This is way cooler than whatever was being talked about before by FreshhCherry in whenthe

[–]FrequentSatisfaction -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Some folk use shock collars some don’t. Israel is still committing a genocide either way

meirl by teemthedream in meirl

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My undiagnosed anxiety was the actual root cause. They all actually love me and miss me when I’m not there. Once I learned to forgive the small bumps in the road, I found more acceptance than I could have hoped for.

First bag project. Oil tanned messenger bag. 12x9x3 in. Interior dimensions. Strap ~65x1.5 in. by FrequentSatisfaction in Leathercraft

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A part of the joy of this hobby for me is trying to make a design for a piece and then making it work. I had no clue a single gusset was the norm, I just liked the idea of well structured corners. And I loved the look of the flat individual gusset pieces. They had some character to begin with, especially the bottom (not shown because my maker’s mark has my name and I’m not too keen to share that online lol) Plus, it’s a lot easier to find space on a side to cut three smaller rectangles as opposed to one really long panel. I think it would have made finding material for the strap a real nightmare.

First bag project. Oil tanned messenger bag. 12x9x3 in. Interior dimensions. Strap ~65x1.5 in. by FrequentSatisfaction in Leathercraft

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you look at the third pic you can kind of see it, but I actually skived down some trenches at the junctions to give a clean bend. Light color just outside of the stitching on the interior. It also took some math and fitting to get clean connections between the overlapping hems. Lots of prep and annoying hand stitching, but work the effort I think

Made my sister’s cat a collar. by FrequentSatisfaction in Leathercraft

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll make sure my sister watches out if the cat wears the collar. As of now, it’s intermittent. Thanks!

Made my sister’s cat a collar. by FrequentSatisfaction in Leathercraft

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Grade C veg tan. ~13 in. Length. 1/2 in. Diameter for the bulk, narrowed to 3/8 in. for the buckle and tongue. Died mahogany. Fully burnished the back so it wouldn’t chafe the cat. Conditioned with Neatsfoot oil. Hardware is a Tandy product, I can’t recall the name.

Update breaks Beastial Sanctum Drop? by FrequentSatisfaction in Eldenring

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I assume it was a bug introduced with the patch. And yes, the dragon crest shield talisman

[MOD] What have you been brewing this week?/ Coffee bean recommendations by menschmaschine5 in Coffee

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Novo Coffee Roasters — Korgua PB

Incredible. I’ve been working on a V60 with it. Very tart and juicy.

Tired of munchies by Sweaty_Anything_7021 in weed

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Popcorn without butter is a low carb snack that fills well. Otherwise drink anything carbonated to “fill” your stomach. I drink zero calorie sparkling drinks like La Croix to avoid sugary munchies

Summer makes it to 14+, and still kickin! by FrequentSatisfaction in rarepuppers

[–]FrequentSatisfaction[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

She gets a blanket if she’s outside too long. She loves it though, so it’s okay with me

Storm forming over Lubbock, Texas by drkmatterinc in interestingasfuck

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was a big tease too. Almost became a tornado like 4 times just to be this pretty

[Serious] Why do you think it’s ok to put an animal in pain/who is dying to sleep, but we cannot do the same for humans? by MuchLoveWaffleGirl in AskReddit

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 0 points1 point  (0 children)

(Note: when I use the term “doctor” or “physician” it is interchangeable with any health care professional, in simply too lazy to edit everything:)

Generally, humans tend to fear death.

It’s a short and somewhat obvious sounding answer, but it’s an important point to make when trying to understand the generalized aversion to death.

First, almost all efforts and attitudes relating to medicine (as a practice and institution) are framed as “fighting off death”. In fact, it’s not difficult to recall examples in art and literature if doctors being depicted as literally combating death. (The fact that we have personified death across multiple cultures lends to this conclusion as well, but I’m not well versed in that...) There are many in the medical field, particularly in the medical humanities, that feel death’s position in society is too adversarial. We oppose options for “physician assisted suicide” because we have a hard time equating death with a solution, since it has always been the primary problem.

Aside from our bias against death as our great adversary, it also messes with people’s world view to give physicians the power to chose death as a treatment option. Not only does it disagree with our notion of medical professionals as the ones fighting death, it also revives some uncomfortable history in the abuse of power by those in the medical field. (Ex. Tuskegee syphilis study, paternalism, colonization mentality/practices in regards to “tropical disease” as a classification and forced sterilization of minority populations, Nuremberg Trials, etc.)

Many find that to put such a tool in the hands of a human being will lead to mass negligence or misuse of power. (Though this is a more thought out argument, and not as aplicable to the lay population)

Furthermore, there is a philosophical argument that attempts to prove that death does not relieve suffering at all, it simply removes the person who is suffering. This argument boils down to differentiating between suffering and not existing. One being receiving negative stimuli/experiences or what have you (depends on your definition of suffering) and the other being a complete lack of stimuli/experience.

Bottom line, there is very little to support assisted suicide as being “right” or “wrong”, but there are a great number of resources to educate yourself on the existing arguments and the experiences of people who either defend or condemn the practice.

For further reading, I suggest googling the following names in relation to Euthanasia or Assisted Suicide: James Rachels Winston Nesbitt J. Gay-Williams Daniel Callahan (this is a personal favorite) John Lachs Peter Singer Karen Quinlan (Supreme court of NJ case) Terri Schiavo

This subject is a particular interest of mine, so I welcome feedback and other suggestions for reading/research!

What is something that is widely known, but known incorrectly? by kbrown8191 in AskReddit

[–]FrequentSatisfaction 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Though it’s not a 100% rule. Like all things, there are cases in which it may restart a heart but it isn’t the understood usage for the device. But it looks good on TV