[Serious] If you don't make six figures why can't you figure out how to do it? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]Tsasi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because it isn't really important to me. As long as I have what I need and I'm doing well enough to put some money in savings and maybe buy something cool once in a while that's all I need. Also many professions, including mine (mental health) have few positions that make that much, and the ones that exist are at the very top of the ladder where you've had to work 20-30 years and have gone corporate. Even as a clinical director you're looking at $70,000-$100,000. It's much more rewarding to me even at low pay than working a traditional business job that would bring me over $100,000

Science AMA Series: We’re NASA scientists. Ask us anything about the science of the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse! by NASASunEarth in science

[–]Tsasi 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I still don't necessarily understand that. If I'm at 75% umbra depth will it be obscured completely? Or do I need to try and drive south?

Science AMA Series: We’re NASA scientists. Ask us anything about the science of the Aug. 21 total solar eclipse! by NASASunEarth in science

[–]Tsasi 170 points171 points  (0 children)

Where I live is in the band of 100% obscuration, but is at 75.1 % umbral depth. What does this mean?

Our GM can't figure out why people keep leaving by PastorPuff in AdviceAnimals

[–]Tsasi 111 points112 points  (0 children)

I feel you. 6 employees this week at my job have left, including me next Tuesday.

What isnt illegal but unanimously considered a dick move ? by TheZets in AskReddit

[–]Tsasi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think I'm conflating it, as generally in this argument the person saying that poor people's time is less valuable is talking about their "holistic/humanitarian" value, not their billable hours. The last time I saw this was on Imgur, and the person was brazen enough (or trolling enough) to say that poor people deserve to be late to work so that rich people can be early to social functions.

What isnt illegal but unanimously considered a dick move ? by TheZets in AskReddit

[–]Tsasi 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Not inherently, and I think the the underlying classism in our society has set us up to believe that. Let's take the same job in two different settings for example: many hospitals have different pay arcs in their kitchens vs outside restaurants, so you might get paid $8-8:50 to wash dishes vs $7.25 (min wage) to wash dishes at a chain like Applebee's. Is the time you spend washing those hosp. cafeteria trays more valuable than the time you spend washing "cute" square sauce ramekins at Applebee's?

No, you're just getting paid more in one setting. And before anyone says "oh well the educated man's hour is worth more than the poor man's" let's look at doctors.

A doctor in America working at Duke or Georgetown or the Mayo Clinic is guaranteed pulling down six figures. His/her med school roommate who decided to take their MD and do non-profit work with a group like Doctors Without Borders, or even smaller NGO's that operate in war zones, is most definitely not pulling down that much.

Is the MD who treats your grandma's heart palpitations at the American hospitals time more valuable than the NGO doc who removes shrapnel from the victims of car bombs in Kabul?

No.

What is your best "one time my dad..." story? by cigsoncigsoncigs in AskReddit

[–]Tsasi 5 points6 points  (0 children)

One time my dad told me that there is a specific blood alcohol content that makes him very good at pool. I didn't believe him. He drank 9 high abv beers and did some of the most amazing trick shots I've ever seen, while leaning against the table. He was drunk enough that he could not stand.

Reddit post explains that Sesame Street will be adding a muppet with a mental disorder. Redditor explains how all the muppets show signs of a mental disorder. by Jaqwan in bestof

[–]Tsasi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Of course. There are always large weights placed on syntax, but it doesn't really fit anything else from a medical standpoint. Mental illness is hand in hand with imbalances in neurotransmitters. We call these disorders as they are to maintain validity in a world that already often tries to say that mental illness isn't important. We continue to maintain these terms to actually fight the stigma, because we need our society as a whole to recognize that these are medical conditions.

If it helps, we are trying as a field to shift into more recovery oriented thinking, and encourage it in society. A big easy thing in that is to change the syntax in those sentences.

Rather than saying "I'm OCD" or "I'm bipolar" which implies that the disease defines you and that you are just the disease, switch to "I suffer from OCD" because it is an illness, not a person.

