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Mike Driver
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AnasAbdin
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

if i look back, i am lost

@theartofmadeline
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@purplesaline
Meet Pando, not a forest but a single tree. Every trunk of the Quaking Aspen is genetically identical & connected by a single 80,000 year old root system, making it one of the largest and oldest living entities on Earth!
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to walk through the body of a God?
@derinthescarletpescatarian
Description: [A video of a woman riding a galloping horse bareback while holding a large rainbow flag.]
i felt like these tags really added to the experience, thanks @cynderxdustypaws for your knowledge
This is one of the most powerful images I have ever seen, and I will reblog it every single time because every single time it brings tears to my eyes.
reading a textbook for class and iâm going insane. why is this just poetry. what. this is a STEM class whatâs going on.
HELLO????? HELLO?????
Fuck yeah droving
I wonder what they're saying to each other?
Most of it is probably "hey calf! I'm here! We're going somewhere new so don't get lost!" and "Hey mum! Mum! This is confusing and I lost sight of you for three seconds! Tell me where you are!"
There's also "argh flies why" just for texture
Ok so my kid had an ear infection, right? As kids often do.
The doctor scraped out a bit of earwax to have a better look inside.
I was sent a bill for $200 PER EAR for this 5 second procedure which I did not give permission for them to do.
That was key- they did not ASK me if they could do this "procedure". And, as I OWN a medical practice (it's me. The medical practice is me, sitting in my house on video calls) I knew to call them when this bill came in to be like "You did not obtain informed consent for this procedure, and it was not en emergency procedure. You had full ability to gain my consent and didn't. I'm not paying."
And the massive hospital who owned the bill said "yuh-huh you do have to pay."
And I said "I own a practice. I know these laws. I do not owe you money for this."
And they conducted an "internal review" and SURPRISE! Decided I totally owed them money and they had never done anything wrong ever.
And so I called my state's Attorney General office, and explained the situation because, as I mentioned, I know the law. The AG got in touch within a couple days to say they were taking the case and would send the massive hospital conglomerate a knock it off, guys letter.
Lo and Behold, today I have a letter where said hospital graciously has agreed to forfeit the payment.
"How not to get screwed over by companies" should be part of civics class.
Know your rights and know who to call when they're infringed on. This whole process cost me $0 and honestly less effort than I would have expected.
May this knowledge find its way to someone else who can use it.
This post is super cute and all but like.... This isn't practical advice. I called the AG???? And they got involved over a $200 bill. Maybe because you yourself are a medical practitioner. Not just your knowledge but also your status.
Civics class wouldn't help most people in this case because the AG will not take on all these cases and most people cannot afford an attorney in this instance or more importantly, the hit to their credit.
The issue is not education over the system, it is the system
I agree the system is a mess but I think education does matter because people seem not to know that this is actually perfectly routine AG office stuff. Iâm not the only person whoâs done this- this is just what they do?
Were they going to get into a lawsuit over my $400 bill? No obviously not. But they printed up a letter on fancy letterhead to say to stop and it worked. They followed up with me the next day to be sure, and so ask how much money they had saved me.
They use dinky cases like mine to track habitual misbehavior of large scale companies to build cases they could actually go to court over.
And because people are shocked- I never spoke to the AG of my state directly. He operates mainly by overseeing a whole crew of people. And this is what those people do.
This didnât happen because Iâm special because of my tiny therapy practice.
This happened because this is what the AG office is for.
âThe problem is systemicâ doesnât mean âand thereâs nothing you can doâ.
This is a systemic problem but that doesnât mean there are no resources to help.
Thank you for clapping back on this. I'm here to reinforce. Yes, you CAN call your state Attorney General office when an entity is doing something illegal, even if it's "only" for $400. You think they don't care a hospital is doing a crime because it's not a big enough crime?
Then you've been trained well by "The System".
Yes, that System you say can't be fought? Where did you get that idea, huh? Who taught you that "small" acts of illegality don't matter? Who made you think that there's no point in fighting back because it will all come to nothing?
Might it be the same entities that benefit if you believe all that?
Gonna pause and let you ponder.
