
blake kathryn

shark vs the universe
$LAYYYTER
One Nice Bug Per Day

Janaina Medeiros
Monterey Bay Aquarium
i don't do bad sauce passes
AnasAbdin
hello vonnie

Product Placement
wallacepolsom
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Keni
Not today Justin
art blog(derogatory)
Peter Solarz
KIROKAZE

Kaledo Art
Cosmic Funnies

Origami Around

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seen from Türkiye
@sheissoblue
aggressive pastels
travestismo, 24/11/2017
The 2017 daily collages are part of fractal project, a year project that try to destroy and create new measures of time taking the personal habits as a periods of time.
Artist: Hoor Imad Sherpao
Calm by Niilo Isotalo
i cant wait to be a piece of shit w/ a bachelors degree
@lilasmia @anastastialovera @thisfashionfiend_
She went mad before she died. She always asked for you. Always.
Marilyn Hacker, from Selected Poems 1965-1990, Separations; “The Callers” (via sittinginyourlapandtakingadrag)
Colours of Morocco
Feel your heart beat faster. Reach out and find your happily ever after. (x)
On being a fat medical student, at the start of our metabolism module
We’re starting our “metabolism” module at med school this week, and I’m dreading it with every fibre of my being. You see, I am going to be a doctor, and I am fat.
I’m not the type of fat you feel after you’ve had a big lunch, and your usually flat belly is protesting against the waistband of your jeans. I’m the real kind. My BMI hovers a couple of points below “morbidly obese”.
I worry a lot about what people will think of me as a fat doctor. For the smartarses among you, of course I’ve tried to be non-fat, it goes without saying. The thing is though, bodies don’t really like weighing less all of a sudden and are pretty good at reversing things in the long run. Mostly my body settles back to the same size 18 shape eventually.
I am always aware of my fatness, but perhaps more so here at medical school. We are training to work with bodies, and mine is a type of body we warn our patients not to have. It is the first thing described in every list of ‘modifiable risk factors’. A colleague suggests “just don’t let yourself get too fat” as we talk about preventing a certain type of cancer. A final exam question asks us to list four poor health outcomes associated with obesity. I sit through lectures with slides that have sniggering titles like “how BIG is the problem?”
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Lilli Carré @lillicarre
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