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Marina |:|

@marinamval

⭐ #Bref #FloodCast #FranceKbek #HeroCorp #Kaamelott #LaFlamme #LazyCompany #LeFlambeau #LeVisiteurDuFutur #Palmashow #SergeLeMytho #Visitors #PokemonGO

Nantes, France Katılım Mayıs 2013
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Marie Fernet
Marie Fernet@MarieFernet·
Je ne sais pas si ces gens réalisent qu’ils sont entourés de moult autistes, sans le savoir. Bref.
Clo du Nord@polka2024

@KateriSeraphina Un gosse autiste, handicapé physique ou mental, n’a rien à faire dans une classe normale. Il a besoin de soins et méthodes d education différentes avec des gens formés pour ca.

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Callum Stephen (He/Him)
Callum Stephen (He/Him)@AutisticCallum_·
The autistic talent of falling in love with unpopular products that keep getting discontinued without warning.
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Coillotte - au TDIstan
Coillotte - au TDIstan@LesCoillottes·
La pastille bleue c'est pour raconter volontairement des âneries + gagner de la thune ? Ou il croit vraiment que dans un pays avec 40 ans de retard sur l'autisme, les proches savent (réellement) ce que c'est l'autisme/soient capables de le "repérer" ? Joyeux mois de sensi TSA🤡
M.Sikorav MD@Drsikorav

Je ne vous diagnostiquerai pas autiste si je ne vois aucun trait, si vous avez un métier où les interactions interpersonnelles sont essentielles, et que votre entourage n'a rien remarqué non plus. Je me trompe peut-être, et vous avez, bien sûr, le droit de vous faire diagnostiquer ailleurs.

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979f5f97d71e9d87fa7e882a1d878997
Сейчас увидела в тт что на беременную девушку наорал муж из-за дорогих фруктов и толкнул, она переосмыслила их брак, пошла развелась и сделала аборт, потому что он недостоин быть отцом 😯 ну королева
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Pat Stedman | Dating & Relationship Coach for Men
We don't know the full story, but I have heard some horror stories IRL about men who never married / got prenups with women and had many kids with them, and then decided later in life to dump these women for someone younger, leaving her basically destitute. Being objective, it's not a good deal for a woman to enter into this sort of arrangement. If you're both W2s, it's reasonable to protect all respective assets coming into a marriage, but it becomes a harder sell for what is built after. If the earnings differential between you is within 2-1 I'm not sure it really matters much, you risk making things too transactional. If he's well established compared to her however or has companies, and she's coming in with little and intends to be a housewife, this is a different story - he needs to make sure his assets are completely protected. But she should still have some financial vesting in the event of a divorce, assuming no infidelity on her end. Like a "salary" that only materializes in the event of things ending. This is basically like alimony except pre-agreed upon. Bottom line is you cannot expect a woman to have no career, stay at home and raise the kids, and have no financial protections or earned stake over the years. I get that things have gone too far in divorce court but the reason this stuff started to begin with is that women who trusted their husbands were ruined when he decided later on to ditch her.
NRM84@Mappy6984

At 27 you know what you're signing. Enjoy the ride

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Libriscent
Libriscent@libriscent·
for autism month: there’s a real loneliness in being the person who notices the pattern, names it softly, gets doubted, stays quiet, watches it play out, and then has to act normal when everyone else finally catches up.
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Mushtaq Bilal, PhD
Mushtaq Bilal, PhD@MushtaqBilalPhD·
The growing inaccessibility of science that you can understand by paying €27.99
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Having a baby physically shrinks part of a woman's brain. Having a second baby shrinks a totally different part. Scientists in Amsterdam just figured out why, and the explanation involves the same process that happens in teenage brains. This is from a research group in Amsterdam called the Pregnancy Brain Lab. They published their findings in Nature Communications on February 19, 2026. The team scanned the brains of 110 women. 40 were about to have their first baby, 30 were about to have their second, and 40 had never been pregnant. They scanned everyone before pregnancy and again after birth. The results were so consistent that a computer program could look at any of those brain scans and correctly tell whether the woman had been pregnant. Every single time. When a woman has her first baby, the biggest changes happen in the part of the brain that handles thinking about yourself and other people. The same region that runs daydreaming and inner monologue. That whole area visibly shrinks. And it stays shrunk for at least six years after birth, according to a 2021 follow-up study by the same team. When she has a second baby, that same area shifts a little more, but the biggest changes happen somewhere else. They happen in the part of the brain that controls what you focus on, and the part that controls how your body moves. Even the wiring between the brain and the muscles becomes more efficient. Lead researcher Milou Straathof said it looks like the brain rewiring itself for taking care of more than one kid at a time. The shrinking sounds bad. The lab compares it to what happens in teenage brains during puberty. Hormones flood the brain and trigger a kind of cleanup. Weak connections between brain cells get cleared away. The strong ones stay and get stronger. The brain ends up smaller, but the connections that remain work faster. The hormonal flood of pregnancy seems to do the same thing. Elseline Hoekzema, who runs the Pregnancy Brain Lab and has been studying this since 2017, told CNN: sometimes less is more. The pattern is layered. The first pregnancy does the deep work on identity and how a mom thinks about her baby. The second pregnancy adds a new layer focused on attention and movement. About one in five new mothers globally develops postpartum depression. The same brain circuits being remodeled here are the ones tied to mood and bonding with the baby. Mapping what a healthy maternal brain looks like is the first step toward catching when something goes wrong.
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