Never. Ever. EVER.
EVER.
Let companies or corporations or hospitals or organizations or any business big or small get away with screwing you over without a fight. Maybe you personally don't win every fight, but you lose 100% of the time you don't try. You'll win more often than you think you will. I know cuz I've done it.
So have others. Attorneys General offices bring lawsuits against businesses all the time. They do so because citizens contacted them to say "someone is doing a crime" and the crime doers did not stop when told and got into way more trouble than if they'd just stopped. FAFO. The Find Out can't happen if you don't even bother to report the Fucking Around.
On that note, as OP said, please know your rights! And, in a situation where you don't but suspect something is hinky, ask! The people of the internet can help! So can librarians! So can many others. Find out what is and is not okay for them to do. If it's not okay, report them! See something, say something.
Don't let the System win by default.
Fight, damnit!
Additionally, pay attention to State Attorney elections! Here in Minnesota, our AG Keith Ellison has made it a POINT to go after slumlords, has created an entire UNIT in the AG office dedicated to wage theft, and gone after debt relief for people who were conned by those scummy fake universities. And despite MN being a blue state, one of his elections was a fucking NAIL-BITER.
Absolutely fight the system, absolutely go to your AG office if youâre being screwed over, and also pay attention to the people running for AG in the first place.
Government of the people, by the people, and for the people only works if the people make it work. That's you! You're the people.
"Don't bother doing anything because nothing will happen" confused cause with effect: it's really "Nothing will happen if you don't bother doing anything." Yeah, I know, it's a travesty that they don't hand you psychic powers when you take your oath as a civil servant, but until we fix that clear defect in our democracy: you're serving the public, too, when you report fuckers like this.
Not gonna leave this in the tags:
Suspicion of The Systemâąïž is one of the ways The Systemâąïž perpetuates itself.
If you believe The Systemâąïž is only for Themâąïž and not you, it will only ever be so.
Know the rules so you can make them work for you. Or better, how to break them in ways that hurt The Systemâąïž and help you.
I also guarantee that if a company is doing it to one person they're doing it to many so even if it is just a $200 fee from your perspective that doesn't mean the AG would be wasting their time going after them because they'd also be helping all the OTHER people being scammed by them
I just watched Mother Mary and my god what a wonderful throwback to what movies used to be like. It was weird. It was beautiful. It made no sense and it made complete sense. It was art, not entertainment. It did not spoonfeed it's story to the audience. It did not explain itself or make sense of the nonsensical to banish any discomfort we might feel at not understanding what was going on.
It was a Play. It was Theatre.
Was it good? I thought so. Some of you won't, and not because you're one of the people that need to be spoonfed. Plenty of very intelligent and very artistic people will dislike it, many more may even find it mediocre.
That it exists at all in the form it has taken seems to me a minor miracle at this stage of our dystopian decline though.
If not friend, why friend shaped?
Hello its me, weird dog not bear, please let in?
He was, in fact, very close to letting himself in whether I wanted him there or not.
We really gotta get a doorknob that is not a leverâŠ
Were you putting distance there to make him lose interest or to have an escape route?
Actually, the door photo came first. I got closer after that. đ
I went down and locked the door, then took the video.
Iâm well aware of the threat bears pose, donât worry. But I grew up out here so Iâm very familiar with how to deal with them. I had a compound bow with me, a rifle down on the table, plenty of stuff to throw, lots of stuff to make noise, and a kitchen full of knives. If he had gotten inside it wouldnât have been a big deal.
Of all the people I know, you are the person I think would be most capable of beating the shit out of a bear with a random object.
You are also the person I know who is the Most Likely To Need To Beat The Shit Out Of A Bear With A Random Object, so it's probably good that you're so capable.
something Iâve noticed about Kep, which surprised me bc I always thought it was instinctual, is that he does not know how to dig. never has. he will paw at his bed or the floor when heâs getting ready to sleep, but only ever with one leg at a time. I have never seen him do the left-right-left-right alternating standard digging motion. itâs always left-left-left-left and sometimes heâll switch to right-right-right-right but never does he alternate feet. itâs also only with bedding, never in the yard. Stellina has always liked to dig ever since she was a puppy (mostly in water but she also has a nice little scrape under my lilac bush she naps in) and Boone was a big digger who made several upsettingly large holes in my yard. I feel like Kep would love digging based on his general penchant for destruction, so maybe itâs a good thing heâs never figured it out.
i really really like this post
does your dog know how to dig?
ohhh yeah
yes but they are nonpracticing
no. my dog is innocent.
