Md Yaqub 🎨✍️👨‍💻

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Md Yaqub 🎨✍️👨‍💻

Md Yaqub 🎨✍️👨‍💻

@MYGraphix1

NFT digital artist I Graphic design | Exh: NFTNYC 24,25 I Studied Accounting I improving my art skill I Won 2 contest: DGTY 24 & SelfChain 25 art design contest

Nigeria انضم Nisan 2020
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Md Yaqub 🎨✍️👨‍💻
GM❤️ Excited now a Patrunos Artist @ThePatrunos After submitting and pass the curation process my Artist profile is officially approved. Thanks to the Founders/Team @EpikNFT & @seizzi Patrunos is a living index of NFT artists, notable collectors, art platforms & more. link⬇️
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BossMan-Troll
BossMan-Troll@HooksHasani·
If you come across this post just know you are the chosen one in your family...so, please hold your head high and continue to walk into your light. 🌞
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DarrenSRS
DarrenSRS@DarrenSRS·
Gm frens
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Bramald
Bramald@Bramald_·
@MYGraphix1 95% is the sweet spot you too Yaq have a great one my friend 🫂
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Bramald
Bramald@Bramald_·
gm by my bored self
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J.P.F.
J.P.F.@jpfreira·
Good night all --- Beauty in Error Those small details that turn something ordinary into something unique. The "dead pixels" that bring life and movement to the static piece. Turning something that could be totally "traditional" into something different, perhaps unique. There are really errors on art? or they are just things that make the piece unique.
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Md Yaqub 🎨✍️👨‍💻 أُعيد تغريده
𝐄𝐦𝐩𝐭𝐲 𝐒𝐨𝐮𝐥 𝐏𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐞
🌟NEW DROP! Hysteria... DID root 🌟 Added to the '' 3DID '' collection @foundation Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) was historically labeled "hysterical neurosis, dissociative type," linking it to old, often misogynistic concepts of "hysteria". While some past observers claimed DID is a "modern variant of hysteria" or mere attention-seeking, it is a valid, trauma-based mental health condition, not hysterical illness. "Hysteria" originates from the Greek word hystera... Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893) defined hysteria as a chronic, hereditary, neurological disorder, rather than a purely psychological one, characterised by distinct functional symptoms like paralysis, contractures, and seizures without structural lesions. He identified it as a 'dynamic lesion' affecting the brain, often triggered by emotional or physical trauma, particularly in patients at the Salpêtrière hospital. Key Components of Charcot’s Hysteria: Physiological Basis: Charcot believed hysteria was a functional, not organic, disease of the nervous system. He considered it a hereditary neurosis, often linking it to conditions like epilepsy, describing it at times as "hystero-epilepsy". Key Symptoms: Typical signs included muscular spasms, contractures, hemianesthesia (loss of sensation on one side), blindness, deafness, and dramatic, involuntary movements. The Four Phases of Major Attacks: Charcot famously classified hysterical attacks into four stages: Epileptoid Phase: Convulsions and loss of consciousness. Clownism phase: Contortions and backward arching of the body (opisthotonos). Attitudes passionnelles: Emotional, dramatic posing, or hallucinations. Terminal Delirium. Hypnosis and Simulation: Charcot used hypnosis to trigger and study hysterical symptoms, believing that the susceptibility to hypnosis was itself a diagnostic sign of hysteria. He believed these symptoms were not consciously faked, but were genuine physiological reactions. Trauma Link: He noted that a 'traumatic experience' could cause ideas to become separated from consciousness, which in turn caused physical hysterical symptoms.
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