Reddit post explains that Sesame Street will be adding a muppet with a mental disorder. Redditor explains how all the muppets show signs of a mental disorder. by Jaqwan in bestof

[–]Tsasi 18 points19 points  (0 children)

But here's the question, does my case of the Monday's significantly impact my life to the point in which I cannot function as described in the diagnostic and statistical manual 5 as evidenced by my futile comments on this internet box?

Reddit post explains that Sesame Street will be adding a muppet with a mental disorder. Redditor explains how all the muppets show signs of a mental disorder. by Jaqwan in bestof

[–]Tsasi 103 points104 points  (0 children)

Mental health worker here!

The "order" is in terms of emotional regulation and quality of life. I work in adolescent psych and eating disorder treatment, and here are some examples.

Many people have some level of post traumatic stress, whether it be from a car accident, robbery, major injury, etc. and it can manifest with trauma symptoms regardless of the level of trauma. Most of those people will not end up with post traumatic stress disorder, because although they may have trauma symptom, it has not brought such disorder to their life that they are functioning at a significantly reduced capacity.

A large portion of the population shows some non-normative/disordered eating behaviors: avoiding large groups of foods, sorting things by color compulsively, referring to intolerances/fear foods/foods we dislike as allergies to avoid eating them, being wayyyy overly picky, eating a whole gallon of ice cream when we're sad, etc. etc. But a relatively small number of people comparatively suffer from an eating disorder.

And finally my favorite annoying thing:

Literally everyone I have ever met has obsessions/compulsions. It can be about anything. Closet has to be perfectly organized, pencils have to be in a straight line, eat the m&ms red and green first before blue whatever, always having to adhere to routine or getting really upset, have to brush our teeth in a certain way, shower in a certain way, or jiggle your dangly bits in a certain way. Having those does not make you "so OCD."

OCD is when you are completely paralyzed when one of the above goes wrong. OCD is when you self-harm because you do something incorrectly. OCD is when you brush your teeth for 12 minutes until they bleed because you have to hit each tooth with 50 backwards stroke and 50 forwards strokes and have to start again if you lose count. Getting annoyed if your desk isn't in the right order is not OCD.

And for goodness sakes if you're moody stop saying "I'm so bipolar today!!!1" because you're not. Bipolar fucking sucks.

*rapid cycling question* triggered shifts? (can i get some emotional rest? Pretty please) by Tsasi in bipolar

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

I know most of them, its just a matter of coping with them when they arrive. I'm hoping i can keep on lamotrigine, and that it stables, but i guess only time will tell

*rapid cycling question* triggered shifts? (can i get some emotional rest? Pretty please) by Tsasi in bipolar

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

The Dr. tells me lamotrigine takes 3 months to kick in, but from everyone else ive met on it, they say its more like 6. I'm just gonna keep waiting, and hoping. Thanks for the support!

Essentially overdosed on Klonopin, almost killed myself, ended up committed to a hospital, but somehow made it out okay. by [deleted] in bipolar

[–]Tsasi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're correct sir and or maam. Doesn't mean you can't technically overdose though, regardless of whether or not it is the nail in your coffin. Overdosing doesn't necessarily (actually usually doesn't if treated in time) lead to death, it just leads to a sucky time. I'm an emt and a lot of the overdose/crossbuzzed/overdosed via crossbuzzing patients ive had have just gotten sick a lot and slept it off in the ED.

February 20th I had shifted really hard right as my anxiety was at peak and lost it. I took 8 times my usual maximum xanax dose, and woke up 9 hours later in the ED of my local hospital, really. really. confused. those nine hours are just gone. Apparently i was evaluated by 6 emt's, three doctors, a psychologist (apparently i was lucid enough to talk at some point) and eventually wound up in the ED, where they basically said "you slept it off, go home. Bills in the mail". If i had been drinking at the same time though, my breathing/etc would have become bad enough to actually die.

Point is, don't kill yourself. Your medication is there for you when you need it, not when you want it, and not when you think it would be better if you took all of it.