• Zagorath
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    10023 days ago

    I didn’t read the “in med school” part and was expecting the reveal to be that she actually took a material science course.

      • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        3123 days ago

        That’s biomechanics and the main thing you learn in it aside from statics and dynamics is that living osseous tissue is a strange material and it bends so much more than you think it should

        • @Fosheze@lemmy.world
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          1522 days ago

          it bends so much more than you think it should

          Especially if it’s in a child. Weird kids and their weird flexible bones.

        • MacN'Cheezus
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          622 days ago

          Makes sense to me!

          Jokes aside, this actually IS in fact the only effective method I’ve found to create lasting change in life – basically, you have to find a way to reframe your situation into something that’s temporary, rather than making it a core part of your identity. Basically, if you consider yourself poor (or homeless) BY DEFINITION, all you’ll ever see is evidence to support that fact. But by doing so, you are in fact robbing yourself of any chance of improvement because if the situation is unfixable, there is no point in even making an effort to try. But if you don’t even try, it simply becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, and then you are indeed stuck with no way out.

          So in a way, you do in fact have to gaslight yourself in to believing the opposite about yourself, and then attempt to validate that idea by looking for evidence to support it. This can of course be rather difficult at first, but the more you practice it, the better you’ll get. And the better you get at it, the more you’ll believe it, which ends up making that idea another self-fulfilling prophecy that ends up replacing the former.

  • @MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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    3022 days ago

    Stress: The mind overriding the body’s natural desire to choke the ever-living fuck out of some asshole who desperately deserves it.

  • moosetwin
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    2222 days ago

    lemmy is one of the few platforms where i’m happy to see a post i’ve already seen months before

    • @ssj2marx@lemmy.ml
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      4123 days ago

      I think the real answer is that it plays an important role in making sure you respond appropriately to being chased by a tiger. For hundreds of thousands of years it was perfectly fine operating in that role, and then in the last ten thousand we accidentally created a civilization where some people get way too much of it.

      • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        522 days ago

        Also, humans are not machines, we need rest and relaxation. It’s debatable for why, but life would be a lot more boring if we didn’t have a need for relaxation, art, recreation, etc. Just pure work for survival.

    • @dmMeYourNudes@lemmynsfw.com
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      1122 days ago

      Cortisol is actually a really important hormone and it can even make you feel good. The problem is when you have too much too often. It’s like putting your body and mind into sport mode. Very useful in the short term but unsustainable in the long term.

    • @RestrictedAccount@lemmy.world
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      723 days ago

      Because people who are born lucky enough to have an easy life are likely to have more kids.

      Using cortisol to magnify that improves selection bias.

      The rest is math.

      Evolution is a bitch.

      • Lath
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        923 days ago

        Uh, poor people tend to have more children than rich people.

          • @CaptainSpaceman@lemmy.world
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            622 days ago

            what does “recent” mean? Poor folks been having shit tons of kids for a long ass time. THey needed to have a) extra workers, and b) a chance at keeping the family name/heritage/culture/whatever going. especialyl being poor, you know at least 3 or your 10 arent going to make it, so you gotta play the odds!

            • @Donkter@lemmy.world
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              722 days ago

              IDK if the original hypothesis is true or not. But it’s kind of impossible to make judgements on evolution based on anything we know about humans and society. Modern homo sapiens are only about 150,000 years old and were pretty sure any semblance of a modern hierarchical society didn’t begin until about 7,500 years ago, much less the concept of money which only happened another thousands of years later.

              10,000 years is a drop in the bucket evolutionarily, hell, 100,000 years doesn’t even do much, so any theory of evolution or why a complex hormone like cortisol evolved to be used in the way it is now is way off base if you’re referencing concepts like “rich” and “poor” or reference to any form of societal structure made in the last 10,000 years.

      • Xavienth
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        222 days ago

        A successful organism would not have evolved to highly express cortisol to weed itself out in the case that it has a stressful life. It makes no sense for an organism to evolve a trait that makes it at best equally likely and at worst less likely to reproduce.

        The reason we release excess cortisol in modern life is because our bodies did not evolve for constantly present stressors, they evolved to be stressed in a situation, run away from the tiger, and then you’re good.

  • TWeaK
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    -2023 days ago

    Trump supporters are a minority, so I think this checks out.