Been a while but my thesis is over and I saw the Back Seat video for the first time in 5 years and wow Junsu is hot.

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@mixednotmatched
Been a while but my thesis is over and I saw the Back Seat video for the first time in 5 years and wow Junsu is hot.
“Why do you want to be a doctor?” This is an answer of mine that stands out most notably.
5 years ago, almost to the date, I went to bed and my back hurt. Like. Hell. when I laid down. I figured it was just a muscle cramp or something, but it happened night after night. Painkillers didn’t work. I was getting less and less sleep. So I went to my pediatrician to get it checked out.
I know this is the point where many medical-student hopefuls will say that their doctor’s exceptional care inspired them to be a doctor. Not this time.
After saying “my back has been hurting every time I lay down or sit/stand for a long time,” the doctor asked “and are you suuuuuure it’s not because of your period?” I’m like, what part of “every day for the past 1.5 months” do you not understand? Sure, lower back pain may be due to cramps, but just because I possess a physiological function does not make that the sole cause of my problem.
I got it x-rayed, and referred to a bone doc. Spinal fracture. Go figure. I ended up in physical therapy, with a message from this second doc saying that if I felt pain shooting down my legs, I needed to go back in immediately, since that could signal potentially-paralyzing nerve damage. About a month later, I found myself making that dreaded call to the doc saying I had pain shooting down my legs. A third doc saw me this time to check my back again and get the ball rolling on a back brace. This doc asked me, after I described my symptoms, “are you suuure it’s not your period?” Like, yes I am absolutely sure that pain shooting down my legs possibly leading to paralysis is NOT a symptom of period-related cramps or pains!
Nevertheless, I averted paralysis and ended that summer back pain-free. And to this day, I still wonder how my life may have changed so drastically had I not had my mom in the room vouching for my pain so it wouldn’t be written off as “period cramps.”
I want to be a doctor because patients deserve better than this. Patients deserve a doctor who will make an accurate, appropriate assessment of their symptoms and work with them on a treatment plan. When somebody goes to a doctor - whether for a routine checkup, an illness, monitoring or treatment of a chronic condition, or an emergency - they deserve to be seen by a physician who listens to them before assuming anything, reading their body language and other clues for anything that might not get communicated verbally, and helps them obtain the best treatment for their circumstances and their lifestyle. I want to be that doctor for my patients. And I want to encourage other healthcare professionals to be that doctor, nurse, PA, etc. for their patients.
Update: This post has gotten quite a bit of attention over the past year, and I want to thank y’all for listening to these stories and for considering ways in which medicine can be improved. Since making this post I stepped away from pre-med and am now focused on research and public health. Same interests, different training basically.
Keep questioning, challenging, and pushing boundaries. And huge good luck to my folks who are hearing back soon about med school decisions this cycle.
top 5 stage outfits (any artist tbh)
tvxq 2008 t tour
i like all the outfits they wore for this concert actually <3
t-ara - i go crazy because of you pink and black outfits
britney oops i did it again tour
son dam bi - queen stage outfit
i LOVE this top ^
and of course ! tvxq's tri-angle era outfits
Triangle Era. Jaejoong’s hair gets me every time.
Two years ago to the date, I sat at my desk and bowed my head in prayer before beginning the crunch for finals season. If I did not pass my organic chemistry final, I would have lost my scholarship, and my chances of going on to grad school would have been axed.
I passed my final and received one of the highest final grades in the class.
I like to think this is a relic of my immigrant heritage and the idea of, “we worked hard so you can have it easier.” Leaving this here as a reminder that our ancestors are cheering us on, our spirit has survived colonialism and turmoil and racism and more, yet we are here now.
going on testosterone is so exciting im so glad to finally go through my himboification
my special friend calls it his PP Juice and I started calling it PP Up from Pokemon and so now it’s the PP Up Juice.
Honestly the minute I saw the word himboification I knew this post was gonna be good and I was not dissapointed. This is so fucking wonderful and I love the sheer universal experience of exasperation, concern, and just so fucking done with your shit from your doctors and nurses.
friend of mine calls testosterone but pronounced like macaroni
RAVIOLI RAVIOLI
GIVE ME TESTOSTERONI
Not as humorous but my nurse asked me what I’m studying in school and I said “Biology,” then she said “ah this usually goes well with STEM people.”
