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👊🏻💥🗣️you”re outclassed 🗣️💥👊🏻
@JustTim80s
training bjj and mma before it became cool. 💕 love horror, Halloween 🎃,cologne, and skincare 🧴
Palm Desert, CA Katılım Mart 2014
963 Takip Edilen499 Takipçiler
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@D4VDisGreat @TRIGGERHAPPYV1 Yes.. Black people would of just stole it
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Your tattoo isn’t just decorative ink: it’s a permanent trigger that keeps your immune system locked in a lifelong cycle of chronic inflammation.
As soon as the ink is injected into your skin, your body recognizes the pigment particles as foreign invaders. Immune cells called macrophages immediately swarm the area and attempt to swallow them up. But because they can’t actually break down the ink, the macrophages eventually die, releasing the pigment back into the surrounding tissue — only for a new wave of macrophages to arrive and repeat the process.
This endless cycle is what keeps the tattoo permanently visible, while also maintaining a state of ongoing, low-level inflammation in the skin.
Over time, some of these ink particles migrate through the lymphatic system and accumulate in the lymph nodes, placing constant stress on the body’s defense mechanisms. Emerging research suggests this internal ink buildup may interfere with normal immune function, potentially reducing the effectiveness of certain vaccines, including mRNA types. Additionally, many tattoo inks contain heavy metals like nickel and cobalt. Combined with the chronic inflammation, this has been linked to a modestly elevated risk of lymphoma and skin cancer.
While tattoos remain a powerful form of self-expression, they represent a complex, decades-long biological conflict between your immune system and foreign substances embedded in your skin.
[Nielsen, C., Jerkeman, M., & Jöud, A. S. (2024). Tattoos as a risk factor for systemic lymphoma: A population-based case-control study. eClinicalMedicine]

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Spanish matador admits he can't sleep or eat after bull spears him right up the bum in excruciating arena goring
Morante de la Puebla, 46, was knocked down and gored by a 512kg bull named Clandestino during a fight at Seville's Maestranza arena on April 20.
The horn caused a 10cm wound that perforated the back wall of his rectum and partially damaged his anal sphincter muscles.
He needed more than two hours of complex surgery to clean the wound, repair the rectal wall and reconstruct the sphincter before being put on IV nutrition in hospital.
In a video from his bed the matador said "The truth is, I'm in a lot of pain" and admitted he's had "a pretty normal night of little sleep" with zero appetite.
He described it as "without a doubt, the most painful goring ever" and is now just hoping to get through it with patience.



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Dean Cain dons his Superman Suit again after 30 years
‘Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman’ actor Dean Cain posted a photo of him wearing his Superman suit after putting the cape away almost 30 years ago
Dean Cain played Superman in the series from 1993-1997 with costar Teri Hatcher, who played Lois Lane

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