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Shelbyeileen Shelbyeileen @lemmy.world
Posts 8
Comments 187
The planet’s vision is getting worse: 50% of the population will have myopia by 2050
  • I truly believe that in first world countries, it's because of insanely bright headlights. I remember reading that they're 3,000x brighter than they were in the 1990s and because trucks are getting taller, they point more at other drivers than they ever have. My library even rents out night driving glasses so people can see if they're beneficial.

  • Are there any good casual/low-stress mobile games that aren't filled with microtransactions?
  • Neopets still exists and is going strong! The community is wholesome and so amazing, You can play it on your phone's internet browser, it's wonderful nostalgic break from everything else, and they have a TON of free games built in... Solitaire, Pyramids, Bullshit, Battleship, Minesweeper, Brick Breaker, Mahjong, Blackjack, Poker, Keno, etc.

    I still play every day and have a BUNCH of goodies for new players, if you do check it out!

  • Plants can have protein??? 🀯
  • Horses happily eat meat when given the opportunity. Young chickens have found this out the hard way.

  • If you don't work IT, retail, or food service what do you do for work?
  • Oh yeah, searching by my posts is much nicer πŸ˜…

  • If you don't work IT, retail, or food service what do you do for work?
  • I specialize in powerful/domme energy characters, because unless you look like a little girl, you don't make money off the sweet/girl next door characters.

    My most popular are Lady Dimitrescu (Resident Evil), Cammy (StreetFighter), Mad Moxxi (Borderlands), so video games, win!

    Oh, and Velma... my most subscribers ever were for that set, but I shot with a porn star and it was my first girl on girl set. πŸ˜…

  • If you don't work IT, retail, or food service what do you do for work?
  • I do cosplay erotica for a living. I make awesome costumes, I take them off, and just post to Patreon. I suppose it's kindof retail, as I'm giving the photos to people, as a reward for subscribing, but I set my own schedule and choose what goes out. The freedom is incredible

  • When Trump visits a black church
  • If you look at the photos of the church at other times, you see a whopping TWO white people ... total ... and it appears they're with their spouses and mixed race kiddos.

  • What do you think of this prediction?
  • I looked at the movie as a fun romp that's a bit inspired by the book and that makes it bearable. The movie took the nerdiness down in a way that was very unrealistic, but understandable to the general public. Anyone actually in the nerd community knows that people find shortcuts and glitches, and do speedrun records competitively; but they removed the entire part about the first key being in the school area (where it would be attainable by all for free) and instead make it "Oh, I was supposed to drive backwards in this race that I need a very expensive car/weapons for"

    It's a very pretty movie with a lot of fun Easter Eggs, but you've gotta separate and realize it wasn't made for them to enjoy it.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • You're correct, I should have chosen the words better. I had the same classes as doctors for years and had to compete with them for grades, but my courses veered once the classes went onto curing people. (It's a bit too late to cure them, by the time they get to us πŸ˜…)

    After that, was 4 semesters of postmortem science classes revolving around pathology, chemistry, embalming, biohazard protection, forensics, facial reconstruction; and the weird ones like funeral law/insurance, history of death, customs and religions, psychology of death and dying. I love doing reconstructions and creating prosthetics to match a photo when a person is too decomposed or injured. Giving people the chance to say goodbye and have closure is really rewarding.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • I get what you're saying, but I respectfully disagree. I don't think you understand the course load/requirements for this degree. It might be different for different schools, so I'm happy to elaborate. First of, ignore pre-reqs, like math/english/computer/etc. and let's just talk science. My university was one of the top in the nation and I was required to take the same courses as doctors for years; I had to compete with them for my grades (bell curves suck); the only difference was that my courses changed direction when it got to classes regarding curing/treating people. You don't need that for a postmortem science degree, so the next 4 semesters went into strictly death related education.

    My university had us thoroughly trained on any potential medical risks, biohazards, and hospital procedures. We were dissecting, helping with autopsies, learning forensics and pathology, training in everything regarding the heart and vascular system, and don't get me started on all the chemistry/physiology... yes, the courses veered, to avoid teaching us how to cure someone, but that does not take away that we go through medical school.

    We are trained to be the last line of defense for catching crimes and doctor's mistakes; we have continuing education alongside doctors, nurses, and pathologists; we have to work with people who've died of dangerous diseases and protect the public.... we just don't have to worry about curing a corpse. If you've actually read this, please start your reply with the word autopsy.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • My university required 2 years of medical courses; as well as 2 years of mortuary science curriculum. Multiple states I've worked in require continuing education in the medical field with exams every year. But every state and university is different. When I was stationed and worked in Colorado, I learned you don't even need a degree to be a mortician. Any person can shadow a Funeral Director and start embalming. That's terrifying.