This amount of individualism is exactly whats gonna kill us all btw
"Going a couple hours without eating a single kind of food? No thanks, I would rather kill a child" is such a wildly horrifying take to see MULTIPLE people proudly stating.
I wonder how many people reblogging this scornfully stopped masking circa 2022 because "the high risk will protect themselves" from covid.
Relying on people acting in good faith is pretty risky when it's an issue a lot of people don't understand well which raises a few red flags for me about this story.
These flags indicate to me that there is more to this story that we aren't being told and/or someone along the line dropped the ball when it came to protecting this child.
Firstly, if her allergy was that severe was the flight a necessity for the family or was there a safer travel alternative? With nearly any other method of travel you can either completely control your environment (inside your own vehicle) or leave the enclosed space so you don't have to rely on the good will of others to protect your life.
A reaction so severe that even being in the same room as peanuts can trigger full blown anaphylaxis is incredibly rare. Usually it's contact with the oils or someone who has just eaten peanuts breathing directly into the person's face that account for a third party triggering the allergy. The proteins that trigger peanut allergies are quite heavy and don't tend to remain airborne long enough to travel any significant distance in a large enough quantity to trigger anaphylaxis in most people with peanut allergies.
Additionally, according to The Sleep and Sinus Centers of Georgia website's page about peanut dust as an airborne allergen, as of May 2026 no known cases of anaphylaxis due to airborne exposure alone have been documented in scientific literature. The filtering system on passenger airplanes is incredibly advanced and incredibly effective to the point that even people with allergies more commonly known to be triggered just by being in the same room as the allergen (ie dog/cat allergies) can be on the same flight with the allergen and never experience any symptoms if they are more than three rows away.
This leads me to believe that it wasn't simply opening the bag and eating the nuts 4 rows away that was the trigger. One possibility is that the scent of peanuts triggered a severe panic attack rather than anaphylaxis or that oils or other peanut residue was transferred close enough to trigger the allergy. This leads me to wonder how well the plane was cleaned before the passenger boarded to eradicate any contamination from nuts from previous flights. If not then she was at risk whether the man opened that bag or not. If so, who should be responsible for the cleaning fee? Would the cost be high enough to be considered undue hardship for the airline? These are important questions to consider when you're looking to assign fault and responsibility.
If the child was one of the very rare cases where the facts as presented are true, why wasn't she wearing a respirator for additional protection? Peanut particles are quite large and respirators capable of filtering them from the air are very reasonably priced. In fact a standard KN95 mask would be plenty to prevent breathing in any peanut allergens. There is still a risk of airborne peanut particles coming into contact with the skin but gloves and tight fitting clothing that covers large areas of skin would help mitigate that risk as well. All of which are very reasonable precautions to expect someone with severe allergies to take.
After doing some more research into this story I've learned the following:
The family was returning from a holiday (they chose to fly for leisure in other words)
This incident was the first time the girl had ever been injected with epinephrine (if her allergy was as severe as the reports of this story would like us to believe she absolutely would have had previous severe reactions requiring epinephrine)
The man who opened the bag of peanuts was from another country and "did not speak good english" so it's entirely likely he did not fully understand the three announcements that were made. The reason he was banned was not that he opened the nuts in the first place but that he didn't put them away despite being asked by flight staff on three separate occasions. It is likely the staff spoke to him in English so once again a language barrier can be assumed.
There were a total of three people with peanut allergies on the flight, including the little girl. The others did not have a reaction.
