Maybe I'll finally finish something. Maybe posting will motivate me. But I was working on this today and also need some recommendations with the skirt of her dress. Was thinking maybe a mermaid's tail sort of bottom?

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Maybe I'll finally finish something. Maybe posting will motivate me. But I was working on this today and also need some recommendations with the skirt of her dress. Was thinking maybe a mermaid's tail sort of bottom?
Aetiology
The Curious Case of Aetiology: Blaming Everything on an “-ology”
In a world where every sneeze, bad hair day, and inexplicable craving for cheese puffs demands an explanation, one discipline has heroically—and hilariously—risen to the challenge: aetiology, the science of causation. While most people assume that “aetiology” is merely the fancy way doctors explain why Aunt Edna sneezes when she sees a dust bunny, a deeper dive into this venerable field reveals it to be the ultimate scapegoat for all of life’s misfortunes. When the Cause Is Worse Than the Symptom Earlier this month, at the Annual Convention of Professional Overthinkers (ACPO), delegates from every continent gathered to debate whether the true root cause of Monday mornings was cosmic injustice or a shortage of coffee beans in the Northern Hemisphere. Dr. Emilia Fuddle, self-appointed president of the National Aetiology Association, declared, “We have conclusively determined that the universal dread of Mondays is due not to calendars but to the misalignment of your chakras with the snooze button on your alarm clock.” Her evidence? A highly dubious poll of five insomniacs and a single barista who once overslept. Experts in aetiology pride themselves on linking every ailment to something far more dramatic than a simple virus. Case in point: last week, pulmonologist-turned-aetiologist Dr. Carl “Cough Doctor” Jenkins published a paper asserting that seasonal allergies are actually caused by microscopic office dust mites plotting to sabotage your weekend plans. Jenkins cites a “confidential office memo” from a dust mite union—complete with a hand-scribbled scrawl warning of “Operation Hayfever Havoc.” Though no independent verification exists, Jenkins insists the memo was notarized in Aruba, which he claims grants it extra credibility. The Evidence—Trust Us, It Exists Aetiologists frequently tout a robust array of evidence: personal anecdotes, shaky eyewitness testimony, and occasionally a chicken bone or two. Take the recent saga of Ms. Tanya Templeton, who attributes her sudden urge to binge-watch reality TV to “an electromagnetic pulse emitted by her fridge.” “I opened it for milk, and suddenly I was four seasons deep into ‘Real Housewives of Toledo,’” she told our correspondent. Ms. Templeton says she witnessed tiny sparks flying from the ice maker—though video evidence consists solely of a shaky smartphone clip shot at 2 a.m. while she was half-asleep. Or consider the widely cited “Adirondack Bounceback Study,” wherein researchers followed 12 hikers who tripped over roots and concluded that tree roots possess a “vindictive intelligence” that seeks out unsuspecting soles. The sample size? One guided hike, two broken ankles, and a retired history teacher who swears he heard the roots whisper, “Ha! Got you!” Though critics call this “anecdotal pseudoscience,” the study remains enshrined in the hallowed halls of Aetiology—and occasionally in middle-school science projects across the country. Analogies Run Amok In a classic display of false analogy, aetiologists often compare human ailments to computer malfunctions. Last Tuesday, Aetiology Today ran a cover story titled “Why Your Gut Is Like Windows 95,” suggesting that digestive issues stem from having too many “programs” (meals) running at once. “Just as Windows 95 would crash when too many applications opened, so too does your stomach rebel when you’re multitasking nachos, soda, and existential dread,” claimed columnist Max Byte. Technology experts ridiculed the comparison, pointing out that Windows 95 didn’t have indigestion, but the piece remains wildly popular on tech forums nonetheless. The Slippery Slope of Causation Aetiologists are also masters of the slippery slope: if you admit that X caused Y, then obviously Z will follow. This summer, a popular Twitter thread claimed that sunburns are the first domino in a chain reaction leading to job loss, existential ennui, and ultimately the downfall of Western civilization. The thread amassed thousands of retweets from people freshly scorched at pool parties, each offering personal stories of career blunders blamed entirely on a lobster-red sunburn. Epidemiologists were baffled; historians shrugged. Aetiologists celebrated another victory. What the Funny People Are Saying “I once blamed my divorce on my toaster’s crumb tray, and thanks to aetiology, I now have a full research paper under review.”—Ron White (impersonator), stand-in comedian “If you think your problems are caused by childhood trauma, wait till you read about the secret government conspiracy of garden gnomes.”—Jerry Seinfeld, in an unverified tweet In Conclusion: A Disclaimer You Can Trust All of the above is—as every seasoned aetiologist would admit—utterly speculative. Attributing causation in life is a delightful art, not an exact science. If you’ve suffered any injuries, inexplicable cravings, or catastrophic meltdowns, don’t blame your socks for tangling, your fridge for conspiring, or your alarm clock for cosmic misalignment. This entirely human collaboration between the world’s oldest tenured professor and a philosophy major-turned-dairy farmer bears no responsibility for your newfound obsession with chicken-bone divination. Any resemblance to real causes—well, that was completely coincidental. Auf Wiedersehen.
SpinTaxi Magazine - The Curious Case of Aetiology. A satirical cartoon depicting a detective-style scientist in a trench coat and fedora, labeled 'Aetiologist', pointing ... - SpinTaxi.com 2 Read the full article
Happy womb emancipation day! I hope it's being splendid to you! (I also really enjoy following you and I don't know if people you don't really know (like me) are wishing you a happy birthday but I think everyone deserves to be wished a happy birthday even from strangers) x
Thank you very much! And thank you for following me, too! <3