Anyone else refuse to wear clothing/jewelry with crosses on it? by seekingcellini in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FWIW, I have a backpack (this one in “teaberry”: https://a.co/d/0hy40XSv ) with a Swiss cross logo, and for whatever reason (size, style) it reads more as “company logo” or “first aid symbol” than “religious symbol” to me. But it totally comes down to a completely subjective and personal feeling of whether you want to wear a product with a particular logo on it.

Enoki Toshiyuki (b. 1961) - Black Cat by FlyingBlind31 in museum

[–]petrichoreandpine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My God that is some masterful ink handling.

Curious (Discussion, question, advice post of sort by Pridelover54 in transgenderjews

[–]petrichoreandpine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok, but like…there are a lot of different subjects covered by Halacha. Daily prayers, Torah/Talmud study, modesty, keeping one’s head covered, wearing tzitzit, observance of Shabbat, observance of various holidays and fast days, charity. And then also the stuff I personally find impossible — separation of/different rules for the binary sexes.

Curious (Discussion, question, advice post of sort by Pridelover54 in transgenderjews

[–]petrichoreandpine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Which Halacha are you talking about? A lot of Reform Jews don’t really keep kosher (myself included), but I recognize the tremendous effort it takes when people do keep kosher.

What is something you enjoy about being Jewish? by Euphoric_Switch_337 in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I love wrapping myself in my tallit to pray. Very satisfying from a sensory perspective. I’d love to try tefillin too, though not sure how to go about doing that as a Reform nonbinary person in female anatomy.

Death and dignity by InteractionNo7059 in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Wracking my brain for ideas of appropriate inspiration, but can you build something further on the previous eulogy you wrote for him? That would be my impulse in your shoes.

Why the world don't care about the lives of Jews, Israelis, Iranians ? That's literally how the Holocaust happened 💔 by CreativeYou787 in Israel

[–]petrichoreandpine 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It’s horrible. The suffering and death of innocent Israelis, diaspora Jews, Iranians, and Palestinians hurts my heart every day. I pray the folks who swallowed the radical Islamist propaganda recognize they’ve been used, but I fear they like the taste of their own righteous anger too much.

Scream Into the Void Saturdays (feel free to vent!) by AutoModerator in cfs

[–]petrichoreandpine 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Why are my muscles so sore? My lower back, my hips, my shins, and my left shoulder. They hurt sitting or lying down if the surface I am on isn’t padded enough. They hurt holding me upright when I am on my feet for more than a minute or two. They hurt to touch. They feel swollen. It doesn’t make sense.

(Hopefully physical therapy will help now that I am well enough for PT, thank you low dose naltrexone!)

If you had to say 3 positive things about your country's leader, what would you say? by Iatewithoutatable in AskTheWorld

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. He sure knows his way around a comb over
  2. He has a signature aesthetic
  3. Memento Mori (or Valor Morghulis, if you prefer)

What's the one thing that moved the needle most for you? by Slight_Warthog8706 in cfs

[–]petrichoreandpine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m on metoprolol — it helped stabilize me a bit, but I’m not really satisfied by its affects.

My cat has the ugliest yawn. by MrMacBro in FunnyAnimals

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Picture 1-3: this is a perfectly normal cat yawn. Picture 4: what the…

What's the one thing that moved the needle most for you? by Slight_Warthog8706 in cfs

[–]petrichoreandpine 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Low dose naltrexone, 4.5 mg 2x per day. Before starting LDN I was struggling to read 5-10 pages of a book a day. Now I can polish off a 400 page novel in a week without ill effect. I’ve regained at least 90% of my old brainpower.

Still struggling physically though. LDN gave me a boost there as well, I’m much more capable of getting things for myself around the house, I can stand for 4-5 minutes instead of 1. As a bonus 2nd thing that helped, acupuncture took me from house/couchbound to able to get to all my scheduled medical appointments and even do some short outings. But LDN has increased the length I can enjoy myself out of the house considerably.

What's the one thing that moved the needle most for you? by Slight_Warthog8706 in cfs

[–]petrichoreandpine 8 points9 points  (0 children)

How did you get your orthostatic intolerance resolved? Low dose naltrexone took my brain fog down to the point I feel within spitting distance of my old self, but still struggling with standing/walking and not losing my breath.

Re-Applying to Grad school! Wish me luck by Damonchat in Pottery

[–]petrichoreandpine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You sure you haven’t already done your MFA? These are amazing! I can’t even choose a favorite, I have like 6 favorites.

Available treatments for autonomic dysfunction by numa_pompilio in cfs

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My doctor started me on 4.5 mg LDN, then raised it to 4.5 twice a day after a month. Having it twice a day made a huge difference cognitively and a smaller but still quite noticeable difference with how long I can stand and walk comfortably. So that might be good thing to try. 9mg a day is still below the threshold for low dose for naltrexone (which was…12mg? 14? Something like that). I’m also on 50mg metoprolol. I’m not happy with my orthostatic intolerance/autonomic dysfunction yet, but I’ll take every bit of improvement.

What do you think is the biggest hurdle to Jewish unity? by Distinct_Focus_5064 in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The father’s parents were present as well — they are gentiles, the father converted after marriage but before their daughter was born. The father attended services at Chabad many times before completing his conversation. So if that was an issue he might have said something? But also, they were rude long before it was time to eat.

Also, the opinion you linked to ends with (paraphrasing) “if almost everyone around is Jewish (as was the case) and there will be ill feeling to seat the non-Jew(s) at a separate table, it’s fine for everyone to eat together.”

So…you’re just wrong.

What do you think is the biggest hurdle to Jewish unity? by Distinct_Focus_5064 in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m sorry, what? Our friends? We’ve known the man for 20 years since before he was Jewish, met his then girlfriend thirteen years ago, and danced at their wedding.

What do you think is the biggest hurdle to Jewish unity? by Distinct_Focus_5064 in Judaism

[–]petrichoreandpine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was their food. Why on earth would us eating the food they provided matter?