Something else I'd like you to consider. The passengers were only warned as they were boarding the flight. What if the man had a medical condition that required him to eat and the nuts were all he had with him? Assume he didn't have money to purchase something different from the airline snack cart or, if snacks were free, maybe he too had an allergy that meant he couldn't eat anything the flight offered? Even if he could afford to buy something else is it reasonable to expect him to spend his money to keep someone else safe when he was given no prior notice that he would be unable to eat peanuts? Did the airline offer him a different snack free of charge when they asked him to put the nuts away? If he needed to eat for his own medical safety where would his rights have ended and hers began? Whose rights take priority?
As disabled people we are entitled to reasonable accommodations but it's seldom as simple as Right and Wrong when it comes to navigating everyone's rights.
âšïžđ§¶Time to spin đ§¶âšïž
Okay this might be too thin for a dk 3-ply, but it gives me an idea for the final braid...
I don't think I should be using the spindle for this job, it only wants to make lace >.<
1/3 bobbins spun and it is behaving better on the wheel
Nakey
Made decent progress on the 2nd bobbin yesterday, let's see how we do today!
Accountability Keppet on duty and taking his apprenticeship seriously
2/3 bobbins spun and my apprentice is working on his patience today
ok so, I approached my local library with a proposal to donate a mural as a way to A: build portfolio/gain practical experience and B: give back to a beloved public institution. The director was very enthusiastic about it and i've been working on it since the beginning of March. Come with me as I endeavor to paint what is in all honesty an excessive amount of birds
I wanted the birds to look like they were actually in the space so first thing after doing the draft was to do a lighting study
after that I covered the walls in letters in lieu of a projector/vr headset bc i have neither of those :) Then i take a picture of the section of wall and superimpose the lineart over top of it so I can pencil in the lines
et voila
and that was a whole week on it's own so next comes the paintin' >:)
ok so, I approached my local library with a proposal to donate a mural as a way to A: build portfolio/gain practical experience and B: give back to a beloved public institution. The director was very enthusiastic about it and i've been working on it since the beginning of March. Come with me as I endeavor to paint what is in all honesty an excessive amount of birds
I wanted the birds to look like they were actually in the space so first thing after doing the draft was to do a lighting study
after that I covered the walls in letters in lieu of a projector/vr headset bc i have neither of those :) Then i take a picture of the section of wall and superimpose the lineart over top of it so I can pencil in the lines
et voila
and that was a whole week on it's own so next comes the paintin' >:)
and now, the birds
Birds 1 and 2/14: Red Winged Blackbird, Male and female, Agelaius phoeniceus
Bird 3/14, American Robin, Turdus migratorius
hoo boy, ok *out of breath*
GIVE IT UP FOR BIRD NUMBUH 5, THE CANADIAN GOOSE, Branta canadensis!!!!
this guy took me about 4 days to completely finish, all of those freakingk coverts were a bear to render
speaking of obnoxious coverts:
bird 5/14, Bluejay, Cyanocitta cristata
the friggin stripes almost got me chat, i may not make it
Madam....
birds 6 and 7: American Goldfinch, Spinus tristis, male and female
pleasantly simple to paint! next is the flickerrrrr
*melts into goo*
BIRD NUMBER 8, (yellow shafted) NORTHERN FLICKERRRRR, Colaptes auratus
genuinely made me start questioning my sanity around day 3, it's half the size the of the goose, WHY did it take me 4 days to finish??
nothing but pain and suffering, i'm sure hope the next bird will be much easier and with FAR less barring :)
in other news, I am losing my mind hairline
SHE'S DONE!!
Bird number 9: Red-tailed hawk, Buteo jamaicensis
my chains are broken i am FREE. although i did have a great deal of fun with this, the barring on the wings itself took me like four days and i am READY to move on
this was a week and a half of continuous work so please excuse me for getting a little emotional in the bg đ
*does a little jig*
BIRD NUMBER 10!!! The Male Mallard Duck, Anas platyrhynchos
the male and female ones are gonna be posted separately bc they're taking a lot longer lol but yea! super happy i was able to capture the iridescent green of the head, i found metallic green and blue paint at a craft store that really made his head POP. it looks better in person i promise
ALSO!! As this is the 10th one, BIG announcement. The end is in sight!!!!! I plan to finish within the next 3 weeks and there will be a small dedication ceremony/ unveiling happening at the library to commemorate its completion on the 16th of May. If you live in the Western New York region and want to check it out for yourself shoot me a dm!
