Thedearladydisdain - Thedearladydisdain

thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain

More Posts from Thedearladydisdain and Others

5 months ago

nobody will ever convince me the act of getting purely cosmetic surgeries- especially life threatening ones, is more empowering than coming to terms with your body. you don’t have to love your body. you don’t even have to like it. getting cosmetic procedures will only make you hate all the other things you don’t like about yourself even more. your body was not made to be “attractive”. and let me clarify, none of this blame is to be based on women in the big picture. yes- women have undeniably contributed to the normalization of these invasive and dangerous surgeries, this wouldn’t even be an issue if men didn’t think the entire existence of a woman is to cater to them.


Tags
4 months ago

ex-christian but i suspect life without eve's choice would have been hellish for women. eve was already condemned to the title of adam's rib. when i was a kid, i used to be angry with eve for taking away a chance at paradise (the intention, i'm certain). but now, i suspect she may have just saved us all the plight of her own existence and i like to think she had more in mind before and after she took that fruit.


Tags
2 months ago

No guys you don’t understand the removal of uterus havers’ rights is a warm up for Real People Who We Actually Care About losing *their* rights. This is why it’s vital that we act now before the damage that’s done actually starts to matter. Also don’t forget that baby incubators are NOT a cohesive oppressed class with anything in common with one another that can be described with one simple word and if you suggest otherwise you’re no better than the people who are restricting the autonomy of birthing bodies!!


Tags
2 months ago

People giving JKR shit for Cho Chang will never not be annoying to me as an actual Chinese person. The thing about Chinese is that there is no perfect way to transliterate it into English, as the two languages are just too different from each other. And while there are more common romanization systems than others, ultimately it's up to the discretion of the individual person for how they want to transliterate Chinese into English. In the Chinese editions of HP, Cho's name is 张秋, which would most commonly be romanized as Zhang Qiu (East Asian names are written surname first, given name second). However, it's completely reasonable to assume that Cho's parents simply decided to romanize her name differently because they personally felt that Cho gets the pronunciation across better than Qiu. I've known plenty of Chinese people, and also people whose languages do not use the Latin alphabet in general, who spell their names in English differently from how the more standard transliterations would spell it, just because of their personal preference. If anything it's no different than Catherine vs. Katherine, so trying to use Cho as a gotcha against JKR is not only annoying and nit-picky, it's also just ignorant. Which I suppose goes for a lot of the criticism against her.

wow this is a great insight, thanks anon


Tags
2 weeks ago
Man withstands 800+ snake bites — on purpose — to find a universal anti-venom
goodgoodgood.co
Tim Friede’s blood is now the source of a potential new universal anti-venom, following hundreds of meticulous bites and venomous injections

"Tim Friede’s YouTube channel is home to a collection of videos depicting the Wisconsin-native truck mechanic subjecting himself to purposeful snake bites, blood slowly dripping down his arms.

For the past 20 years, Friede has been one of the most notorious “unconventional” medical researchers, undergoing over 200 bites from the world’s deadliest snakes — and more than four times as many — 850 — venomous injections. 

He did it all in the name of science.

According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 100,000 people are killed by snake bites each year, with countless more being disabled by the venom of the deadly reptiles. 

While life-saving anti-venom is available, very few countries actually have the capacity to produce it properly, given that most bites occur in remote and rural areas, and anti-venom requires arduous sourcing and accuracy. 

But Friede’s blood is now full of antibodies, following decades of strategic exposure to the neurotoxins of mambas, cobras, and other lethal slithering critters.

His blood is now the source material researchers are using to develop an anti-venom capable of neutralizing a broad spectrum of snake bites...

Friede started this hobby — which he is indeed adamant no one else tries at home — out of sheer curiosity in childhood. After playing with harmless garter snakes in his youth, he began keeping more dangerous species of snakes as pets. At one point, he had 60 of them in his home basement.

In 1999, he began extracting venom from his snakes, drying it, diluting it, and injecting himself with tiny doses — keeping meticulous records as he went.

He had one major hospitalization in 2001, when he was paralyzed and in a coma for four days. But instead of giving up, he doubled down. 

“In hindsight, I’m glad it happened,” Friede told The Times. “I never made another mistake.”

Jacob Glanville, an immunologist and founder of biotech company Centivax, stumbled on Friede’s videos.

Now, Friede is the director of herpetology at Centivax and serves as something of a “human lab” to Glanville.

“For a period of nearly 18 years, [Tim] had undertaken hundreds of bites and self-immunizations with escalating doses from 16 species of very lethal snakes that would normally a kill a horse,” Glanville told The Guardian.

“It blew my mind. I contacted him because I thought if anyone in the world has these properly neutralizing antibodies, it’s him.”

To develop the new anti-venom, Glanville and his fellow researchers identified 19 of the world’s deadliest snakes — in the elapid family — which kill their prey by injecting neurotoxins into their bloodstream, paralyzing muscles (including the big, important ones, like the heart and lungs).

The trouble is, each species in the elapid family has a slightly different toxin, meaning they would each require their own anti-venom.

