blueberry skins yum
Sade Olutola

blake kathryn
i don't do bad sauce passes
cherry valley forever

Andulka
will byers stan first human second

tannertan36

Discoholic 🪩
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
NASA
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Mike Driver

Janaina Medeiros
trying on a metaphor

@theartofmadeline
DEAR READER

titsay
dirt enthusiast
noise dept.
Three Goblin Art

seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States
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@andthatstheteasis
blueberry skins yum
He’s like the weak stupid pants, and I like them
nice album
being gay is so hard yes i want to be punk yes i want be a cowboy yes i want to be a pirate yes i want to be cute and pastel yes i want to be a cryptid yes i want to have a dark academia aesthetic no i will not be any of these because i cannot commit to anything and i am worried people will judge me
That trans experience when you catch sight of yourself and....you don’t immediately hate it?? Like is this sense of contentment and being able to identify with oneself what cis people have all the time???? WTH??? Being comfortable? Wild.
(clears my throat and stands at a podium) cock
Gay🌪irl
Ann Jones tried everything short of surgery for her chronic migraines, which have plagued her since she was a child.
“They’ve actually gotten worse in my old age,” says Jones, who is 70 years old and lives in Tucson, Ariz.
Jones would have as many as two dozen migraines a month.
Over the years, some treatments might work initially, but the effects would prove temporary. Other medications had such severe side effects she couldn’t stay on them.
In 2018, her doctor mentioned a study that was taking place nearby at the University of Arizona: Researchers were testing if daily exposure to green light could relieve migraines and other kinds of chronic pain.
Jones was skeptical.
“This is going to be one more thing that doesn’t work,” she thought to herself.
But she brushed aside the hesitation and enrolled in the study anyway.
It began with her spending two hours each day in a dark room with only a white light, which served as the control. In the second half of the study, she swapped out the conventional light for a string of green LED lights.
For more than a month, Jones didn’t notice any change in her symptoms. But close to the six-week mark, there was a big shift.
She began going days in a row without migraines. Even when the headaches did come, they weren’t as intense as they had been before the green light therapy.
Some patients in the study of about 25 people noticed a change in just a few days. For others, it took several weeks. Dr. Mohab Ibrahim, the migraine study’s principal investigator and an associate professor at the University of Arizona, says that on average, people experienced a 60% decrease in the intensity of their migraines and a drop from 20 migraines a month to about six.
Researchers Explore A Drug-Free Idea To Relieve Chronic Pain: Green Light
Photo: Will Stone for NPR Caption: Ann Jones has been spending two hours each day in front of a green LED light — an experimental treatment aimed at alleviating migraines and other forms of chronic pain.
amazing
Same Energy