Flashy Flash
cherry valley forever
Keni
Show & Tell
Monterey Bay Aquarium
occasionally subtle
Acquired Stardust
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Andulka
Peter Solarz

No title available
Stranger Things
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Claire Keane
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
AnasAbdin
taylor price
trying on a metaphor

Janaina Medeiros

shark vs the universe
hello vonnie

seen from Indonesia
seen from Israel
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Spain

seen from Israel

seen from Malaysia

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seen from Germany
@flashsimpp
Flashy Flash
the execution of all saiflash fans will take place tomorrow at 7 a.m
鏡 ソニフラ r18 漫画
None of Class S can drive, nor do they have licenses to do so.
Child Emporer and Metal Bat are minors so that rules them out. Metal Bat also probably lost his due to road rage
Bang might as well be legally dead, but he doesn't drive because walking is healthier.
Samurai's don't drive.
Tornado just floats everywhere.
Drive Knight can turn into a car, you can't ban him from driving so no license anyway
King most likely has road anxiety.
Puri Puri is in jail so no license
Pig God can't fit in a car
Superalloy Darkshine jogs everywhere because it's healthier.
Watchdog man can't drive because dogs don't drive.
Flashy Flash nyooms everywhere.
Zombieman IS legally dead so no license.
Metal Knight never leaves his house so no.
Tanktop master refuses to get a license because they wouldn't let him wear a tanktop for his photo
Saitama doesn't drive, so Genos doesn't drive.
Finally deranged Genos
Had to do this in such a short time, exams are killing me
Its like 2 am here and i need some sleep, dang- I WANT TO DO MORE
Opm x buckshot roulette (one shot roulette) by @yoooootakunis !
did i ever ask if genos feels pain? i feel like it’s pretty obvious that he doesnt but im too tired to remember why i wanted to know so badly…
Short answer: yes, but not easily.
Long answer: alas, it’ll have to wait for a weekend. Ask me again if you wish. :)
@gofancyninjaworld if youre ever free, id still very much like to hear ur thoughts on this!
Thank you so kindly for prompting me. So this is a tricky topic, not just because the subject of pain is complex, but also because it’s one that impinges much more readily into the real world than initially meets the eye. I’ll try to make my least preachy fist of it.
“Most things don’t exist. Don’t let it bother you” – Ruollf, 1999
I do date myself here. Once upon a time, I was an engineering undergraduate student, and the above statement was one of the many quips my mechanics professor would throw out. It was absurd enough for me to remember and the older I grow, the more true it’s turned out to be.
In all my ramblings, there are just two things I’d like to have as takeaways.
Pain is processed in the brain.
When someone says (or acts as if) it hurts, believe them.
What is pain?
There is no objective measure of pain. There are no pain molecules that can be detected. Pain is a sensation that is processed and interpreted by a person’s brain as being noxious. It is always and entirely all in your head. Doesn’t make it any less real. While pain is thought of as being a response to damage to the body, no amount of physical damage to one’s body can definitely be linked to a given experience of pain – some people don’t feel pain at all, many people have a reduced ability to feel pain, and many have a heightened ability. And quite a lot of pain has no immediate physical source. It is entirely subjective – you will always only have the individual’s report of it to go on. The same is true for you: to others, they have to believe that your report of pain is true.
The issue that comes in is that believing that others feel pain reflects quite horribly on our empathy and prejudices, with people believing that those they are biased against feel less pain. It has real consequences: in healthcare, in the justice and corrective services, in teaching… doubting or discounting the pain of others causes real distress, measurable harm and needless death [1,2]. Pain can’t be measured – other people’s pain are a fiction you have to choose to believe and it’s dangerously easy to refuse to do it.
Anyway, let’s go on. Does Genos feel pain was your question. The answer, as I said, is yes. But it’s a question that needs to be picked apart.
Easy pain
