clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Good for them! Hope they get what they’re asking for
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
He’ll eat your pets _and fuck your couch! Nothing is safe!!
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Great post, but I did get thrown for a loop with the word placeboing, which of course I read as place-boing…
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Goblin.tools is the best! Are the best?
Am the best!!
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
I’ve got this sticker on my laptop at work! And whenever the idiots the “engineers” my coworkers have a death wish don’t know how to read ask me to do something stupid I like to point to it and wait for them to see it
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Watch out for sodium levels with this, deli anything usually has elevated levels of sodium which can be devastating in cats
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
How the fuck is this guy married?! I feel so bad for his daughters
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Honestly, same. Ever since my own mother asked me if I knew that Swift was a witch (as in, pointy black hat, spells, and broomsticks kind of witch)(yes, I’m serious, she legit believes this, stop laughing) I knew the far right has had it out for her. Don’t know what she did to get their attention (and I don’t really care) but they’re coming with their pitchforks
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Yeah, unfortunately meds don’t fix ADHD. They’re a treatment, not a cure. Meds are supposed to be used in conjunction with other treatments (such as therapy, as an example) to be most effective. I know, it sucks, but these are the cards we’ve been dealt.
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
The University of Alberta has a free course on science literacy. I think it’s available on coursera.
clockwork_octopus Now • 92%
Main/secondary
Prime/secondary/tertiary etc
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
It is! Turns out she had spent a lifetime fighting back. It wasn’t just some isolated incident, and she was far from the first person to refuse to give up her seat. The book sets all this straight.
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Bold of you to assume I’d read or even see that note…
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Huh. That’s a good point, I should do something about the hot house I live in. Probably easier doing that than relocating my meds to a different place where I’m guaranteed to never find them again
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Honestly? In America, if you’re white, you’re probably fine. Black though, evidence and all of American history tells us otherwise. America is racist, and cops seem to be even more so.
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Possibly, though seasons vary wildly across the earth, so results would likely be limited to regions, and even then, we travel around a lot and have things like electricity and indoor heating which would probably negate most impacts.
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
I’ve currently got three on the go, because I’m like that. For my non-fiction, read-with-my-eyes selections, there’s two.
First, The Rebellious Life Of Mrs. Rosa Parks by Jeanne Theoharis has been really interesting. I’m not American, and so didn’t learn about her more than “she helped kick start the civil rights movement in the US by refusing to give up her seat on the bus”. It’s weird how much her story has been written over and forgotten, and I’ve enjoyed learning about her and all of her efforts, not just the single one she’s known for.
Next up, The Little Book Of Satanism by La Carmina has been fascinating. I’ve always been intrigued by the idea of religion, but am an avid atheist. I am however quite familiar with the history of how Christianity grew and took over the western world before morphing into the unrecognizable behemoth it is today, and with it, some incredibly toxic ideas have grown as well. The history of the idea of satan lives in this same ideology, and this book explores the history of where the idea of a devil comes from, and explains how the thing that Christians fear most sprang up from their own ideas. Fascinating stuff.
And lastly, I’m listening to Witch King by Martha Wells while I’m at work, and I’m going to be honest here, but I really don’t have a clue what’s going on in this story. I’m going to have to return to this book again one day, and probably read it with my eyes instead of my ears. The story is interesting, though, despite my struggle to follow along
clockwork_octopus Now • 100%
Talcum powder should not be used by women as studies have shown there may be an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer
Technically they're littermates...
Obligatory not-my-cat. This is Holly, the new smol. She’s eating the stick end of a feather toy. I’m told it’s the tastiest part.
Obligatory not-my-cat. This is my friends lovely void, Jezebel.