Source: [x]
Click HERE for more facts!
noise dept.
DEAR READER
Mike Driver

oozey mess
No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
NASA

blake kathryn
styofa doing anything
No title available
Claire Keane

@theartofmadeline
RMH
Xuebing Du
Jules of Nature
Today's Document
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Janaina Medeiros
hello vonnie
ojovivo
seen from Netherlands
seen from Austria
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Mexico

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Denmark

seen from Türkiye
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
@optometrui
Source: [x]
Click HERE for more facts!
child handling for the childless nurse
My current job has me working with children, which is kind of a weird shock after years in environments where a “young” patient is 40 years old. Here’s my impressions so far:
Birth - 1 year: Essentially a small cute animal. Handle accordingly; gently and affectionately, but relying heavily on the caregivers and with no real expectation of cooperation.
Age 1 - 2: Hates you. Hates you so much. You can smile, you can coo, you can attempt to soothe; they hate you anyway, because you’re a stranger and you’re scary and you’re touching them. There’s no winning this so just get it over with as quickly and non-traumatically as possible.
Age 3 - 5: Nervous around medical things, but possible to soothe. Easily upset, but also easily distracted from the thing that upset them. Smartphone cartoons and “who wants a sticker?!!?!?” are key management techniques.
Age 6 - 10: Really cool, actually. I did not realize kids were this cool. Around this age they tend to be fairly outgoing, and super curious and eager to learn. Absolutely do not babytalk; instead, flatter them with how grown-up they are, teach them some Fun Gross Medical Facts, and introduce potentially frightening experiences with “hey, you want to see something really cool?”
Age 11 - 14: Extremely variable. Can be very childish or very mature, or rapidly switch from one mode to the other. At this point you can almost treat them as an adult, just… a really sensitive and unpredictable adult. Do not, under any circumstances, offer stickers. (But they might grab one out of the bin anyway.)
Age 15 - 18: Basically an adult with severely limited life experience. Treat as an adult who needs a little extra education with their care. Keep parents out of the room as much as possible, unless the kid wants them there. At this point you can go ahead and offer stickers again, because they’ll probably think it’s funny. And they’ll want one. Deep down, everyone wants a sticker.
This is also a pretty excellent guide to writing kids of various ages
Looking forward to seeing you later
the struggle is real (by @fire-plug)
The cross-eyed teacher just couldn’t control her pupils..
reblog per il sociale
OH MY GOD. ACTUALLY USEFUL LIFEHACKS. I HAVE MISSED YOU.
If you’re up really late studying for finals, try swapping your contact solution with coffee for a quick pick-me-up.
PLEASE DO NOT DO THIS
Hot new trend alert.
When first years ask what to expect in second year
Hello, We are interested in using an Ankyloblepharon image found on your blog in our forthcoming publication. Please let us know what additional information you might need to proceed with this request.
Hello there! I apologize for seeing this quite late, I am not the original source of the image, so you would have to ask the original poster of the image. Thank you for politely asking!
90% of my day is me being nervous
My Sister, the Optometrist #1
*to my doctor after getting laser eye surgery* so how do i shoot them
BOARDS
IN 8 DAYS
Glasses