I call it easy because this is the sort of pain we all find easy to appreciate: physical damage provoking a pain response. It’s probably the question you’re asking. The answer for Genos is yes. The prosthetic parts of his body are not pain-sensitive; he can feel touch – watch him turn when someone taps him on the shoulder, but not pain. Just as well given how hard he uses them. Or not: if they hurt, there’s some things he wouldn’t do.
someone didn’t get the memo about not sticking your arms in the rotating blades
However, when it comes to damage to his somatic body proper, it does hurt. The clearest place is his upper back. When the Deep Sea King spat acid at the little girl and Genos caught it, there was no question it really hurt as it sank in.
Some people like to doubt that and say it’s only in the manga or the anime, so here’s a look at webcomic, manga and anime (link). No, no question: it looked like it hurt, he is acting like it hurts. It hurts.
That hurt: top, the webcomic, middle, the manga, and bottom, the aftermath, needing to be pieced back together under general anaesthesia.
His upper back has become even more heavily-armoured since:
Just to drive the point home, you can dismantle most of his body save head, neck and upper torso without causing Genos any distress, at least not in the short-term.
I had really wanted to be a fly on the wall for this conversation – it sounds like it was intense. But alas, JC Staff couldn’t find the space…
So. In short, if you can get at Genos’s body proper, it will hurt him. But you have your work cut out to do so.
Medium pain
This kind of pain is a little bit harder to appreciate. As I said, pain is something the brain processes in response to messages received from nerves. The trouble is nerves don’t always give accurate reports of what’s actually going on and the brain doesn’t always interpret the information it is given accurately. The first question Dr Kuseno asked Genos when the latter received a new body is an extremely important one: ‘how does it feel?‘ (chapter 80). Even if nothing is mechanically wrong, feeling good isn’t a trivial thing: getting good, appropriate sensation back from his body is just as important as being able to move it.
Who is touched by this in real life? Anyone whose body interfaces with a prosthetic, whether it’s exterior ones you can see or interior ones like the million people a year who get joint replacements. Many times, inappropriate pain is a sign of poor fit or infection, but sometimes it’s not and it can be very frustrating to get relief. An even bigger subsection are people who have experienced major injury and find that long after the original injury is healed, it still hurts. Cancer survivors who have had chemotherapy often find themselves contending with inappropriate pain from the damage it has done to their peripheral nerves. How medical practitioners deal (or fail to deal with) these kinds of pain is a topic well above my pay grade and the remit of this answer.
Hard pain
As I said earlier, pain is processed in the brain. Just because a body part doesn’t exist any longer doesn’t mean that its representation within the brain has gone anywhere and this leads to a phenomenon known as phantom pain, which sounds more cute than it is. While it’s called phantom pain, the actual sensations felt range from pain to itching, cramping, senses that the limb or body part is distorted in shape and many more disturbing feelings. A good 80% of amputees do get phantom pain. Shockingly, only 17% of patients who complain of phantom pain get the help they need, with many of them told that they’re mentally disturbed. [3] It’s completely unacceptable given that there are many therapies available. When it comes to Genos, if you’re asking if a quadruple amputee with additional extensive defleshing and major organ resection feels pain, not only is the answer yes, but hell yes. The only question is how much and where? The only thing we can say is that in Genos’s case, he’s got it managed well enough not to interfere with daily life. The good news about phantom pains and sensations is that for most people it’s not constant and does usually diminish with time but it can and does flare up intermittently even after many years. That’s our weird brains for you. [You will notice that I’ve not touched on somatic symptom disorders where no organic cause can be found for the pain, but the pain is absolutely real. Again, it’s outside the remit of the question.]
Wrapping up
I hope you’ve not minded this whistle-stop tour of what is a really big and complex topic. Pain is entirely a phenomenon in your head. It doesn’t mean it’s not real. As someone with his brain and all mental faculties intact, Genos has 100% of what a person needs to feel pain. And he seems to. Which ought to be good enough for anyone. [4]
