Orgasm denial but in the same way people talk about the moon landing being faked
oh there's "video evidence" that orgasms are real because you saw it in a porn? you know those are paid actors, right?
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Keni

if i look back, i am lost

JVL
hello vonnie
Peter Solarz
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Andulka
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
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KIROKAZE
DEAR READER
untitled

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@chamespond
Orgasm denial but in the same way people talk about the moon landing being faked
oh there's "video evidence" that orgasms are real because you saw it in a porn? you know those are paid actors, right?
W-what?
Same man!
Finally a Japanese man that gets some heat
You can tell by his wifeās face that this man fucks
The cutest duck Iāve ever seen.Ā
viaĀ @flora_and_fowl
domestication syndrome is one of the coolest findings from recent genetics
Yes!
Basically scientists have found that if you start selecting for people-friendly animals, you see a bunch of hypothetically unrelated traits start showing up in all sorts of mammal species: floppy ears, piebald/patterned coats, etc.
This is true for everything from cows to dogs to rats! One of the coolest long term studies on this has been the Russian fox experiments.
So essentially the science goes like this:
You have two copies of every genes, one from each parent.
We tend to simplify genetics, and say that for every single gene you have it is random,l coin flip which copy you pass on to you offspring. We also tend think of genes as a 1:1 ratio of genesā>traits.
But! This is not quite the case.
Genes have a specific physical location and order relative to each other on your chromosomes, and the chance of genes being inherited together goes up the closer together they are located. This means random, unrelated traits can wind up being more commonly inherited together in specific patterns just because those genes are located close together, and you donāt get that completely random reshuffling of two parentās traits. Some of them tend to stay āstuckā together.
This is called linkage, and itās why you often see red hair, pale skin, and freckles together, for example.
The second factor that plays into this is that a lot of times 1 gene affects several different traits (or several different genes affect 1 trait). This means that sometimes you really *canāt* untangle two traits because they have a similar cause. For example, say genes for increased aggression are responsible both for making a spider a better hunter (pro) and making a spider more likely to eat its offspring (con). Because the same gene is the cause of both things, natural selection canāt really untangle them.
Circling back to the redhead/freckles/pale skin example, these traits are affected by a number of different genes, but also one gene in particular: MCR1, a gene that changes how your body responds to hormones promoting melanin production. Again, one gene related to pigment production can affect a BUNCH of different traits. (And also skin cancer risk. Fun!)
Domestication Syndrome in mammals turns out to be due to both linkage and genes affect by multiple traits!
See, when we domestic animals we want them to be friendlier/less aggressive, which normally translates to less FEARFUL.
And it turns out that the same genes involved in adrenal responses and other stress reactions are also involved in melanin, cartilage, and bone production. So when we domesticate animals we get these recurring changes in pigmentation (white patches, piebald costs), floppy ears (cartilage), shorter muzzles and other changes in physical stature (bone growth), etc.
We also wind up selecting for a lot of neotenic genes in generalā that is, retention of childhood traits into adulthood. Thatās because baby animals tend to have lots of friendly/trusting/biddable/curious traits we are looking for.
And honestly, who can say no to a face like this?
ps, since it was mentioned:
the same genes involved in domestication probably help animals form social groups in general. if you need to get along with and trust strangers you need a decrease in the panic/aggression genes.
cats, for example, probably domesticated themselves when they started living close to each other and to humans to feed off of pests in grain silos.
and yeah, some some recent theories suggest humans may have ādomesticatedā themselves:
so basically youāre saying that when we breed animals to be friends, they become friend-shaped.
āWhy do you like Spider-Verse so much?ā
Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse (2018)
The Curious Creations of Christine McConnellĀ | 1x01Ā Snacks for Strays
The Curious Creations of Christine McConnell (2018-)
Watch: Kristen Bell opens up about the mental health double standard and how she manages her own struggle.
Follow @this-is-life-actually
Hit reblog on this so hard
SHOUT OUT TO KRISTEN BELLāS MOM THOUGH? WHAT KIND OF FANTASTIC SELF-AWARE PARENTING, WELL DONE MA'AM
I fucking hate harry potter for forever ruining wizards. They used to be badass old men who traveled on boats and killed cool shit like dragons and made potions now they just fucking go to a shitty school and donāt learn math or postmodernism
Being a supportive parent to your trans daughter AND standing up to her trolls and mocking them openly. Good parenting.
Colin Mochrie - A+
Spider plant, spider plant
Does some things that spiders canāt.
Clones itself in a pot
Makes the air fresh when itās not.
Iām⦠gonna steal this spider plant.
Spider plant, spider plant.
Ā Friendly cubicle spider plant.
Ā Kinda like Fieriās hairĀ
But takes formaldehyde from the air.Ā
Look out, i stole a spider plant.
Great lesson in empathy, you never know what someone is going through.
āAnd I put on weight. Big fāing dealā is gonna be my new mantra
Wentworth Miller is really good