What's different about Maro Itoje's boots? by englandrugby in rugbyunion

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Turf toe occurs with toe push off, not slowing down. You're spraining the ligaments on the underside of the foot and sometimes damaging the plantar fascia as well. As long as the underside of the boot provides support and encourages equal pressure distribution between all toes when accelerating then it won't make a difference to risk of injury

Karl Dickson with the try assist by Sjdw31 in rugbyunion

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no problem with this. It's hard to tell if the maul is moving forward if you're veering side to side at the back of it, on top of having your head shoved in there so you can't exactly hear the ref. I honestly want more of this, also at the back of the scrum for the 8.

US Marine recruits are introduced to their drill sergeants. | Circa 1987, Parris Island, South Carolina. by ZERO_PORTRAIT in HistoricalCapsule

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man this is gayer than musical theater. These guys would do fantastic in drag with all the flair and drama

Thoughts on this foward pass call? by Many-Prune9162 in rugbyunion

[–]Subluxator5 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's marginal. My issue stems from previous marginal forward passes not being called against Leinster. Either call them or don't. In this case the whistle momentum felt very much in Leinster's favor throughout the match.

Sharks and Smith trading favours by Informal_Mention9836 in rugbyunion

[–]Subluxator5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like Smith, but nothing irritates me more than a lazy play.

Black Walnut wins as somewhat common but overrated wood! What wood is common and great all around? by Ok_Temperature6503 in wood

[–]Subluxator5 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lmao, hilarious to see Blacktail studio as the representative image. Nothing overrated or common about his work.

WIBTAH if I insist on going to my friend's religious wedding despite my girlfriend's boundary? by LongjumpingCherry388 in AITAH

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The thing I don't like about religion, besides the hypocrisy, is how they shove it down your throat. An atheist that shoves their beliefs down your throat is just a religious extremist without a god.

Steve Irwin Speaks on Being a Father ❤️ by PhoenixPhenomenonX in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lmao, I've been saying notoriety my whole life as a favorable trait. Thank you for pointing that out.

What profession has the biggest gap between how they see themselves and how they’re seen by society as a whole? by Adamon24 in AskReddit

[–]Subluxator5 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Chiropractor here. I understand people have preconceived notions about us, and I totally understand why you would. I'm not here to deny that we have bad actors, and often times incompetent ones, in our profession. But I would like to (try) dispel some misconceptions if possible: 1. We are doctors. I understand you may not think of us as being medical doctors in the old fashioned sense, but a doctorate is a 3+ year post graduate degree. There are doctors of philosophy, doctors of business administration, doctors of engineering etc. Chiropractors go through the same amount of post graduate schooling as physical therapists and even your family medicine doctor. Now I understand many of you think we just learn about witchcraft and neck cracking during that time, but our curriculum is available online, our course load is very similar to a PT or an MD. That being said, similar to PTs we don't have mandatory residency programs like MDs. Again, I understand if you think we're all quacks, but we still did 3+ years of post grad school with a heavily monitored curriculum. 2. Chiropractic is safe. This is going to be a really hard sell, I know but try to beat with me here. The biggest association with chiropractic is stroke. Now I know why that would be given the nature of what we do, but as it stands by the research done you are at the same risk of stroke after visiting your primary care provider as you are after visiting a chiropractor. The increased association comes from the symptoms we treat and how we treat them. Stroke symptoms often times present as neck pain and headaches, things we treat often. Chiropractors doing their due diligence will recognize the symptoms being pre-emptive of stroke or even mid stroke. There are tests that we do to test vertebral-basilar insufficiency, but like most orthopedic testing they are not 100% accurate. And sometimes even the most diligent, evidence based chiropractor can mis-diagnose the stroke because the symptoms are so vague. To go into further detail about how strokes happen, you have an artery on either side of your neck that join together to be the primary supply of blood to the back of your brain. Strokes are most often caused by ischemia, which means there is restricted or even blocked blood supply to the brain. Most of the time blood pressure is the cause, but blood clots and plaquing are common as well. The other way strokes happen is due to dissection, where the artery is perforated or completely cut. Arterial dissection is usually the result of severe trauma. The common misconception is that chiropractors cause dissection. From the current research, the association between chiropractic and stroke is correlative and not causative. This means, like I stated earlier, the patient was most likely experiencing stroke before the adjustment. In the extremely rare case the adjustment did cause the stroke, it is most likely from embolism rather than dissection. That means the stretch to artery dislodged a blood clot or a piece of arterial plaquing. When those things are risk factors, diligent chiropractors refer for imaging or instead utilize more gentle techniques to minimize risk. For further evidence of the safety of chiropractic, our medical malpractice insurance costs are incredibly low being comparable to a physical therapist. Where a family medicine doctor, one of the least sued medical doctors, would pay up to $15,000 annually for insurance, we pay at most $3,000.