🚨: A second pregnancy transforms the brain, making it sharper and more efficient as it adapts to caring for two children, research finds.

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William A. Wallace, Ph.D.
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.@WilliamWallace·
The "microwave-safe" label means the container won't melt, warp, or deform during typical use, and that migration stays below FDA limits. It does not mean nothing leaves the container. When you microwave food in plastic, three things migrate into the food: plasticizers like phthalates, monomers like BPA, and microplastic particles. Lim 2009 measured BPA migration in polycarbonate bottles after 9 minutes of microwaving — 6 to 18 ppb into rice, well below the 600 ppb regulatory limit. Hussain 2023 measured up to 4.22 million microplastic particles and 2.11 billion nanoplastic particles per square centimeter released within 3 minutes of microwave heating. Daily intake estimates: roughly 20 ng/kg for infants drinking microwaved water. Heat increases migration. Fat content amplifies it (phthalates are lipid-soluble). Acidity amplifies it. Container age and microscratches amplify it. Whether these doses matter for health at typical exposure is uncertain. Standard food-grade glass and ceramic don't migrate meaningfully at any temperature with typical foods. The swap is free. Lim, J Tox Env Health 2009: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20077198/ Hussain, Environ Sci Tech 2023: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37343248/
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Give A Shit About Nature
Give A Shit About Nature@giveashitnature·
If you see butterfly bush for sale at the garden store, don't buy that shit. Get butterfly weed instead. Butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii) is from China. It produces enough nectar to attract every butterfly in the neighborhood, which is why it's marketed as wildlife-friendly. But there's a catch. Not a single native North American caterpillar can eat its leaves. Butterflies that lay eggs on it produce zero offspring. You're feeding the parents and starving the babies. It also escapes. A single flower spike produces over 40,000 seeds. The seeds blow into roadsides, riverbanks, and forest edges, where they outcompete native shrubs that DO support caterpillars. It's invasive in over 20 states. Plant butterfly weed instead. Butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) is a native milkweed. Bright orange flowers, 2-3 feet tall, drought-tolerant, deer-resistant. It's a host plant for monarch caterpillars, which means a female monarch can lay eggs on it and the caterpillars actually grow into butterflies. It also feeds adults. Bees, swallowtails, fritillaries, hummingbird moths. Same nectar magnet, but the caterpillars survive. Do you have butterfly weed growing in your yard?
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Give A Shit About Nature
Give A Shit About Nature@giveashitnature·
That cute rock stack by the creek just killed a bunch of mosquito killers. Dragonflies spend most of their lives underwater, sometimes up to five years, clinging to rocks while they grow. A single dragonfly larva eats hundreds of mosquito larvae before it ever flies. But dragonflies are just one species. The rocks in a healthy stream are also covering caddisfly larvae, mayflies, stoneflies, water beetles, salamander egg clutches, and the freshwater snails that fish depend on. Eastern Hellbenders, an endangered giant salamander species, lay their eggs specifically under flat stream rocks. Moving the rock kills the clutch. When you pull a wet rock out of the water and stack it on the bank, everything clinging to that rock dies. They desiccate within minutes in the sun. A single rock pile is dozens of small lives lost. Most stream cairns are stacks of fifteen to twenty rocks. If you see stacked rocks at a creek, knock them over. The stream rebuilds itself faster when rocks are scattered the way water put them. Leave no trace isn't an aesthetic preference. It's real habitat protection.
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonCentral·
RFK jr's brain worm forgot he had a wife and initially left her behind
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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonCentral·
Stephan Miller uses his pregnant wife as a human shield, and a man watches in judgment.
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