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19
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564
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • They usually charge themselves in their case (small pods) or have big batteries (over ear). I use my pods probably 8 hours a day, and just need to charge the case once or twice a week.

  • It's an understandable reaction, but it's not ideal or effective. In fact, depression and apathy is one of the key mechanisms of keeping a group oppressed.

    Fighting to maintain power is costly and risky, but if someone can make people give up hope and stop struggling, then they can do what they want to them.

  • It was a university degree in the UK , and then I worked for the NHS for a number of years (until I moved to France and a much more relaxing job teaching at a university). I mostly specialised in pediatrics, particularly ASD and other developmental conditions. If I'd stayed with adults I would have focused on Aphasia and acquired language disorders. I found neurology very fun, and the way that damage could reveal the maaany faculties required for effective communication was super intresting to me.

    LSVT is certainly well-evidenced and I've seen it be very effective. But it's quite repetitive, so colleagues who did a lot of it sometimes complained of not getting a chance to be creative in their approaches, just having to stick to the protocol.

    Dysphagia is a bit scary, but it makes such an incredible difference. Even many years after working with stroke survivors, every time I'm incredibly thirsty I think about the poor folks who were 'nil by mouth' and so desperately wanted a mouthful of water. Having a nurse swab your mouth is really not the same. Doing a swallowing check with them and giving the nurses permission to give them some fluids (even if they had to be weird and thick) completely transformed their day.

    Good luck with your studies! It's a very rewarding career!

  • Social stories can be really helpful for all sorts of things. But it really depends the individual and what their strengths and needs are. I've worked with children with ASD and they've been great readers, but struggled with verbal communication and understanding social expectations. For them having a short focused 'story' that explained how to ask a question in class, or how to share with a friend, can be really helpful.

    I've also seen them be effective with adults with learning difficulties. But often that's more because it trains the carers and family members around them. Not only does it fix the language so that the same thing is explained the same way everytime, and in appropriate language, but the process of writing the story and trying to articulate a piece of advice into concrete simple language can help 'normal' people realise how complex the 'simple rule' they want to communicate actually is. "don't talk to strangers" is the sort of advice people give, but what's a stranger, how does someone become 'known', what about a police officer? Or even a waiter?

  • Hah ! Speech therapy was what I thought! I used to be an SLT, but you probably know more than me about a bunch of things, because it's been a while...

  • But don't we have lots of insults for other categories of people? People call people soyboys, incels, tankies, fashy, bible thumper, nepo babies or basement dweller.

    Aren't those just the modern version of "jocks" and "limeys" (I went for those because I'm Scottish and British, you can mentally fill in the alternatives...)

  • I've not noticed that in particular yet. but it might be because I block accounts that don't add constructively to the comments, so maybe I'm not seeing a lot of the worst behaviour.

  • Love warehouse 13! Like eureka, it's kinda silly, but good heartwarming fun. Definitely good inspiration for dnd campaigns. I've always wanted to rip it off but set in planescape. Sending players to different planes to pick up weird artifacts without blowing their covers.

  • I'd say, post as often as you can be bothered and make interesting content. I rarely pay attention to the username beside a post, so I'm unlikely to judge that it's the same person who posts 99% of posts in a less popular community. But if I see lots of examples of posts on a topic, it's easier for me to remember about it and think "I'll post there".

  • that's a cool hobby! I used to love watching the parts of my tape deck move as a kid. Te parts clunking into pace, the gentle pace of the rotation. That's a very nice player you've got!

  • Not a car guy, but it makes more sense to me than people who collect expensive watches. At least a car is fun to drive and goes vroom. A rolex is just some jewelery for guys.

  • What interface/appnare you using? On boost its exactly the same process for upvotes or downvotes. I don't think an extra step would make any difference, I don't downvote very often and when I do it's because I think it's worth doing.

  • Yeah, never feel like it's too late to start something. There's stuff (learning an instrument, language, craft stuff) I considered getting into in my 30s but felt like it was too late. Now I'm 40 and I've started and I wish I'd done it ten years ago, because I'd be so much further ahead.

  • I read some piece of advice a while back (on lemmy I think) about when to talk, "Does it need said? Does it need said right now? Does it need said by you?" and it really stuck with me.

    I'm definitely a talker, and my friends and family will talk all day. But I know my partner can find it a bit much, so having a basic rule has been surprisingly helpful. I might want to tell him about the intresting thing that I read, but does he really want to hear that? We might need to talk about something important but stressful, maybe bringing it up just before bed isn't the best idea?

    It is all pretty obvious stuff, but I spent three decades only really spending time with people who talked all the time too. I didn't need to worry about bringing something up at the wrong time, because if I did, they would immediately say "oh I don't want to talk about that because...." and explain or change the subject. I didn't worry about a conversation being uninteresting, because if it was we'd quickly tangent into something that worked for us both.

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  • I don't think it's very common, partners and flatmates have definitely (and understandably) been frustrated. When I was younger and used to smoke, my friends would be horrified that I wouldn't tap ash into the an ashtray, but just into the floor or couch I was sitting on. It wasn't intentional, I don't like getting ash over myself (or having to pick up envelopes, or find socks scattered over the house) but if I was occupied by a conversation or even just thinking about something, it would happen without my noticing.

    But to be fair, I have adhd, so I've got a bunch of issues around attention and impulse control. It's a tiresome habit, and I'm definitely not condoning it. I'm just so glad that I don't act like that outside my home. There I'm just normal levels of thoughtless, like forgetting to use coasters.

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  • Not to justify littering in the slightest (it's gross and I don't do it) but I think I can give you an insight in some of the thinking. Because in my own home, I frequently and unthinkingly 'litter' even though it annoys me! I open an envelope and read the letter, unconsciously dropping the envelope on the floor. I constantly find empty food packaging in weird places because as soon as I'm done with it I just drop it.

    Fortunately I don't do this in public because I'm always more aware of my actions when I'm out of my own space. But within my home, if I'm doing something while focusing on something else I'm prone to abandoning things carelessly, and when I find them latter I'll be mad at having to tidy up after myself. So, maybe some folks are like that in public? Also, some folks consciously and shamelessly litter, and there's really no excuse.

  • I feel like "going viral" partly covers that? When you make an offensive tweet before boarding a plane, and get turn off flight mode to realise the world has judged you and you've lost your job?

    If you specifically mean how the Internet can misrepresented a country because most people online have never been to Montenegro or Bhutan, then it's maybe just "bias"?

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  • Good to see the great art of conversation is still with us.