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Sop0lep3
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@Limessa_67 @PaulGadsden82 You had bad luck. Foto some people it's a gane changer
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@Lady__Fantasy @PaulGadsden82 I hate that this drug hasn't been yanked off the shelves yet. It truly deserves to be.
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@lamartaraquel @CalmateElvira Los cítricos no duran nada porque son moléculas muy chiquitas. No entiendo nada de química, pero eso es lo que leí por ahí. A mi también me gustan los cítricos y a la media hora ya ni se sienten. Tienen que estar bien combinados con otras notas.
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@CalmateElvira Me gustan suaves, más que nada cítricos o flores blancas, y estoy harta de que no perduren.
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@Limessa_67 @PaulGadsden82 They know about it, but what they care about is that stopping too fast or cold turkey wont kill you. They dont care about you feeling like shit for weeks, even months.
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@PaulGadsden82 Same thing happened to me, but with Effexor. My GP knew more about AD withdrawal than the mental health "professionals." Thankfully I didn't follow their instructions. I probably wouldn't be here today.
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@yanosequienera @rxnata_ Combinado con antidepresivos o eso solo? Porque primera línea de tratamiento de TAG son antidepresivos.
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dolor en el pecho y ataques de pánico me llevaron a la guardia donde me recetaron la droga propofólica por excelencia. lo tome antes del mediodía y sigo volando

renata@rxnata_
ya estoy acá chicos quien trae la bomba de infusión
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She found what was described as a severed penis in her lab coat pocket. It was her male classmates’ idea of a joke. She waited until class ended, held it up, and asked calmly: “Did one of you lose this?”
1908. University of the Republic.
Paulina Luisi was one of the very few women in medical school. Uruguay had hundreds of male doctors and only a handful of women. She was about to become one of them.
Her classmates did not want her there. They mocked her in lectures. They questioned her intelligence. They “explained things again for the lady.” They sabotaged her equipment. They spread rumors about her character.
The severed organ in her pocket was meant to humiliate her. It was meant to prove women were too fragile for medicine.
She refused to give them that win.
Paulina had been fighting her whole life. Born in 1875 to immigrant parents, she grew up in a family of educators and activists. At 15, she earned her teaching degree. Years later, she became the first woman in Uruguay to complete a bachelor’s level education.
Then she did what many thought was impossible. She enrolled in medical school.
Professors argued about whether women even belonged there. Some believed female brains were not suited for science. Others feared she would “distract” male students. They admitted her reluctantly, expecting her to quit.
She did not.
In 1908, she graduated as Uruguay’s first female physician and surgeon.
But the degree was only the start.
Working in gynecology, Paulina saw women suffering. Untreated diseases. Unsafe abortions. Preventable infections. Ignorance was costing lives.
She realized medicine alone was not enough. Women needed education.
In 1916, she publicly called for ‘sex education in schools’. The backlash was immediate. Newspapers called her immoral. Religious leaders condemned her. Critics said she would corrupt children.
She kept speaking.
For years, she pushed for curriculum reform. Her proposals and projects helped bring sex education into teacher training, and later into broader education planning in Uruguay.
At the same time, Paulina was building movements. She founded ‘Uruguay’s National Women’s Council’ and connected activists across the Americas. She fought for suffrage, labor rights, reproductive rights, and protections against trafficking.
She represented her country internationally, becoming one of the first Latin American women to serve as a government delegate at global conferences.
In 1932, Uruguay granted women the right to vote. Paulina had spent many years fighting for that victory.
She never stopped organizing. She hosted radio programs urging women to stay politically active. She opposed fascism. She ran for office. She mentored younger generations.
By the time she died in 1950, she had transformed her country.
They tried to shame her into silence.
Instead, Paulina Luisi changed the rules of education, politics, and medicine in Uruguay and helped spark feminism across Latin America.
Calm.
Unshaken.
Unmovable.
They wanted her to quit.
She built a revolution instead.

