4 shades of blue captured in a single image in Antarctica
(via mmmarrammm)
4 shades of blue captured in a single image in Antarctica
(via mmmarrammm)
So one time I put my peacock on my bike and realized they matched.
Dreamy! Thank you so much!
(via thatgordongirl)
Wait do people in the lower 48 not learn your state songs in school??
Did not need to be taught. Georgia On My Mind is a delight and we sing it anywhere we can.
I hate Sinatra as a result of “New York, New York” because the state is more than that fucking city.
I learned “California Here I Come” from cartoons like a normal person.
Ehhhh, at some point you’d probably run into “Tennessee Waltz,” I think. Though I have to say, it’s a depressing song for a state song. “My old buddy stole my girlfriend at the dance.” Really says state pride.
(via mylittleredgirl)
(via castalianspring)
Temperatures were hovering right at freezing for several days, and you know what that means: It’s Jesus Geese season!!
I wasn’t fast enough with my camera, but the local pond looked exactly like this.
Laughed myself straight to hell thank you
(via sarnakhwritesthings)
You want the meaning of life. Came to the right place. Hey, guys, dinner’s on me tonight.
i think we should be talking about the semi-recent advancements in cystic fibrosis treatment like all the time every day. there hasn’t been a drug like this since AZT medications for HIV infection it is truly fucking miraculous and very important
basically: cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease which makes the mucous a person generates extra sticky. it used to kill people in infancy, then with advancements in medical tech it killed people in young childhood, and until very recently cystic fibrosis patients could expect to live until about thirty years old with consistent painful lung infections and complications.
in 2019 the FDA approved a drug called trikafta (which is really three drugs in one) for cystic fibrosis treatment. what it essentially does is patch up the malfunctioning proteins that cause the extra sticky mucus. trikafta is effective on about 90% of cystic fibrosis patients.
people who had spent their entire lives in and out of hospitals, on and off of ventilators, suffering from pneumonia and sometimes treated through painful procedures like intubation took this drug, got out of bed, coughed up an entire lifetimes worth of mucus out of their lungs over the course of a few hours, breathed clearly for perhaps the first time in their lives, and now go on to live well into their seventies.
like isn’t that insane. isn’t that amazing. doesn’t that give you hope for the future of medical advancements and treatment. fuck. i think about it all the time……
There’s a WHAT.
For WHAT.
It’s been amazing!
My ward is the respiratory ward - CF is one of the things we specialize in.
Since this med came out we haven’t had a SINGLE CF admission to the ward
There used to always be a CF patient spending a couple of months with us at a time
There’s a man who is 23 years old who I was sure would not survive his next admission (aim saturations 85% is end stage lung disease)
There’s a set of the local frequent flyers that we all know so well
Except
No we don’t
On the CF specialist ward (with reasonable staff turnover)
Half the staff have probably never even seen a CF patient
They are going to live
For the people asking “well how do we know people are living that long if it’s so new????” Here’s a page from the CF foundation about life expectancy.
Additionally, it should be noted that metrics like life expectancy are in no way a guarantee of… Anything. There are significant outlier CF patients who are at an advanced age now despite the odds due to a variety of different factors, having lived the majority of their lives before the development of modulators.
But the fact remains that the odds are better now than they have ever ever been before, by leaps and bounds. It isn’t cured, and many patients still need significant treatment in addition to Trikafta, but it is so much better than anyone could have dreamed of twenty years ago, and that is a triumph.
(via kenaran)
(via littlehen)
If you didn’t need to work for money (e.g. via universal basic income), would you still work? If so, what’s the primary reason?
Yes, my work helps people
Yes, I like the end product of my work
Yes, I enjoy working/being productive
Yes, to spend time with my coworkers
Yes, I need the structure/schedule
Yes, I feel an obligation to my workplace/company
Yes, another reason
No, I’d stop working
Not applicable/I don’t or can’t work now anyway
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.
(via carpe-mamilia)
when i say i got that dog in me this is the dog i’m talking about
(via mmmarrammm)