interwebois - Interweb bois
Interweb bois

Not meddically recognized but talking to a therapist that knows about DID/OSDD and doing that type of work

314 posts

Made By Jon Uhler

Made By Jon Uhler
survivorsupport
The Process of Healing | survivorsupport

Made by Jon Uhler

We made a similar one. Who is more close to me and ones we have less knowledge about and or less communication and it helps. 

  • charismajackson
    charismajackson liked this · 1 year ago

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1 year ago

His videos really help. One thing that explained a lot is when a Part feels angry or a strong emotions, the body produces adrenaline, which can feel like anxiety to the other Part.


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1 year ago

For Us we have similar things we like but for music our taste is so different from each other.

What else in your System are similar but in other words really different?


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1 year ago
An archival photo from the Museum’s collections of a Pteranodon skeleton on display. A man facing the specimen reveals its enormous size.

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s… a dinosaur? Nope to all of the above. This Fossil Friday, let’s talk about pterosaurs—the first animals with bones to evolve powered flight. Though they were related to dinosaurs, pterosaurs evolved on a separate branch of the reptile family tree. They ruled the skies for more than 150 million years, evolving into dozens of different species. Some were as small as a paper airplane while others, like Pteranodon pictured here in the Museum's Hall of Late Dinosaurs circa 1940-1960, had a wingspan of more than 20 ft (6 m).

Along with other large pterosaurs, Pteranodon longiceps was first discovered in western Kansas, near a chalk formation called Monument Rocks. Today the region is dry, but at the time this species lived, about 85 million years ago, central North America was covered by a seaway. This large pterosaur likely spent its days flying over the sea. Unlike early species of pterosaurs, Pteranodon and many other Cretaceous-era species didn’t have any teeth. In fact, its genus name means “winged and toothless,” while the second name, longiceps, means “long-headed.”

Today, you can find Pteranodon in the Hall of Vertebrate Origins. We're open daily from 10 am-5:30 pm! Plan your visit.

Photo: Image no. ptc-217 © AMNH Library