Also thank you everyone for your kind words and support throughout this whole process, it's been a genuine treat thinking there are potentially thousands of you out there cheering me on while I paint this đ„č
every addition of the insane public kills me anew xD
I almost missed the Glorious 25th!!
I think the lilacs are late this year. I'll have to check the front yard.
I do think "literally zero evidence indicates that gatekeeping medical transition does anything to prevent regret, but the harm done by gatekeeping is extensively documented" is a much stronger argument than "regret isn't real" cause there's always going to be some anecdote that puts you in a weak-looking rhetorical position for the latter, but the former is pretty unassailable.
tags from @queerical
Ain't no one passing bills to save us from regretting tattoos or piercings or forked tongues
Springing off of my addiction post once more, I am also skeptical at best of 12-step programs, because their framework has just never remotely aligned with my actual experience.
The substance I was addicted to was heroin. While I was actively addicted, it absolutely came before everything else. My life shrank around it. I kept using despite very real, very obvious negative consequences. If youâre looking for something that fits the âcompulsion + harm + loss of controlâ model, that was it.
But whatâs always sat strangely with me is what happened when that context changed.
Once my abusive relationship ended and I was no longer in an environment where it was readily available, it was shockingly easy to stop. Iâm not saying it was physically comfortable. My body was pretty pissed off for a while. But psychologically, it just didnât have the same hold anymore. I wasnât spending my days white-knuckling cravings or constantly thinking about it. It dropped out of my life in a way that, according to the 12-step model, is not really supposed to happen.
And thatâs where my issue with that framework starts.
Because 12-step ideology tends to assume that if you have ever had that kind of relationship with one substance, it reveals something fundamental and permanent about you. That you now have a generalized âaddictive natureâ that will attach itself to other substances or behaviors if youâre not constantly managing it. That you are, in some essential way, always on the verge of transferring that pattern onto something else.
And that just hasnât been true for me.
I was a near-daily cannabis user for years. When it started consistently making me feel physically uncomfortable instead of good, I stopped. No drawn-out battle, no existential crisis, just âthis isnât giving me what I liked about it anymoreâ and I moved on.
I drink occasionally, in social or celebratory contexts, and I genuinely find alcohol kind of boring outside of that. It doesnât have much pull for me.
I tried gambling once, got annoyed at how tedious and overstimulating it felt, and left the casino in under an hour. I have not felt remotely compelled to revisit that experience.
I use the internet a lot, and I play a handful of video games, but I can also go on a camping trip with no signal and be completely fine, unless you want to try and find something pathological about nature photography, in which case you can blow it out your ass. If anything, I generally enjoy the change of pace. Thereâs no sense of panic or withdrawal or âI need to get back to my computer/consoles immediately.â
So when I hear the idea that addiction is this broad, transferable trait that will latch onto anything with quick reward or low friction, I just donât see it reflected in my own life.
What does make sense, looking back, is context.
When I was using heroin, I was in an abusive relationship. My environment was unstable, stressful, and honestly pretty bleak. The substance didnât just exist in a vacuum. It fit into a specific set of conditions where it functioned as relief, escape, and regulation.
When those conditions changed, the behavior changed with them.
That doesnât mean there was no dependency. There obviously was. It doesnât mean there were no consequences. There very much were. My grades suffered. I dropped out of college. I lost my apartment because staying out of withdrawal and numbing out from the abuse felt more important than paying rent.
But it does suggest that what we call âaddictionâ might not always be this permanent, identity-level trait that needs to be managed forever. Sometimes it looks a lot more like a relationship between a person, a substance, and a specific environment.
When thatâs the case, then a framework that assumes universality - âif this happened once, it will always be waiting to happen again, with anythingâ - is going to miss a lot of variation.