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My lord, forgive the boldness of one so lowly. When we speak of our ailment in the only terms we know, it is not to presume upon your learning, but to grasp at understanding. We are not schooled in symptoms and signs, only in the names we have been told before.
If we say “a chest infection,” it is because we lack the finer words, not because we would have you take our judgement as equal to yours. Guide us, my lord. Ask of our pains, and we shall answer as best we can, for we come seeking your wisdom, not to challenge it.
Only grant us a little patience, I beg you, for we are often afraid, and our speech is clumsy when we suffer.
Jonathan@jabberwock951
I'm not gonna lie, it is frustrating when you ask a patient what's wrong and they just give you a diagnosis. Like "I have a chest infection". OK, you're probably right but I need to know your symptoms to see if I agree with that diagnosis. I can't just take your word for it.
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@malepichot Sabes lo que pasa, es que antes eso era plata FICTISIA. Los negocios explotaban porque los que iban pagaban con papel crocante recién EMITIDO. En un país EN SERIO no se emite. Es doloroso darse con la realidad pero se puede, ami mi mujer me dejó, costó al ppio pero salí adelante
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@jenkins55351 @PaulGadsden82 That is the thing. It is one thing if they do not know. But they are terrible at looking inwards assessing to what extent they might not know, and don't know how to manage patiënts with uncertainty. Also completely unwilling to try something new.
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Son igual de violentos que un golpeador. Tiro y al río.
Zoya🕊️@Zoya_ki_batein
This type of reaction tells me they want to be Violent
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@rey34721 @MamaCassOFee @chemtrailwizard @julia_doubleday Which one of all of those is the best for nauseas caused by motion sickness?
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Just know what you are asking for. This is an atypical antipsychotic. It is a D2 and 5HT3 antagonist. It is also an antihistamine. Reason why it works is it hits just about all of the receptors mediating nausea. At 2.5-5 mg it works for at least 24 hours. Side effects include appetite increase, neurological effects and sedation. I take it because it controls nausea and stimulates my appetite.
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Drs have such weird control issues that you literally have to go into every apptmnt acting like you’ve never heard of the concept of medication. I’m not just talking opioids or benzos. I mean even if you want migraine meds for a migraine you have to let them come up w the idea
Immuno(un)compromising Writer@jacobscheier
To the drs saying they don't act out of a desire to control: just because you are not in touch with your own unconscious will to power or have not examined your own ideology, doesn't make what I wrote untrue.
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@julia_doubleday Thats because most doctors are arrogants af. Doctors, we know you studied a lot of years, but that doesn't stop you from being an idiot, and a lot of you are!
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Sop0lep3 retweetledi

@elcancillercom Al trabajo se llega 15’ antes, para preparar matecito y organizar el día; y se arranca a horario. No es por el patrón, es por auto-organización
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[REDES] "¿Qué harían? ¿Le dicen que no venga más?": un tiktoker emprendedor cuestionó a un empleado porque necesita que entre "cinco minutos antes" para poder empezar a trabajar "a las 8", pero se negó. 🤔
ElCanciller.com@elcancillercom
[REDES] "Este equipo te lo hace fácil": un tiktoker mostró cómo es "un día siendo el jefe de un restaurante". 🍽️
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@MutedIrish @DreamOGenocide @valenluciana Eso es de retarded pero estar chupando birra a las 10 am está bien, no?
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@valenluciana Why would you want to drink coffee after 4pm?
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@kpicha2023 @ACarringtonC Tengo recuerdos desde los 2. Quizá vos no tenés porque eras, y sos, medio boludito.
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@ACarringtonC No tenemos memoria de los 4 años, no tan nítidamente. Inventin Tarantino.
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Veo gente contando anecdotas de anestesia: a los 4 años me operaron de adenoides. Fue en el consultorio del medico. Entré sola, mis padres se quedaron afuera, con el que era mi pediatra. El medico me mostró el instrumental con el que me operarían. Todo me parecía raro y grande, pero no tenia miedo, de hecho me parecía incongruente que me mostrara todo. Me preguntaron si me gustaba mas la banana o manzana. Dije banana y me dijeron que me pondrían una mascara con olor a banana. Me sentaron a upa de una medica o enfermera, y cuando me pusieron la mascara quise decir que no era olor a banana (!!!), después la medica me agarró los brazos con fuerza para inmovilizarme, me calzaron la mascara como haciendo sopapa, lo que no me dejaba respirar y empece a sacudirme con desesperación, al toque aflojaron la mascara y respiré fuerte, por todo lo que no habia podido respirar segundos antes. Me dormí, y me desperté llorando boca abajo y sangrando por la nariz y sentí como me ponían un supositorio.
Tengo 52 años y me acuerdo esto que paso hace 48 con un nivel de detalle pavoroso. Asi de traumático fue.
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@RCPavanzado Yo pensé que la mina quedó así sin hablar porque estaba teniendo una ausencia...
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@oronje_emmanuel @HistoryVille Argentina abolió la esclavitud en 1853 y en 1813 decretó la libertad de vientres.
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@HistoryVille According to USA, Argentina, and Israel, this was just a normal act.
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An enslaved African is hung alive by the ribs to a gallows above skulls of beheaded slaves on posts, Dutch Suriname, 1773.
An incision was made in the victim's ribs, and a hook was placed in the hole. In this case, the victim stayed alive for three days until he was clubbed to death by the sentry guarding him. #HistoryVille

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