But Friede’s blood contains certain fragments of each of these toxins; protein molecules seen across the various species. Because of his decades of service to science, his blood also contains the antibodies required to neutralize these toxins, preventing them from sticking to human cells and causing harm.

Combining the antibodies LNX-D09, SNX-B03, and a small molecule called varespladib that inhibits venom toxins, Centivax has successfully created a treatment effective against the entire range of 19 species’ toxins.

Their work, which was recently published in the journal Cell, will soon be tested outside of the lab. 

Trials will start with using the serum to treat dogs admitted to Australian veterinary clinics for snake bites. Assuming that goes well, the next step will be to administer human tests.

Researchers also believe that because the serum stems from a human, this should also lower the risk of allergic reactions when being administered to other people. 

“The final product would be a single, pan-anti-venom cocktail,” Professor Peter Kwong of Columbia University, a senior author of the study, told The Times.

Or, he added, they could make two: “One that is for the elapids, and another that is for the viperids, because some areas of the world only have one or the other.”

As for Friede, he maintains his affinity for snakes, though his last bite was in November 2018, when he said “enough is enough,” according to The New York Times.

By then, he had certainly done enough. His pursuit of immunity could feasibly save countless lives.

“I’m really proud that I can do something in life for humanity,” Friede told The New York Times, “to make a difference for people that are 8,000 miles away, that I’m never going to meet, never going to talk to, never going to see, probably.”

-via GoodGoodGood, May 2, 2025


Tags
1 month ago

"I'm not a woman, I'm just a person"

Women are people, being a woman is being a person, we are not an alien or some kind of strange invention. Women are people, being a woman is being a person.


Tags
4 months ago

"we need to bring back x" it starts with YOU


Tags
3 months ago

jk rowling: congratulations idiots, you set the bar so low for women's rights that donald "grab em by the pussy" trump had no problem clearing it

everybody: wow i can't believe she's celebrating his achievements, she's a literal white nationalist

4 months ago

Being resourceful isn't ghetto. Being resourceful isn't "redneck" shit. Being resourceful will always be more impressive than casual consumerism. Making something you need or want out of what you already have will always be more impressive than funneling money into Amazon.


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • sevress
    sevress liked this · 1 month ago
  • thesceneryisnice
    thesceneryisnice liked this · 2 months ago
  • debarupa
    debarupa liked this · 3 months ago
  • chondrichthyes-x-mantodea
    chondrichthyes-x-mantodea liked this · 3 months ago
  • summersswiftsartre
    summersswiftsartre liked this · 4 months ago
  • 3lix101
    3lix101 reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • d-24-b
    d-24-b liked this · 4 months ago
  • thedearladydisdain
    thedearladydisdain reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • princessinredlipstick
    princessinredlipstick liked this · 4 months ago
  • strangecollectionperson
    strangecollectionperson liked this · 4 months ago
  • ju-ja
    ju-ja liked this · 4 months ago
  • suhgrant
    suhgrant liked this · 6 months ago
  • kriscossapplesauce
    kriscossapplesauce liked this · 6 months ago
  • mode-lstatus
    mode-lstatus liked this · 7 months ago
  • gypbitch
    gypbitch reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • gypbitch
    gypbitch liked this · 8 months ago
  • octobears
    octobears liked this · 8 months ago
  • thetastesofthedukewerepeculiar
    thetastesofthedukewerepeculiar liked this · 8 months ago
  • ricecakesonice
    ricecakesonice liked this · 9 months ago
  • liolena0
    liolena0 liked this · 9 months ago
  • sharp-rosee
    sharp-rosee liked this · 9 months ago
  • exitpursuedbyasloth
    exitpursuedbyasloth liked this · 9 months ago
  • stonesforroses
    stonesforroses liked this · 9 months ago
  • paradise-restored
    paradise-restored liked this · 9 months ago
  • eeeh-oh
    eeeh-oh liked this · 10 months ago
  • ymrai
    ymrai reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • nothingfrompoland
    nothingfrompoland liked this · 10 months ago
  • mantisfem
    mantisfem liked this · 10 months ago
  • waterlogged-ghost
    waterlogged-ghost liked this · 10 months ago
  • radfemaizen
    radfemaizen liked this · 10 months ago
  • fka-thique
    fka-thique reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • sillybillytrilly
    sillybillytrilly liked this · 10 months ago
  • anik-moon
    anik-moon liked this · 10 months ago
  • femininenuisance
    femininenuisance liked this · 10 months ago
  • shakespeareplaysandautumndays
    shakespeareplaysandautumndays liked this · 10 months ago
  • bluesilksilverspurs
    bluesilksilverspurs liked this · 10 months ago
  • lorisori
    lorisori liked this · 10 months ago
  • usuallurker
    usuallurker liked this · 10 months ago
  • 19thcenturypagans
    19thcenturypagans liked this · 11 months ago
  • lvlylv
    lvlylv liked this · 11 months ago
  • queenmimi2004
    queenmimi2004 reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • nevvve
    nevvve liked this · 11 months ago
  • platycodon-platypus
    platycodon-platypus liked this · 11 months ago
thedearladydisdain - thedearladydisdain
thedearladydisdain

Are you yet living?

110 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags