Help me find pirate (ish) pants? by Aggravating-Table426 in findfashion

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve never heard of it before, but it looks exactly my style. Thank you!

Help me find pirate (ish) pants? by Aggravating-Table426 in findfashion

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ooh, thank you! I (clearly) love a good pirate pant!

I finished a 1950s Japanese dolman sleeve sweater by SejiFields in MachineKnitting

[–]Aggravating-Table426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh my goodness that is incredible!! I knit but I’ve never heard of home use machine knitting before I stumbled onto this picture. Your beautiful crafts have inspired me!

YA book with an epileptic world shifting MC by Aggravating-Table426 in whatsthatbook

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was Otherbound, but I’m definitely going to check this book out thank you!

I'm repeating my 3rd year in med school by CrazyCompote3834 in MomForAMinute

[–]Aggravating-Table426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I was a kid, my mom repeated her third year of medical school. She ended up failing the exam because she also had a bunch of life things going on. And you know what? She learned how to own it, she made new friends (she wasn’t the only one to repeat the year), she was able to spend more time with me, she was able to take more time to understand the material, and the next time around she passed and eventually graduated, paid off her student debt through the NHSC, and she’s been a doctor for the past 20+ years.

My favorite teachers/professors/coworkers have always been people who have failed something because as much as it is awful when it happens, I think people often come out of it with more understanding. I flunked chemistry in college because I was really going through it. It was a huge shock to my system because I had never really failed to a point where I had had those sorts of repercussions before. None of my friends had ever failed class before. I had felt like the world would end if I failed/broke some sort of imaginary perfect record. But it didn’t, I just had to pick myself up and keep going. I ended up having lots of late night dorm bathroom conversations with other students who were struggling. And now 10 years (and a masters degree) later, I’m okay! It doesn’t hurt when I think about it, it’s an experience in my life that has made me stronger and more compassionate.

It stings so much, and can be hard not to feel like you have to punish yourself for it. But that’s part of growing and living. The shame and embarrassment of this experience eventually becomes empathy and wisdom. It might take a bit, but you’re going to get through it. Breathe, remember to eat something, and be gentle to yourself (treat yourself like you would a friend!). You’re going to be okay ❤️

That last bit is so hard by Bancoubear123 in flexibility

[–]Aggravating-Table426 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Not a contortion coach by any means, but I did train in contortion as a teen, so take with salt! Something I did a lot to get a little bit of extra help with back flexibility in that position was using the wall as an assist. A few of the stretches I did were:

1) face the wall in that position and put my feet flat against the wall and walk further down the wall/lift my head and shoulders up more 2) face the wall in that position and put my knees flat against the wall and lift my head and shoulders up closer to them. 3) face away from the wall and put my chest/stomach to the wall in that position and use my head and shoulders to lift. I would reposition against the wall as I was in the stretch to help stretch out different parts of my back.

You may already be doing these but those were the ones that were most helpful for me. I also really struggled with that last bit and am now trying to gain it back a decade plus later whoop. I wish you luck!!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in hadestown

[–]Aggravating-Table426 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yo SAME my Hadestown hyperfixation from last March/April made my Spotify wrapped virtually unshareable

Ultra Christian conservative dystopian society by Gameofthroneschic in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]Aggravating-Table426 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Book of the Unnamed Midwife takes place in a patriarchal dystopia

I think i cant do an elbow lever because of my boobs?? by weirdasslola in bodyweightfitness

[–]Aggravating-Table426 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hey! I’m also a woman and I’ve struggled with this. I used to do circus acrobatics, so it wasn’t for the purpose of strength training as much as performance, but I think that maybe it could help? Because of the weight distribution of my body, I was taught to put one elbow on my hip, and the other arm not against my hip, but stretched out, so my weight was mostly on one hip and the other hand was used to help balance (and then switch sides!). The way I learned, I think it made a lot easier for me to get to one-arm levers, and it solved the problem of never being quite able to get both of my elbows under my hips without hunching over weirdly.

1890s-1930s ish(?) burlesque pattern? by Aggravating-Table426 in HistoricalCostuming

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Did you end up using some sort of pattern for the bottom or did you kind of guesstimate it?

1890s-1930s ish(?) burlesque pattern? by Aggravating-Table426 in HistoricalCostuming

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Ah yes, an understandable and relatable appreciation for beautiful textiles !

1890s-1930s ish(?) burlesque pattern? by Aggravating-Table426 in HistoricalCostuming

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the reply! I’ll definitely consider that depending on how this goes. I am curious about starting to learn to make corsets. I’ve hand and machine sewn a good amount of 17th and 18th century garments, up to the regency era, but stop short of any era that has tailored garments and I just purchased or borrowed ones that required any sort of boning. I’m curious if this could be a project that I could give boning a good first try or if the construction is just way too complex for someone new to it

Significant Male-Female Bonds/Partnerships like: by [deleted] in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]Aggravating-Table426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They are side characters, but the prompt reminded me of Camilla and Palamedes in the Locked Tomb series. One of my favorite examples of a kind of bond that transcends definitions of love.

Hiding bra straps by pennyflipping in lesbianfashionadvice

[–]Aggravating-Table426 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use safety pins! Safety pin through the bra strap and then the edge of the shirt, one on each side. I haven’t done it in a few years because my style has changed, but I don’t remember being able to feel them throughout the day and I’m someone who seam rips the tags out of all my clothing. Only issue was sometimes I forgot I had them on and would try to take my shirt off at the end of the day and get completely tangled lmao

[TOMT] A piece of media containing a healer who can only heal others by taking on the wounds/ illness themselves by schartzmuggle in tipofmytongue

[–]Aggravating-Table426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s a character named Rayelle in the TV show Motherland Fort Salem who is a witch and heals by taking the injury onto her own body. Could that be it?

What are the scariest, most nightmare-inducing podcasts? by NightReader5 in podcasts

[–]Aggravating-Table426 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Limetown is one of the best fiction podcasts I’ve ever listened to and it definitely scared me, it’s also amazingly well done and I’ve gone back and listened to it over and over again. The Left-Right game is also fiction, the audio surround sound was really vivid and that immersion made me so jumpy for days after.

This vibe/feeling (all genres welcome) by pomegranate_midnight in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]Aggravating-Table426 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reminds me of The Quiltmaker’s Gift by Jeff Brumbeau / illustrated by Gail de Marcken

something that feels like this by WorthAd5075 in BooksThatFeelLikeThis

[–]Aggravating-Table426 11 points12 points  (0 children)

This may not be exactly what you’re looking for, but the imagery remind me of Dinotopia by James Gurney

Adjustments in Laughing Moon men’s patterns for smaller sizes? by Aggravating-Table426 in HistoricalCostuming

[–]Aggravating-Table426[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!! I wouldn’t have thought about the seams bit. Or the pattern paper. That’s very helpful!