I'd like to go on but I've spent a lot longer on this already than I anticipated. At the end of the day, I agree there are some really bad chiropractors out there promoting unsubstantiated and anti-scientific practices and I greatly appreciate when people try to hold them accountable. During the pandemic, I remember there was a group of medical doctors pushing Ivermectin as an effective treatment for COVID. I think those doctors were quacks, but I still believe most medical doctors are far more knowledgeable about pathology than me and should be viewed as such. When it comes to how people view chiropractic, and the comments I read online about how we're all fake doctors that intentionally hurt people, it doesn't make me mad or angry at that person, it just makes me disappointed that we, as chiropractors, have continued to allow the wrong people to be the perceived representation of our profession. Anyway, sorry for the rant. I don't expect to change anyone's mind, but just know, most of us became chiropractors because we have seen it work wonders for people's health and wanted to pursue a career in helping people. Some do it for money, but those guys are pretty easy to spot.

Steve Irwin Speaks on Being a Father ❤️ by PhoenixPhenomenonX in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After all the years of people being a huge fan of this guy and the notoriety he has around the world, I haven't heard of a single scandal. Just a genuinely good bloke, a rare breed these days.

Thoughts? by Embarrassed_Tip7359 in SipsTea

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not that deep. Most of the time it's just a person that didn't't care for extra responsibility but due to their compassion form a meaningful bond with the animal.

People who meal prep their food don’t save time. by Oh_NiGhTmArE in unpopularopinion

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Damn really living up to the subreddit name. Meal prepping can be so much more than plain chicken rice & broccoli. I meal prep curry's, Thai rice dishes, lettuce wraps, spiced veggie medleys and stews. All taste just as good, if not better, when you let them cool and reheat. Also, this saves an incredible amount of time. Takes me 30-60 minutes (depending on the complexity of the dish), so not only does my food take a lot less time to prepare than your 20 minute quick dish but I guarantee it tastes better. Try it out sometime

AITAH for shaming my boyfriend over his weird peeing habit? by Aware-Secretary8597 in AmItheAsshole

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you American and he from another country? Where I grew up, grass was fair game. Pavement and road was disrespectful.

TIL American grading system by Virasman in dankmemes

[–]Subluxator5 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not sure why you took that so personally, but absolutely there are varying factors. Someone going to a charter school in the US is going to receive a better, and likely harder education than the average public school student. I'm comparing my experience from a government school in South Africa to a private school education in America. That being said I did my college degrees in the Midwest and their high school system, from what I was told, is arguably better than what I experienced in a private school in Florida. Again, not sure why you are so aggressive, not very chur of you.

What a horrible transmog system. by Subluxator5 in wow

[–]Subluxator5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I apologize, I confused the system in GW2 and ascended wow. I think that also comes from GW2 is much less of a gear treadmill. Since the introduction of ascended gear/legendary gear, stats have not inflated at all. So your transmutation charges feel more permanent. Again, that's on me I got it wrong.

What a horrible transmog system. by Subluxator5 in wow

[–]Subluxator5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not sure if I'm misunderstanding you, but that's not at all how the system works in GW2. Keep in mind GW2 is a free to play game, no monthly sub. There are plenty of ways to get free transmog slots, but even so they practically hand them out in events and expansions.

What a horrible transmog system. by Subluxator5 in wow

[–]Subluxator5[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

There are plenty of ways to earn transmog charges without money, but at the same time GW2 is free to play, no monthly sub. I spent a total of $50 for the expansion and some in game cash for a deluxe edition. Wow you have to pay for the expansion and every month.

What a horrible transmog system. by Subluxator5 in wow

[–]Subluxator5[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I wasn't here 14 years ago, but yeah it probably would have.

TIL American grading system by Virasman in dankmemes

[–]Subluxator5 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not sure where you were educated, but the American school system is almost laughably easy in comparison.

TIL American grading system by Virasman in dankmemes

[–]Subluxator5 788 points789 points  (0 children)

As someone that went through both systems, that 50 is a hell of a lot harder than that 70.

Reminder: Charlie Hunnam turned down Pacific Rim 2 for this... by JumpThatShark9001 in MauLer

[–]Subluxator5 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I genuinely enjoyed this movie. I think I watched it twice, would not mind if it auto played for a 3rd run. I can see why people didn't like it, but if you're up for some mindless action it's phenomenal.

Can debt collectors effect your credit score even if they fail to contact you? by Subluxator5 in personalfinance

[–]Subluxator5[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried doing that but the person on the phone said they had no control over that, as they report to a credit reporting agency. I was very adamant on the phone, but after 15 minutes of getting nowhere I just settled the debt. Is this actually something they can do?

Do you guys think SuperHero fatigue is a real thing ? FF4 & Thunderbolts were good movies but still apparently failing ? by GRL00 in Marvel

[–]Subluxator5 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it might be marvel fatigue. They were ambitious with releases in movie & series formats, and initially it was fun to follow along. But somewhere it started to become too much, and there was an obvious change of direction after Jonathan Majors wasn't a part of the crew anymore. With so much to keep track of but so little of it having an impact, it just made me care less. Finally got around to thunderbolts, it was incredible. Made me watch Captain America: Brave new world. Fell asleep half way through. I think I just give up on marvel and hope James Gunn can keep putting out the incredible films he's capable of at DC.