I ------
As someone writing a thesis on the implications of unethical experimentation and covert racism in medical practice throughout US history, jokes aside, this is actually a really good question to guide my thesis. If my thesis does not defend me, then I am doing a great injustice to those I interview and those whose trauma I write about, living and passed.
This happened on Oct. 5 and not one major news source covered it. This is the end goal of the anti-choice movement.
An autopsy report stated Poolaw’s child died at 17 weeks gestation.
LAWTON, Okla. (KSWO) - A woman has been found guilty of First-Degree Manslaughter at the Comanche County Courthouse.
The jury returned around 6:30 today with the verdict in Brittney Poolaw’s case.
The jury began deliberating around 3:45 p.m.
An autopsy report stated Poolaw’s child died at 17 weeks gestation.
The report showed it tested positive for methamphetamine, amphetamine and another drug in the liver and brain.
An OBGYN testified on the stand Tuesday as an expert for the state.
The doctor confirmed the fetus was at the gestational age of about 17 weeks and that methamphetamine use can have an effect on the pregnancy, though he said it may not be the direct cause of death for the fetus.
A nurse and medical examiner both testified to seeing congenital abnormalities on the fetus.
Poolaw was sentenced to four years in prison.
This is likely respectability politics in action. Because this woman may have miscarried due to substance use, she’s not a sympathetic enough victim of judicial overreach. Instead there’s going to be a ton of people whose initial outrage will turn into “oh well in this case…”
Gestational parents with substance use disorder need to be able to reach out for assistance without fear of incarceration or they will be less likely to reach out. Cases like these only work to increase infant and gestational parent mortality.
And for those of you who look at this and go “but she was harming her child through substance use”, do you think this is where it will stop? Once you start holding people liable for miscarrying, it won’t stop just with the people you find it “acceptable” to be used against. A gestational parent who goes against doctor recommendations for bed rest for a high risk pregnancy and miscarries, who miscarries after an at-fault car accident, who doesn’t seek pre-natal medical care, who does anything that may directly or indirectly lead to a miscarriage…
And as always, the people this law will impact will disproportionately be poor people, people of color, immigrants, people with substance use disorder, disabled people. It will be people who cannot afford medical care, who medical systems do not take seriously, who are over policed and under resourced, who already have much of their agency taken away by those who believe they know what’s best…
Beyond disgraceful. Miscarriages happen for a million and one reasons, and it’s especially sickening that instead of giving her access to substance abuse services, she will be institutionalized and given zero support. Shame on everybody who testified in favor of the state. Shame on the judge. Shame on this system.
SHINee Fan - Ideas?
Made the title so it wouldn’t be triggering of painful memories among us KPop fans. Most often I post on here about TVXQ or BTS, but I’m coming in search of a different fandom today.
I used to be a huge fan of SHINee and their music hit the spot every time. However, since Jonghyun’s death, I kinda just avoided SHINee for a few months to avoid the haunting thoughts of what happened. Months turned into years and today I still have trouble listening to Jonghyun or SHINee without getting teary-eyed, or getting a knot in my throat.
Shawols out there, how did you cope with Jonghyun’s passing in 2017? How did you start loving SHINee and their music again? Is this still too painful for folks to discuss? Generally what’s up in Shawol-land?
Yo I lowkey love how my university’s Wind Ensemble went from predominantly cishet Greek life folks from the same 2 or 3 orgs, to lots of queer non-Greek life kids who are kinda shy but friendly towards one another (the Greek life kids graduated). The clarinet section alone used to be a sorority clique. Now it’s led by two young queer men.
When we say representation matters, it’s not just Hollywood or Fortune 500 or reality TV. It’s the everyday spaces we live in.
I think it’s important to note that you’re not going to connect on a super deep level with every friend you have. There are many kinds of friendship and some of them involve just going for coffee, or just talking about a single, certain subject, or just chatting about books, or meeting up when the other is in town and doing the “how have you been?” routine for an hour and then saying goodbye.
Not every friendship is going to be this we-connect-on-every-level-no-one-has-ever-understood-me-this-way sort of soulmate. And that’s ok.