Iâm not saying 12-step programs canât help people. Clearly they can, or they likely wouldnât exist in the way they do. But I do think theyâre often treated as the model of addiction rather than a model that fits some people and not others, and when your experience doesnât match that model, many people who swear by them will assume that you are misunderstanding yourself, in denial, or ânot taking it seriously enough.â This paternalistic attitude only serves to make me even more skeptical of the framework.
For me, what mattered wasnât declaring myself permanently âaddictiveâ or treating every pleasurable behavior as a potential threat.
What mattered was getting out of the environment where that pattern made sense in the first place.
Rat Park, people. Stop forgetting about Rat Park.
âaddictionâ might not always be this permanent, identity-level trait... Sometimes it looks a lot more like a relationship between a person, a substance, and a specific environment.
I have helped change more individual behavior by changing the environment around them than I have by working on their behavior.
For many people addiction is simply a maladaptive coping mechanism. If you can get the person away from the stressors AND give them the tools to develop healthier coping skills, and give them the time to practice using the new coping mechanjsms until they're comfortable enough with them that they'll default to those in high stress situations rather than the previous maladaptive ones then the chances of them going back to addiction behaviours with any sort of substance or addictive behaviour is pretty damn minimal.
It's rare that they ever get the opportunity to practice the new coping mechanisms enough before they're exposed to their lives again though and that's why so many tend to relapse. When you're in a tight spot you'll always reach for the tool you KNOW how to use and you know you can rely on even if it's not the best tool for the job
You know, I don't think I'll ever get over how that one post I made about women as knights in history, made it all the way to Reddit only for a bunch of redditors to argue that women couldn't actually be knights because:
- "the term is gendered" (it's not, and feminine equivalents were sometimes created specifically for the purpose)
- "they didn't actually do things as knights" (who didn't? The Hatchet women fought the Moors. A few other Orders had women as masters of arms. Both martial and formal examples)
...and a few other reasons that come down to "I don't like imagining my manly men in steel had women in their ranks, girls have cooties".
And the reason I say this is because recently, Wikipedia updated their page on "Knight", specifically adding a section about women with the title of knighthood, and what function they performed. And I know: "Wikipedia is not an academic source"--but every academic institution will accept the sources and articles used to back up wikipages, which confirm what has been said.
Knights were sometimes women. đ€·
I saw this and needed to answer.
The gendered versions of 'knight' come from Romance languages, and literally just change the word to fit the gender of the subject (within a binary). So it isn't like English, where a female knight has always been a 'Dame', but, using Spain as an example, the word for Knight in Spanish is 'Cabellero'. This is the default masculine.
The feminine word for Knight? 'Cabellera'.
Similarly in French: "Chevalier" becomes "Chevaliére".
In Italian, "Cavaliere" becomes "Cavaliera".
Outside of Romance languages, "knight" is just a title for a social rank, so even the English Dame is by default a knight by rank, but may not have the title (although not impossible).
So it's not a silly infantilisation, than using a word for the knightly class and gendering it in a binary, which means we can actually tell that, yes, women as knights existed, enough that the feminine form of the word pops up now and then, so we know it existed.
ooh, where one could read that original post??
Just a note about translations and ... well, patriarchal bullshit.
When you say "Hatchet women fought the Moors" I was like "hey, that seems to be part of my local history, how have I never heard about it?", and when I googled it ... I actually have heard about it, it's the Orden del Hacha from Catalonia (Orde de l'Atxa in the original Catalan). But ... there's something odd going on. Why the fuck in English they have translated like "Order or the hatchet"? You know, in Spanish and Catalan there's no really a difference between "Axe" and "Hatchet": There's a single word for them, "Hacha/Atxa". But in English, there's a difference. A Hatchet is a hand axe, pretty much the smallest one you can think of:
So It's pretty remarkable that whoever translated the name of the order to english first decided to use "Hatchet" and not "Axe". I'm pretty sure if this was a order of men warriors the name would have been pretty different. Specially when THIS was their coat of arms:
So dear academic-who-translated-this-first: Does that look like a hatchet to you, motherfucker?!?!?
Important inclusion I was not aware of, thank you very much friend. :)
Iâm going to be chuckling over âDoes this look like a hatchet to you, motherfucker?!?!?â for the rest of the day.