30-minute-memes:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

fandomsandfeminism:

alicesobscurity:

fandomsandfeminism:

Ok, so theres like 14 tugboats working on the Ever Given now and the tide is coming in. They MIGHT be able to refloat her today.

As a hilarious side note, THIS apparently happened on a highway in china this morning, which SEEMS like a joke but is apparently real:


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https://www.unilad.co.uk/viral/evergreen-truck-blocks-chinese-motorway-just-days-after-evergreen-ship-jams-suez-canal/

Thank you for a source!

Update on the Ever Given: between the tides and the tugboats, she was straightened out by like…30 meters. The tide has gone back out, so she’s not gonna be free TODAY it seems, but they are making progress.

To answer some questions that have come up in the notes:

1. Ever Given is the ship; Evergreen is the company. Yes, that’s confusing


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2. Yes, it’s the same Evergreen that owns the shipping container on the truck (but not the truck itself, I think.)

3. It is also the same Evergreen that has a ship, the Ever Laurel, that spilled thousands of rubber ducks into the ocean in 1992.

3/28/2021 It is Sunday morning. They are going to try again today to dislodge the Ever Given with the tides/tug boats.

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Sunday evening: still stuck.


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Maybe tomorrow evening?

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With 17 tugboats helping her- The Ever Given has been refloated and is straightening out! It looks like she did it, yall. She’s moving!

Friends. I am so sorry. It is 8am Monday and…we may have celebrated prematurely???


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She…she might still be stuck? Or be re-stuck? It’s a little unclear at this point.

8:30 Monday update!!!


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I think it’s for real this time. I think she’s free.

I know it was only temporary but I’ll miss her

(via contactwithbelief)

Anonymous asked:

Is it possible to “beat” mental illness? Or does it depend on type/circumstance?

missmentelle Answer:

“Beating” mental illness is actually the norm, not the exception. Most people who have a major depressive episode never have another one. 80% of people who survive their first suicide attempt never make a second attempt. 93% of Borderline Personality Disorder patients achieve remission. Up to 74% of people with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder achieve significant clinical improvement in their symptoms, and 20% achieve full remission. Half of Generalized Anxiety Disorder patients achieve remission after the acute phase of treatment. Even disorders with relatively low rates of remission - bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, schizoid personality disorder - generally become milder and easier to manage as you age. Psychiatric symptoms tend to peak in your 20s and generally drop off as you get older, especially if you seek treatment. 

This is why the narratives we use to talk about mental illness matter so much. Right now, the dominant narrative is that mental illness is “an imbalance in the brain” and that it’s largely something that people are born with. There are upsides and downsides to this. The upside is that it promotes the idea that mental illness is not the ill person’s fault, and it helps us understand that mental illness can impact anyone, regardless of their life circumstances. The downside, however, is that it’s sort of given us this idea that mental illness is inborn and unchangeable. People have taken on the idea that “that’s just how my brain is”, when the reality is that, for most people, mental illness is less of a stable trait for them, and more of just a shitty thing that they are going through for a little while. The idea that mental illness is just “in your brain” also erases the very real connection between your life circumstances and your mental health - while it’s very true that a wealthy person in a happy marriage can become depressed, it’s also very true that living in poor conditions and being in an abusive marriage can be the cause of depression, and that improving your life circumstances can lessen or eliminate mental health conditions. 

If you have a mental health condition, it’s very important that you not resign yourself to the idea that you’re going to be like this forever. Chances are, you won’t. Even if you have a mental health condition that is associated with low rates of remission, it is possible to make leaps and bounds in your functioning, and to get to a point where managing your condition becomes second nature to you. Our understanding of mental illness is improving every year, and new therapies and treatments are becoming available all the time. If you seek treatment and do your best to manage your condition, you have every reason to believe that you will make huge improvements. 

Hope this answers your question!

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I’m way hotter than horse face and my next person will respect that

ginspi:

lesbianshepard:

lesbianshepard:

can not believe that a 70 year old senator actually uttered the phrase “ignorant slut” about bernie sanders on the senate floor.

elderly men should definitely call each other “sluts” more often during senatorial meetings. give politics some much needed zest.

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Hmm. Didn’t deny being a slut… 🤔

(via contactwithbelief)

champagne:
“ “Two Lovers.
You expect them to fly past you.”
(Paris France @MuseeLouvre photograph taken by Timothy Tolle, 2006)
flic.kr/p/iaXPF
”

champagne:

“Two Lovers.
You expect them to fly past you.”

(Paris France @MuseeLouvre photograph taken by Timothy Tolle, 2006)

flic.kr/p/iaXPF

(via infected)


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