this is a cinematic masterpiece
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@what-th3-fuck
this is a cinematic masterpiece
These are $30 for one but stitches at the hospital are more expensive so this is pretty damn great
So what you’re saying is that someone in the free market has responded to high costs by developing a new product that is far less expensive, and can be applied by the injured person themselves not just a doctor or nurse.
This is neat AF
Its an advanced butterfly bandaid.
@keyhollow
This isn’t ‘Neat’ this is horrifying. America is in shambles.
‘Oh drat! I’ve been stabbed and I can’t afford to go to hospital. Good thing I’ve brought my emergency DIY stitches.’
America… your health care system is fucked up. You know that, right?
Yes we know thank you
never gonna get over the cycle of
product invented -> problem with capitalist hellscape mildly circumvented -> americans celebrate because its incredibly good that this product exists -> non-americans telling us we’re dumbasses for? being happy theres a tiny little workaround for our shitty system? acting like we’re stupid for looking forward to a product that fixes an 800 dollar problem for a fraction of the cost?
extremely cool and sexy of you all to uhh *spins wheel* mock the citizens of a dystopian nightmare for *throws dart* being excited about the prospect of having one less thing to suffer for.
when the times get rough and I lose sight of the goal i just. reread “the orange” by wendy cope again & remember. that’s where I’m going folks. sooner or later, whatever it takes.
At lunchtime I bought a huge orange— The size of it made us all laugh. I peeled it and shared it with Robert and Dave— They got quarters and I had a half.
And that orange, it made me so happy, As ordinary things often do Just lately. The shopping. A walk in the park. This is peace and contentment. It’s new.
The rest of the day was quite easy. I did all the jobs on my list And enjoyed them and had some time over. I love you. I’m glad I exist.
– “The Orange,” Wendy Cope
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HELLO MY FRIEND IM DRESSED JUST LIKE YOU
I feel like the body positivity movement is literally only beneficial for average sized women who have been emotionally impacted by images of skinny women and completely useless for women who actually have to deal with the tangible effects of having bodies that aren’t conventionally attractive.
The vast majority of the women in my life are average sized women who have been emotionally ravaged by the idea that skinny is the norm. I won’t take away from these feelings or experiences because they’re real and every day women are struggling with their bodies because of them. However, none of these women actually have to deal the very tangible and devastating consequences of having a body that falls outside of average.
Can you define what you mean by “tangible consequences” in this context? Beyond the internal aspects described in another response? I’m not disagreeing, but I’m not entirely sure what you mean. Are you talking about social consequences of not being seen as “acceptable,” or more like accessibility?
By tangible consequences I mean that they don’t often have to deal with consequences outside of their own personal and emotional perception of their body, which would include social consequences as well as accessibility.
So an average sized woman may feel insecure about her body but those feelings don’t effect her social standing the way that it would with a plus sized woman. Those feelings will not determine the quality of her medical care, the ability to find work, to be promoted within the workplace, to find love, to find friendship, to find clothes, etc. while an average sized woman may feel worthless because she’s not skinny, plus sized women actually socially lose their value as human beings which has far reaching and devastating effects that have nothing to do with ones perception of self.
Furthering this, I think this is why so much of the body positivity movement is about reassuring average size women that they’re normal.
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