I think it’s important to note that there’s a difference because I never had the latter, what I’ll just call a kindred spirit, until I got to high school. And after that, I wanted all of my friendships to be like that, and when they weren’t I got frustrated, and probably ended up hurting a lot of people in the process when I burnt out or realized that isn’t what I really wanted.
Kindred or casual, neither is better than the other. Both are good. It’s ok to have kindred spirits and it’s ok to have casual friends–human beings need both. You can’t get to know everyone intimately, it’s impossible and exhausting.
And I just feel like there’s this perception that you have to have a best friend, like you have to choose, and you have to hold onto them for years and years and years, and all of your friends have to be kindred spirits or they’re “acquaintances” and I’ve seen so many people categorize their friends as like … if someone doesn’t know you intimately and won’t do certain things for you that are associated with kindred spirits they’re not “real/true friends” and I keep seeing this demarcation between “friends” and “best friends” and I think that’s kind of an unhealthy attitude and I don’t really think that’s true.
Sometimes you need someone you can spill your soul to, who peers into all your dark corners, who youdon’t lie to and who you feel gets you in a way no one else has. And that’s good and that’s healing.
Sometimes you just need someone who will geek out with you about a new rock or a new album or who is down for meeting you at a diner at 3 am or whatever and that’s it and there aren’t any expectations for soul-bearing (which is exhausting let me tell u what) and you’re both fine with that. And that’s good and that’s healing.
Listen, life is full of some really amazing things, and you’re going to meet some really amazing people. Sometimes they’ll hold your hand for the whole journey, or a long portion of it, and sometimes, they’ll just grab you and spin you around before letting go. And both are good.
It doesn’t matter how long they held it, what matters is that they took your hand. What matters is that they left you laughing.
I’ve known folks who really struggle to understand this concept. And it’s really sad seeing them pass by so many chances to even talk with people without thinking “this person isn’t spiritually connected to me on a deeper level.”
A dear friend recommended “You Spin Me Round” by Dead or Alive, and I cannot overstate how damn s e x y Pete Burns and Steve Coy are in that video. Like hot damn.
кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! тархун кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр! кедр!
Kedr!
Ok I just found out that the girl who outed me to half the school in middle school is EXTREMELY gay and has been out and proud for some time now. What a turnaround after 6? 7? 8? years. As much as I absolutely hate the whole “homophobes are closeted gays” stereotype because queerphobia was invented by straight people (and therefore not our responsibility to clean up), being queer at a young age is super stressful and even if you don’t realize you’re queer at that age, it’s when people grow up and some of us discover things about ourselves earlier or later than others.
The year I was outed like that was complete hell and hurt my ability to trust anyone for years afterwards (still working through some of it - these experiences put you in a cycle where you end up in toxic scenarios over and over). But still, I forgive this girl for what she did. As someone who went through hoops to discover my own queer identity and be comfortable with it, I understand the messaging from society at a young age that queerness is bad and not knowing how to normalize it, along with internalized queerphobia of all kinds that causes folks to not want to associate with queer people (especially those who are already out and/or comfortable with themselves).
I forgive you.
Hair porn? Perfect description.
The “it’s not ‘good evening, ladies and gentlemen,’ it’s ‘about time you filthy creatures showed up’” white queer people are mostly the same as the white queer theater kids who have this oversized superiority complex over other, less privileged queers because they listen to niche indie bands and had a full-blown emo phase that lasted into adulthood. There’s always gatekeeping to keep only rich white, able-bodied, cis-passing queer folks in certain queer spaces by way of not just explicit discrimination but by alienating and delegitimizing any queer person (most often somebody outside of the rich white queer culture) who doesn’t understand inside references to movies, music, theater, etc. in pop culture that are held as the things a person must be fully immersed in to be “legitimately” queer. Where this gets incredibly problematic is when you see that lots of people in our community who are BIPOC, disabled, poor, immigrants, or anything other than super skinny have different lived experiences and cultural contexts in which they have (or currently are!) come to terms with and embraced their identities - communities they grew up in, languages they speak at home, music they listen to, etc.
TL;DR - rich white queer culture is not unanimous to all queer people!
This is lowkey gender envy
Damm fine boy
Ok but yes