youβre Just Saying Something Nice to head off a shutdown. But praising the specific things they did well, or got right, even if itβs just β dude, you said that so fast!β or βThanks for matching my question, good job listening.β is a game changer.
Going to a seder at a family friend's place tonight and I have been informed multiple times that someone there has changed her name to Stephanie, but because it seems nobody wants to deadname her, nobody has specified who Stephanie is. So I guess I'm just going to get a surprise Stephanie when I arrive.
I am among the first people to arrive which means I get to play a fun process of elimination game. It is not the family's youngest child so I think that leaves two more. Unless Stephanie is an aunt or a niece or something.
Have learned that Stephanie is the eldest child. Which is very convenient for me because she is the one family member whose name I could not remember anyway.
prof offhandedly said βI used to work on a show called backyardigansβ like itβs nothing.. like itβs just some random showβ¦
blocked and unfollowed sucked and swallowed i donβt care. i donβt care
what will it be, boss? the comfort of misery or the pain of change?