Asides
[1] Patient–physician gender concordance and increased mortality among female heart attack patients. Brad N. Greenwood, Seth Carnahan, Laura Huang. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Volume 115, Issue 34 Aug 2018, Pages 8569-8574; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1800097115
(While there are a lot of studies showing that female physicians outperform male ones across the board, this study focusses on heart attacks, where assumptions made about the patient by the physician really matter. They find that not only patients treated by female physicians more likely to survive regardless of gender, but male doctors are particularly bad when it comes to treating women. The kicker? When male physicians work alongside female ones, they stop killing so many of their female patients.)
[2] Jazmine Ulloa , 22 April 2019, ’These California bills would train nurses, judges and police how to spot their own biases’. Los Angeles Times. Available at: https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-implicit-bias-legislation-california-20190422-story.html Accessed: 30 May 2020
[3] Phantom limb pain L. Nikolajsen, T. S. Jensen BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia, Volume 87, Issue 1, 1 June 2001, Pages 107–116, https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/87.1.107
[4] Then again, I know the occasional dumb-ass who would still deny that Genos feels pain. For which Jeremy Bentham’s question might suffice: “…the question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? “ I trust that even the most mind-dead would deny that he can and does suffer.
Found it, @the-daiz :)
It’s nearly five years old but there’s not much I would change about it, so I’ll leave it here.
Names and reputation
Chapter 85 - Is it because I'm Caped Baldy
There's something to be said about Hero association and it's tendency to give awful hero names to random heroes. In the latest chapter 221 - Emerging Power, Hero Names Victims Association wants Saitama to become their executive because he's the highest ranked person with a name that bad.
And not without good reason, because their names are just as bad. Red nose, Dr. Grumpy Pervert and The Great Degenerate are honestly wild and the Hero association commitee should be fired for making people put up with such names. Names have power and they can easily give a hero bad reputation simply by associating them with the name. Nobody wants to be named pervert or degenerate or toupee or what have you.
{...🄶🄾🄾🄳 🄴🄽🄳🄸🄽🄶...}
Day 3 of Wanpanmas: Snow
Decided to do a bunch of headcanons with OPM men as boyfriends <3
Metal Bat Headcanon
He's a singer (100% trust)
He sometimes let his sister do his hair
hates school (skips sometimes school)
Has bad grades
Prob eats McDonald's 3 times a week cuz of Zenko
Has many fangirls in school
Teachers scold him for not hiding his metal bat or leaving it home
Back then in primary school he got prob bullied for his name being just "Bad"
beats up people who provoke him too much
listens to rock or classic music
loves Baseball
no one knows his actual eye color
ok that's it for now if I think of anything else i write a part 2 :)
The Figure with the core I made in this summer.
I didn't make it movable. Instead, I could concentrate on making it look cooler.
I had been thinking of making him with the core since when I found transparent paint that glow blue only in UV light.
It can be seen hardly after assembling that I also made background of the inner chest part glow.
I wasn't planning to paint eye at the first. Noticing it definitely lacks the soul, I purchased red immediately.
Added electric effects⚡
Hadn't it been for the past attempt, I couldn't reach today's progress. Hmm... the latest one looks much more thicker compared to the past one. Sadly, many joints of past one is broken and it's no longer safe to move them now.
The hair evolution (in the order of letter z stroke) Nomad Sculpt helped me a lot make his hair style in the latest two works.
When it comes to create his head, I must think about printablity and assembling simultaneously. Then also about difficulty of painting mask (wanna make masking easier or need none by dividing parts), and in the last, form 360° looks right. So actually, every time I make his head drives me almost insane because of these reasons. But I believe I'm getting closer to his true image.
↠ amai mask icons ~♡
like/reblog if you save © on twitter @mewseok
transparent hi3 official 6th anniversary art by starshadowmagician
Blizzard and Tornado