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anyone got the drawing of chubby anime girl sweating lifting up her boobs in front of a fan? pls
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anyone got the drawing of chubby anime girl sweating lifting up her boobs in front of a fan? pls
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San Francisco Opera, 1989
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self discipline is so hard like. i know the sucker who's in charge...a pushover who hates authority and loves hedonism
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people dont worship me here like they did in santa cruz
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Love a little sting of nettle, & for the rest of the day :3
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putting in the effort to get to know and trying to understand someone is just incredible its so hard it would be hard to believe anyone every attempts it but there is nothing more rewarding and worth living for
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https://open.substack.com/pub/justinpetersen/p/the-charm-of-jeanette-macdonald
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genuinely insane that anyone has ever worked a shift succesfully ever in human history. how does it keep happening.
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justice for the other as other. other is good for you.
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@summersoaked i adore you :') thank you! 💓💓
where's the fanart of me
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In the 1950s, when most psychologists believed that only vertebrates were capable of learning, James McConnell demonstrated that flatworms, planaria, could be trained to change their behavior. These worms are able to regenerate a whole body, including the brain, from any part of the organism. McConnell found that worms regenerated from a part, such as the tail, of a trained worm retained the knowledge that had been acquired by that worm. He also found that when trained worms were ground up and fed to untrained worms, those worms learned the behavior more easily. He suggested that RNA molecules synthesized following the worm’s training might be responsible for distributing the learned behavior throughout the whole organism. During the 1960s, several other researchers found that extracts from the brains of other animals, including insects, fish, and rats, could transfer learned behavior to untrained animals. In 2013, experimenters confirmed McConnell’s work, by demonstrating that after being decapitated, the regenerated flatworms retained their training.
These experiments have made it clear that experience is always modifying our being, and that our continuous processes of adaptation and development can’t be separated from our understanding of the world.
ray peat, 'Intention, Learning, and Health' (2021) x
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