Kaitlyn
Misplaced Lens Cap
𩵠avery cochrane đŠľ

tannertan36
cherry valley forever
Cosmic Funnies
todays bird

Discoholic đŞŠ
macklin celebrini has autism

oozey mess
Not today Justin
Mike Driver
Sade Olutola
Cosimo Galluzzi
Keni

Kaledo Art

romaâ
Fai_Ryy
d e v o n

#extradirty

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@danddanddissertations
Kaitlyn

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âMake people deal with you, but make sure that dealing with you is always a positive and kind experience.â
âTaliesin Jaffe, on what to learn from his character Mollymauk Tealeaf
professors who have only interacted with other academics for years: âwhat do you MEAN you donât know multi-variable calculus yet??â
professors with small kids: âthank you for not putting the lab equipment in your mouths when I turn my backâ
Bringing this back to share that one time I slept through part of a zoom meeting with my PhD advisor (who has a toddler) and he told me it was fine, that just meant I was a good sleeper
You wouldnât think that flamingoes are extremophiles just from looking at them. Itâs like somebody tried to build the vertebrate equivalent of that fungus that lives inside nuclear reactors, and ended up with a gangly pink dinosaur with a spoon for a face.
For everyone in the comments asking how flamingos are extremophiles:
Flamingos can survive in low oxygen, high altitude, high temperatures, low temperatures, high alkaline, they can and will drink boiling water and they can be completely frozen at night and still get up the next morning
Donât fuck with flamingos

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they banned #bone? how quickly they forget
forever remember when a paleontology conference banned the word bone
im screaming i love her sm omg
such rage in such a little body

