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art blog(derogatory)
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trying on a metaphor
One Nice Bug Per Day

Product Placement

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Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature

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Claire Keane
Cosimo Galluzzi

oozey mess

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Kaledo Art
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Cosmic Funnies

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@ihasashark
hurr hurr I'm a human body hurr hurr I'm gonna solve all my problems using mucus
2024 is the year we stop “consuming” and go back to “reading/watching/listening to/playing” things
Is it OK to still consume cum or
no you have to "guzzle" it this year
This building always attracts my attention. Ever since I started working in the medical center. Is it a sign?
Can confirm, definitely a sign that led to me exploring a new career. On Monday I will be graduating with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing! Four years later...wow. What a fucking ride.
i guess im just too fucking dumb to lucid dream. cant ever realize im in a dream, i’ll look around me like damn i’m in my old elementary school and my teeth are falling out and im naked? well shit guess this is my life now. got fooled by my subconscious again lads
actually i love growing older and learning how i work as a person like realizing what kinds of fabrics feel best on my skin or what brand of yogurt i like best or how I want to be touched. watching myself change, enjoying brussel sprouts when I used to hate them as a child, understanding why I got angry in that one conversation 10 years ago… there are so many mysteries inside me that i have yet to unravel and there will always be more and sometimes i think maybe its all worth it
On the early morning of december 17th im going to post the peanut butter baby, an image rich in skin tone pixels, like 50 times in a row, and get banned
They dont like it already
Hold on lemme post another one
Like clockwork
WHY DO I PROCRASTINATE????????? i yell from a mountain top because i would rather climb a mountain than do my homework
This is still very true!
where do I see myself in five years? hopefully replying to multi-paragraph work emails with: cool! thanks.-Sent From My iPhone
haha this is pretty cool because I currently do that now, except not from an iPhone :)
“Breathe. It’s okay. You’re going to be okay. Just breathe. Breathe, and remind yourself of all the times in the past you felt this scared. All of the times you felt this anxious and this overwhelmed. All of the times you felt this level of pain. And remind yourself how each time, you made it through. Life has thrown so much at you, and despite how difficult things have been, you’ve survived. Trust that this struggle is part of the process. And trust that as long as you don’t give up and keep pushing forward, no matter how hopeless things seem, you will make it.”
— Daniell Koepke (via mednerds)
The thing about adhd is like if you hit any sort of roadblock while doing a task, no matter how small an obstacle, it’s gonna throw you completely off track.
like for example:
I’m hungry and I want to eat. But when I get to the kitchen I realize I have to cook something. It’s not that hard but it’s something in the middle of where I am now and me eating. So I end up not eating.
I’m cleaning my room. There are dirty clothes all over the floor. But my laundry basket is full and so I can’t put my dirty clothes where they are supposed to go. Now my momentum for cleaning is shut down and I go back to something I know how to do, like change playlists.
and that’s on executive dysfunction
oppression isn’t generational and trying to frame politics as “the old people are wrong and the young people are right” erases the fact that there are old people who have been fighting the good fight for decades and the fact that there are young people who are literally nazis
Plus while there might be less old people fighting the good fight it’s usually because they were killed or were part of the minorities that have poor living conditions that kill you early
As came up recently, in fact: Seniors Are More Conservative Because the Poor Don’t Survive to Become Seniors
Big suffering!
The twelve months of 2020
How Moderna’s Vaccine Works
Moderna, a Massachusetts-based vaccine developer, partnered with the National Institutes of Health to develop and test a coronavirus vaccine known as mRNA-1273. A clinical trial demonstrated that the vaccine has an efficacy rate of 94.1 percent in preventing Covid-19.
A Piece of the Coronavirus
The SARS-CoV-2 virus is studded with proteins that it uses to enter human cells. These so-called spike proteins make a tempting target for potential vaccines and treatments.
Like the Pfizer vaccine, Moderna’s vaccine is based on the virus’s genetic instructions for building the spike protein.
mRNA Inside an Oily Shell
The vaccine uses messenger RNA, genetic material that our cells read to make proteins. The molecule — called mRNA for short — is fragile and would be chopped to pieces by our natural enzymes if it were injected directly into the body. To protect their vaccine, Pfizer and BioNTech wrap mRNA in oily bubbles made of lipid nanoparticles.
