sitting in a tim’s in newfoundland listening to people – white, Canadian, people – discussing what precautions are needed to cross the US border. legally.
jesus fuck this is weird.
like. i was only 9 or 10 when they made passports mandatory for canadians to cross into the States. “longest unarmed border in the world” was a Patriotic Bragging Trivia i grew up learning (it’s not been true in years, tho’ I’m not 100% sure if Cdn border guards are armed yet or not).
the fact we need passports alone still has a certain level of Weird to it, but the sheer level of wariness and caution, if not outright fear, that has set in over the past year…
some of the earliest headlines after 45 took the presidency was of Muslim Canadians getting turned away at the border, or other non-Muslim brown or black folks running into trouble. but even middle-aged, middle/working class white Canadians talking about it?
I don’t know this guy, I just follow him on Twitter, but I’ll encourage you, if you’re on Twitter, maybe go and hit that retweet on these too – folks there need this advice as much as we do here.
the demons in my head: cat.(ding ) I’m a kitty cat. and I dance dance dance.
me: what year am I in
This meme is so ancient most ppl who rebloged this prolly dont even know the video jingle this came from.
12 years. This meme is 12 years old
according to know your meme it’s actually 14 years old. as of today, coincidentally. happy birthday kitty cat dance thank you for your contribution to meme history
an alligator has a tapetum lucidum at the back of each eye, which reflects light back into the photoreceptor cells to make the most of low light, and causes its eyes to glow red. photos by larrylynch and david moynahan
We really have harmed a whole generation of trans and gnc children by failing to communicate how serious a decision binding actually is, how there’s no ACTUALLY safe way to bind, how it permeneantly damages the body, how it can make top surgery more difficult in the future. I don’t think we should be keeping trans kids from binding (we let kids do all sorts of things they’re really not old enough to understand the potential consequences of) but we owe them the ability to make informed decisions at LEAST
So this is definitely an important conversation to have, but can you point me at some reading about “permanent damage”? I might just be lucky, but I had zero lasting effects from binding. I’d like to at least read up on it so I can have this conversation and be more specific than “be careful.”
Of course! I can’t easily source right now but I am more than happy to provide further info when I am not at work and on mobile. Unfortunately, like a lot of trans healthcare, a lot of what we know about binding is anecdotal and word of mouth. BUT permeneant damage can include:
-Musculoskeletal damage. Binders are indiscriminate compression tools; they can’t flatten the chest without applying pressure every other anatomical structure underneath including the spine, ribs, lungs and heart. Many people who bind experience chronic back pain, shoulder pain, sharp stabbing chest pains, permeneantly decreased lung capacity, literal spine deformation, etc etc.
-A continuation of the above but the ribs are actually jointed bones. Their ability to flex is absolutely vital to their ability to withstand trauma and protect your vital organs. Imagine the damage that would be done to your elbow if your bent your arm to full flexion and then tightly bound it closed like that, for six, eight, twelve hours per day, every day, for weeks or months or years. And you don’t NEED a functioning arm to live!
-Tissue atrophy. Forcing chest tissue to lay in an unnatural way can and will change the way that tissue looks, even to risk of atrophy. Some people who bind and only moderately dislike the way their chest looks find that they HATE the way it looks after binding for a period of time. Tissue atrophy can also make top surgery more difficult in the future, and increase the risk of complications like nerve damage.
-Worsened dysphoria. Once someone starts binding and becomes accustomed to seeing themselves with a flat chest, it can be much more difficult to see yourself without one, and dysphoria that much more intolerable. You can imagine the psychological feedback loop of binding more in response.
The typical safety measures passed around about binding are harm REDUCTION measures and should not be advertised as making binding “safe.” Binding is not safe. It is a very serious health decision with long term consequences and should be treated as such. That doesn’t mean it’s the wrong decision, but it should not be considered the DEFAULT decision for chest dysphoria which is frankly how it’s currently treated.
I love the theory that most of the words Shakespeare is credited with “inventing” are really just pre-existing slang that was popular among teenage girls at the time the plays were written, because it puts a totally different complexion on how the tone of certain scenes must have read to contemporary audiences.
Some angry shakesphere character upon seeing the man who murdered his dad and fucked his wife: BEGONE THOT
Shakespeare would totally write “BEGONE THOT!” But then he would write a
fire monologue where the whole thing turns on how thot and thought are
pronounced the same.
The “thoughts on thots” speech.
And then there’s the “All that Glisters/Glitters is Not Gold” bit, where he’s credited for something that is explicitly framed as already being a well-worn saying in the play it appears in. Still not sure how the fuck that happened.
I’m down to my last $50. I got a new rheumatologist but copays to see her are $35, same with my endocrinologist and GYN. To see my primary care is another $20. My new medicine combined with more PT is going to cost a not so pretty chunk of change. I still have to pay a few thousand for school this year, it’s my last year if everything goes well. I have rapidly increasing medical debt.
Literally anything will help, I wouldn’t be asking if I wasn’t desperate.
Thousands of cartons of Vanilla Almond Breeze are under recall for containing undeclared milk. I don’t care what you think about vegans, nondairy milk, whatever…
This could kill people if word doesn’t get out fast enough.
Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin
Please share this. Dairy allergies can be fatal and many people with them choose to drink almond milk.
recall is dated august 2, this is current. pass it along for your lactose intolerant friendos.
Adding info:
Approximately 145,254 half-gallon cartons of the affected product
were shipped to retailers and wholesalers in AL, AR, CT, FL, GA, IA, IL,
IN, KY, LA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, NC, NE, NJ, NY, OH, OK, PA, SC, TN,
TX, VA, and WI. The units recalled represent less than 0.8% of
half-gallon containers of refrigerated Vanilla Almond Breeze almond milk
shipped by Hood in the last twelve months.
The recall only applies to the following product: refrigerated Vanilla Almond Breeze almond milk with a use-by date of September 2, 2018. To identify the affected product, consumers should look for the stamped information printed as:
and
a Universal Product Code (UPC barcode) of 41570 05621 on the side panel
of the carton next to the nutrition facts. Below is a photo of the
affected product and stamped information on the carton.
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