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Hey students, hereâs a pro tip: do not write an email to your prof while youâre seriously sick.
Signed, a person who somehow came up with âdear hello, I am sick and not sure if Iâll be alive to come tomorrow and Iâm sorry, best slutantions, [name]â.
I mean, if someone wrote that to me, Iâd probably believe they were sick.
âSlutantionsâ has me crying laughing
i once emailed my professor with a migraine. a mistake.
âI amsick will not to choir because i have a heache. i Hope its very and i am so sorry
love,
blueâ
the subject line was âOWâ
THE SUBJECT LINE IS THE BEST PART JSJFJSJDJS JUST IMAGINE GETTING AN EMAIL WITH NO CONTEXT OTHER THAN âOWâ
As someone who has taught college, please send those emails because 1) We WILL believe that; no one would write that on purpose and 2) we need a laugh sometimes.
On the other side of this, once after getting taken to the ER by ambulance, I got an email from the professor whose class Iâd passed out in, and the message had no text, just the subject line âyou good?â
Reblogging for the last addition
Claritin makes me weird, but I have allergies so thereâs about a month and a half block of time where Iâm taking Claritin and am just weird most of the time.
Anyway, my last year of college, I got the flu or something in late March and was also taking Mucinex. I told my professor I couldnât come to class one day by email except I couldnt think of what to say, so my medicated ass decided to make a Fry meme. I think it said something like âNot sure if I can go to class with a head the size of Texas, bottom text.â I didnât think until the next day that it probably wasnât socially-acceptable to tell your philosophy professor you werenât coming to class via Tumblr style memes. When i got back to class, i found that sheâd printed it out and taped it to the classroom bulletin board.
Oh shit you guys i turned on my WinXP laptop that I used to use back then.
IT WAS ON THE DESKTOP. THIS IS WHAT I SENT.
Itâs even worse than i remember it
I laugh myself hoarse every time this post comes around, so here it is again.
this image of Mongolia's best known paleontologist standing in between the fossilized arms of Deinocherius is undeniably the most powerful image in paleontological history
The Moon, la Lune ⢠old academic newspaper aesthetic
thinking about how in ancient times, at least people knew that the lives their children would lead wouldâŚ.vaguely resemble their own???
People have always fondly reminisced about The Good Old Days and complained about Kids These Days, of course. Butâand I cannot stress this enoughâwhen my mom was born the Internet did not exist.
like Iâm thinking about how I am a college student and during the pandemic, work, education, and relationships have been almost totally dependent on a network of technology that literally did not exist when my parents were college students.
When my mom was in college, she just wouldnât have been capable of predicting what college would be like for me. I took a full semester of college from 5 hours away because I can virtually attend class through a pocket sized device that projects my image and voice into a shared virtual classroom where I can interact with my professor and other students. I wrote research papers without physical access to a library because I could read my college libraryâs books on my computer.
If youâre a Mesopotamian farmer, hitching his oxen to a plow, likeâŚidk, man. I canât picture myself at 40. I feel like a Mesopotamian farmer, trying to imagine his sons riding John Deeres.
Itâs so persistently portrayed as this eternal, cyclical thing: Get a job, buy a house, get married and have kids, save for their college, send them off to college. This is the cycle of life. 2.5 kids, buy a house, have a steady career. Just as your father before you did, and his father before him.
Except they didnât. His father before him didnât do this, and your son will not live like you. This is not enshrined in tradition. This is not life. This is not how things are, or have been, or how they ever been. Look at it. This beautiful, ageless world of saving for your kidsâ college and paying off mortgages and nuclear families. There is no way of life to pass down to your children, no tradition, nothing your father gave you that you can give to your son! You were born into a world that is unintelligible and inaccessible to the children you wanted to inherit it, and you and your children will both die in a world that is as foreign to you both!
I donât envy the Boomer generation, nor do I have some kind of conceited disdain for them for not being able to adapt to now. So, so much of what defines our lives happened for the first time in their lifetime, and the absence of those things cannot be explained to us. Do you remember what it was like before television? WellâŚwhat is âit?â
Itâs like our generationâs dim memory of childhood before Internet, and the vast, panicky knowledge that our childhoods were mostly full of a quality best described as the absence of internet, and there is no way to transmit that idea to the kids of today or explain it. We remember it, so, so clearly. It was real. But itâs gone. Annihilated.
Thereâs a midrash that before he died, Moses was worried about what would become of the Israelite people after he was gone. God brought him forward in time to the schoolhouse of Rabbi Akiva. Moses listened to the discussion but could not understand a thing, and nearly despaired, until he heard a student ask Akiva, âhow did you arrive at this conclusion?â Akiva responded, âit follows from what Moses taught.â Reassured, Moses returned to his own time and died.
I taught this midrash last week to a class of about ten 3rd-8th graders whom I have been teaching since September and have never met in person. I asked them to continue the midrash: if Moses made a second stop in 2021, what would confuse him, and what would reassure him?
The youngest kids had a fantastic time imagining Moses trying to use an iPad, trying to understand that he was in a classroom, that we were doing remotely what he had seen Akiva do in person. The older kids wondered if he would be astonished at our level of literacy, or our coed learning.
When I asked what would reassure him they were momentarily stumped: it wasnât the first time this group has struggled to identify positives about their lives and experiences, except in a guilty âsome people have it worseâ kind of way. I reminded them of what reassured Moses in the schoolhouse of Akiva: knowing that what he taught had evolved from rather than superseded the traditions of our ancestors. âWho are we learning about right this very minute?â I prompted.
One of them acted it out: Moses peering suspiciously at his iPad, then exclaiming, âTheyâre learning my Torah in there!â We are not unmoored, we are evolving. It is easier to see the changes than the things that remain constant, but I think there is value, whatever your cultural tradition, in asking âwhat would reassure my ancestors?â
âThe children are using this vast, incomprehensible magical network to mock that damned Ea-Nasir and his terrible copper. Good.â
i love to think about how my ipad holds vastly more knowledge than was available to sumerians in 2000 bce, but if one of them saw me scribble away on it with my stylus, they would know what it is! from 4000 years across history, they would recognize this object if they saw me use it! and maybe theyâd say âyou know, we use something like this where iâm fromâ. and iâd say âi know. in school we learn that you invented them.â and in a weird, convoluted, wonderful and very comforting sense, they invented my ipad too.
@hexadecimal00
statue of our ancestors

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weâre really at that point in the year where no one cares about anything huh
My psych professor mentioned swaddling in lecture so I emailed him a picture of me being swaddled in my dorm room and asked if I could get extra credit because it was really hot in there and I got really sweaty and he was like âfabulous, sureâ
Iâm going to miss the Honors Advisor from my university.
This is definitely my favorite email iâve recieved from a professor, with the subject line âback at itâ.
spoopy dimetrodon