Because of their fragility, the mRNA molecules will quickly fall apart at room temperature. Moderna’s vaccine will need to be refrigerated, and should be stable for up to six months when shipped and stored at -4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Entering a Cell
After injection, the vaccine particles bump into cells and fuse to them, releasing mRNA. The cell’s molecules read its sequence and build spike proteins. The mRNA from the vaccine is eventually destroyed by the cell, leaving no permanent trace.
Some of the spike proteins form spikes that migrate to the surface of the cell and stick out their tips. The vaccinated cells also break up some of the proteins into fragments, which they present on their surface. These protruding spikes and spike protein fragments can then be recognized by the immune system.
Spotting the Intruder
When a vaccinated cell dies, the debris will contain many spike proteins and protein fragments, which can then be taken up by a type of immune cell called an antigen-presenting cell.
The cell presents fragments of the spike protein on its surface. When other cells called helper T-cells detect these fragments, the helper T-cells can raise the alarm and help marshal other immune cells to fight the infection.
Making Antibodies
Other immune cells, called B-cells, may bump into the coronavirus spikes and protein fragments on the surface of vaccinated cells. A few of the B-cells may be able to lock onto the spike proteins. If these B-cells are then activated by helper T-cells, they will start to proliferate and pour out antibodies that target the spike protein.
Stopping the Virus
The antibodies can latch onto coronavirus spikes, mark the virus for destruction and prevent infection by blocking the spikes from attaching to other cells.
Killing Infected Cells
The antigen-presenting cells can also activate another type of immune cell called a killer T-cell to seek out and destroy any coronavirus-infected cells that display the spike protein fragments on their surfaces.
Remembering the Virus
Moderna’s vaccine requires two injections, given 28 days apart, to prime the immune system well enough to fight off the coronavirus. But because the vaccine is so new, researchers don’t know how long its protection might last.
It’s possible that in the months after vaccination, the number of antibodies and killer T-cells will drop. But the immune system also contains special cells called memory B-cells and memory T-cells that might retain information about the coronavirus for years or even decades. An early study found that Moderna’s vaccine provides protection for at least three months.
For more about the vaccine, see Moderna’s Covid Vaccine: What You Need to Know.
Preparation and Injection
Each vial of the vaccine contains 10 doses of 0.5 milliliters. The vials need to be warmed to room temperature before injection. No dilution with saline is required.
Image: A nurse prepares a shot of the Moderna vaccine. Hans Pennink/Associated Press.
Vaccine Timeline
January, 2020: Moderna begins work on a coronavirus vaccine.
March 16: Moderna scientists are the first to put a Covid-19 vaccine into human trials.
April 16: Moderna announces that the United States government will provide $483 million in support for the design and testing of Moderna’s vaccine. Researchers at the National Institutes of Health will oversee much of the research, including the clinical trials.
July 27: After initial studies yield promising results, Moderna and the N.I.H. begin Phase 3 testing on 30,000 volunteers across the United States. A quarter of the participants are 65 years or older.
July 28: Moderna finds that the vaccine protects monkeys from the coronavirus.
Aug. 11: The United States government awards the company an additional $1.5 billion in exchange for 100 million doses, if the vaccine is authorized by the Food and Drug Administration.
Nov. 16: Moderna announces preliminary data from its Phase 3 trial. Researchers estimate that the vaccine has an efficacy rate of 94.1 percent, far higher than experts had expected when vaccine testing began.
Nov. 30: Moderna applies for emergency use authorization from the F.D.A.
Dec. 2: Moderna registers a trial to test the vaccine on children between 12 and 18 years of age.
Dec. 17: The F.D.A. will meet in an open session to discuss emergency authorization of the Moderna vaccine.
Dec. 21: If Moderna receives emergency use authorization, the first injections of its vaccine could start on Dec. 21.
Dec. 31: The company expects to produce 20 million doses by the end of this year, and up to a billion doses in 2021. Each vaccinated person will require two doses.
Spring 2021: Vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer are expected to reach large-scale distribution in the spring.
Sources: National Center for Biotechnology Information; Nature; Florian Krammer, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. By Jonathan Corum and Carl Zimmer (The New York Times).
bruh why can’t i hyperfixate on something useful like sleeping or drinking water or making money