laureltreedaphne
laureltreedaphne
laureltreedaphne

Sure, having them in pantsuits but twerking would probably be a good way to point out the ridiculousness of objectifying women's bodies that way. Or even just having them wear the same outfit as Lily.

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The problem isn't having backup dancers. It's objectifying them, and having only one sex of dancer. Here's a very old example, Britney's "Slave For You."

Haha I'm not sure - one gathering data for a social experiment about men who value the lives of their cats over their girlfriends?

That is exciting, though to be honest I don't get why either side spends time drafting and passing these bills that are guaranteed to fail in the House / Senate. Is it just so they can tell their constituents that they did it?

I once asked him "If an armed robber was holding me and the cat at gunpoint, and said you had to pick one of us to die, who would you pick?"

Biochemistry. Ugh.

So, I have an exam on Monday. I just took a practice test and got a 52%. I need to get at least a 44% to even have a chance of passing the class (and that's if I get 100% on the last exam, which is unlikely.) I am freaking out and don't know what to do. And the worst part is that it's pretty much my own fault - I

Yeah I mean, I see too many people with kids they're pretty disappointed in. I dunno - it's not a risk I want to take. My cat is never going to disappoint me, beyond maybe peeing on my couch. My kid could be a rapist, or an asshole, or a Republican. Or just grow up to hate me and never call me, for whatever reason - I

You have the world's best user name - every time I see it I laugh.

It would be so worth it. Though I don't know if I'm down for the ping pong paddles.

What a cool story! I am desperately jealous of your job!

Duh.

This is how I feel about pets vs. children. 100% convinced that a dog / cat brings more joy and satisfaction to my life than a baby ever would.

That's not how residency interviews work in hospitals - you do in fact have one interview during your fourth year of medical school. You meet some of the doctors in your specialty but not all of them, and most of who you meet are the other residents, not the attendings. So it's totally feasible, actually. They also

I really feel like the Times is just fucking with us - this CANNOT be real. I refuse to exist in a world where these people are real.

I think that's definitely a big part of it, but I also saw a lot of people who just kind of had the attitude of "dammit, I trained for this, I MUST finish." I wanted to shake them - you can always run another marathon and finish it, but not if you irreparably injure yourself trying to finish this one!

I don't disagree that it's a nicer way to go than cancer. I was more commenting on the sentence about her insisting on finishing the race like a "true runner." If she died of a head injury that could have been treated, that's pretty sad, and I don't really think it's inspiring - this woman seems like she probably had

That's exactly what I was thinking - people don't often realize how serious it is, because they can keep going, hold conversations with people, etc. Her age isn't even the issue, it happens to a wide age range. You just have to hit your head in just the right way - and what sucks is that it is usually a fixable

I don't like it being held up as an inspirational death. There's not really enough information on how she died, but if she died of the head injury that makes me sad for her and her family, not inspired. I'm completely fine with 86 year olds running marathons if that's what they want to do, but I really don't like this

I actually agree with you, and from what I can tell about this lady it seems like this is probably the way she would have chosen to go. I was more referring to this sentence: "She fell at mile 20 and hit her head, but insisted on finishing the race, like a true runner." I wish we wouldn't perpetuate the idea that true