    I'll happily concede that things may have changed. I was in college 10 years ago.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • Lawmakers rarely update laws. Disability(SSI) hasn't changed since 1974. The medicaid asset limit is $2,000. If you EVER have more than $2k in your bank, you lose your medical insurance and food. You can't even pay rent/bills for that small amount. If adjusted for inflation, that $2k would be $13k. That's enough to pay bills, that's enough to put a deposit down on a home, that's enough to do some of the things you could do in 1974 with $2k.

    I contacted a Michigan representative about this, and was told they keep the asset limits so low so that only the severely destitute get it... but even the severely destitute can't afford their bills. SSI pays a whopping $11k a YEAR if you're permanently disabled, even though they can't work and paid taxes to protect themselves.

    I'm a disability advocate, so very passionate about this.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • That's awesome. It's nice to read that some places are doing away with stupid things.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • If you want an interesting read, look up cadaveric spasms. I've been slapped by a dead body.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • We have to take additional courses and pass every year, as well as take pandemic response training and mass death psychology/procedure. I even got trained for the ebola outbreak 10 years ago. 2 years of pre-med, 2 years of medical and postmortem science, and a residency which is a minimum of a year, but often longer as it's based on tasks you have to do. A specified amount of autopsied cases, military cases, decomposition, etc. Then you have to pass your state and LARA exams.
    The curriculum included classes for psychology, reconstructive cosmetology, and business law too. I'm a Jill of all trades πŸ˜…

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • I'm a mortician and posted something similar. Morticians go through 4 years of medical school, including pathology and forensics, because it falls on us when the coroner screws up... and they have. The case that hits me the hardest was an infant being given SIDS as the cause of death, but postmortem bruising and broken bones told a different story. The owner had to call police and fake a funeral arrangement while he waited for them to arrive.

  • What jobs were you horrified to learn are done by people with little to no experience or training?
  • The county coroner is an ELECTED position.

    I'm a mortician who's worked substantially with autopsies. To be the county coroner, you do not need a degree, you do not need experience in mortuary science, postmortem science, forensics, pathology, NOTHING. All you need to be the county coroner, is to be popular.

    Meanwhile, funeral directors in the USA need to go through years of college and continuing education, because we're literally the last line of defense when coroners/doctors screw up. I've caught dozens of mistakes the coroner has made and I'm sick of it. The most recently was a shaken and bruised baby having cause of death listed as SIDS.

    I no longer blindly trust autopsies for accurate cause of death. If the mortician needs 4 years of medical school, the freaking county coroner would should be required for at LEAST that to be elected.

  • A PR disaster: Microsoft has lost trust with its users, and Windows Recall is the straw that broke the camel's back
  • My bigger concern is that almost every company now has it in their contracts/terms of services, that all users are not allowed to participate in a lawsuit, be it class action, or court case against them Most of them even have a maximum sue limit too! There's a lot that have a rule that initial arbitration cannot have a lawyer, but that won't be enforced.

  • I miss when she was this tiny!

    When I got her, she was so small that I had to cut a sock for her to wear as a sweater because nothing fit. She's an Aussalier; half mini Australian Shepherd and half King Charles Cavalier; and the most loving dog.

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    I'm so proud of how my Lady Maria turned out! Check out the side by side!

    So excited to share my Lady Maria from Bloodborne! I even got to shoot it at an 1800s victorian mansion! Everything is handmade or highly modded. I 3D printed the Rakuyo myself and it does transform like in the game! I'm so happy with how it turned out!

    I'm ShelbyEileenCosplay and happy to answer any questions you might have! There's a spicy version of this too.

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    "Dog"ter Grant and Dr. Ellie Sattler (self)

    I'm a cosplayer, so I make costumes for my service dog too!

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    I love hand-making cosplays because it encompasses textile arts, armor crafting, 3D printing, painting, wig styling, jewelry making, etc. (ShelbyEileen)

    I’m ShelbyEileenCosplay and am really excited to see that textile arts are included in this instance! I’ve been sewing for 12 years and armor crafting for 10, and competing in cosplay contests for 10. It’s the most challenging and fulfilling hobby I’ve ever tried and I love it so much.

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