killjoy:

aleatoryw:

robotlyra:

jenroses:

heavyweightheart:

Research has shown that pleasure affects nutrient absorption. In a 1970s study of Swedish and Thai women, it was found that when the Thai women were eating their own (preferred) cuisine, they absorbed about 50% more iron from the meal than they did from eating the unfamiliar Swedish food. And the same was true in the reverse for the Swedish women. When both groups were split internally and one group given a paste made from the exact same meal and the other was given the meal itself, those eating the paste absorbed 70% less iron than those eating the food in its normal state.

Pleasure affects our metabolic pathways; it’s a facet of the complex gut-brain connection. If you’re eating foods you don’t like because you think it’s healthy, it’s not actually doing your body much good (it’s also unsustainable, we’re pleasure-seeking creatures). Eat food you enjoy, it’s a win-win.

what

no seriously

what?

PLEASURE IS A NECESSARY PART OF HUMAN HEALTH, BOTH PSYCHOLOGICALLY AND PHYSICALLY

this is why you should be eating your chips with salsa and guac instead of beating yourself up for not eating a salad with tomato and avocado (unless you are a salad bitch like me then enjoy both of them!)

here’s a recent systemic review of all the research done on the subject

(via narwhalpotato32)

trilliath:
“#like the cat is stiles’s familiar #and derek is sneaking out of bed #after this crazy night with this witch he just met #and he doesn’t know how to stay #and stiles is out like a light because he wasted a lot of magic showing off for...

trilliath:

#like the cat is stiles’s familiar  #and derek is sneaking out of bed  #after this crazy night with this witch he just met  #and he doesn’t know how to stay  #and stiles is out like a light because he wasted a lot of magic showing off for derek  #totally not a waste thank you very much  #and so he doesn’t stir when derek leaves  #but the cat can feel how derek’s presence  #changed stiles  #and so she follows Derek when he leaves  #sneaks into his car  #and into his house  #and then eventually derek realizes he has a cat in his house  #a cat he recognizes  #and he has to man up and go back to that witch’s house  #because that’s just the right thing to do  #even though he really likes this cat  #and how she falls asleep on his chest  #it just feels right  #so he  #puts it off  #because he doesn’t want to have his excuse to go see stiles leave  #but eventually  #stiles traces his familiar’s energy  #and finds his way to derek’s hideaway  #and retrieves his cat  #a little indignant that he has to face this guy  #this guy who rejected him  #though he’s glad he kept her safe #and the cat just sighs  #because they are DUMB  #and clearly should be together  #so when Stiles takes her home  #All petulant and pining  #she just sneaks out again  #and goes back to Derek’s  #again and again  #because CLEARLY they are dumb    

(via wellhalesbells)

beemovieerotica:

I know people on tumblr looove stories of underwater cave diving, but I haven’t seen anyone talk about nitrogen narcosis aka “raptures of the deep

basically when you want to get your advanced scuba certification (allowing you to go more than 60 feet deep) you have to undergo a very specific test: your instructor takes you down past the 60+ foot threshold, and she brings a little underwater white board with her.

she writes a very basic math problem on that board. 6 + 15. she shows it to you, and you have to solve it.

if you can solve it, you’re good. that is the hardest part of the test.

because here’s what happens: there is a subset of people, and we have no real idea why this happens only to them, who lose their minds at depth. they’re not dying, they’re not running out of oxygen, they just completely lose their sense of identity when deep in the sea.

a woman on a dive my instructor led once vanished during the course of the excursion. they were diving near this dropoff point, beyond which the depth exceeded 60 feet and he’d told them not to go down that way. the instructor made his way over to look for her and found a guy sitting at the edge of the dropoff (an underwater cliff situation) just staring down into the dark. the guy is okay, but he’s at the threshold, spacing out, and mentally difficult to reach. they try to communicate, and finally the guy just points down into the dark, knowing he can’t go down there, but he saw the woman go.

instructor is deep water certified and he goes down. he shines his light into the dark, down onto the seafloor which is at 90 feet below the surface. he sees the woman, her arms locked to her sides, moving like a fish, swimming furiously in circles in the pitch black.

she is hard to catch but he stops her and checks her remaining oxygen: she is almost out, on account of swimming a marathon for absolutely no reason. he is able to drag her back up, get her to a stable depth to decompress, and bring her to the surface safely.

when their masks are off and he finally asks her what happened, and why was she swimming like that, she says she fully, 100% believed she was a mermaid, had always been a mermaid, and something was hunting her in the dark 👍

(via motsimages)

pepperf:

c-l-y-d-e:

meshugenist:

vague-humanoid:

https://t.co/zO681ePk7B pic.twitter.com/ZLGx8SjMhj  — Dr Tom Bowers (@fancywookiee) May 2, 2023ALT
image

The aritcle:

From what I understand from the article, it’s even rougher than normal content moderation: a lot of these workers were hired to train AIs like ChatGPT away from, well, all the worst that the web could provide, to detoxify it for the end users. They are specifically given the worst stuff that can be dredged up from the depths of the internet, and asked to label it - so that the AI can use that data to identify hatespeech, suicide ideation, racism, CSA, etc etc.

It’s an awful job, and some are paid less than $2 an hour. Workers have PTSD. Are they being offered counselling, support, compensation? Fuck no, they get punished for speaking up.

Good luck to the African Content Moderators Union, I hope they get the protections and compensation that their workers need.

(via motsimages)


Indy Theme by Safe As Milk