
Yuri, 30, he/him — sharing my recs, random thoughts and occasionally art — also here's my side blog where I collect cool posts
70 posts
A Skill That I Mustered And That I'm Really Proud Of: Seeing A Hilarious Tiktok, Experiencing The Urge
a skill that I mustered and that I'm really proud of: seeing a hilarious tiktok, experiencing the urge to send it to my friends and then resisting this urge and NOT SENDING IT TO ANYONE
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hestiashand liked this · 1 year ago
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amberbeeszeesees liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Iuri-kun
btw, if you like this concept too, check out @kinomiakai's work, they're by far my favorite sns author, and the tension they create between these two is just

here's their ao3
you know what
naruto post vote 2 not realizing that he's in love with sasuke and sasuke getting it first and then just rolling with it without explaining anything to naruto just waiting for him to have an epiphany all on his own
that's the shit
My friend: How can people be so wrong? Me: What about? My friend: Everything. All the time. My friend: ... My friend: Characters, mostly.
like why the fuck has fever always made me much more productive when I was younger and still created comics regularly, I would always draw the most detailed art when feverish fever makes my mind quiet and my focus sharp, and despite all expectation to the contrary some of my best work is done when my temperature is 38°C or higher and you know fucking what?
I googled it and apparently it's very common for people with adhd and autism and there's even a potential explanation of this phenomenon:
"For many years, the parents of children with autism have reported that behavioral symptoms diminished when the child had a fever. The fever phenomenon has been documented in at least two large-scale studies over the past 15 years, but the reasons behind it have continued to mystify scientists.
Now, a new study by researchers at Harvard Medical School and MIT sheds light on the cellular mechanisms that appear to underlie this phenomenon.
In a study of mice, published Dec. 18 in Nature, the researchers found that in some cases mimicking bacterial infection, an immune molecule called IL-17a is released and suppresses a small region of the brain’s cortex linked to social behavioral deficits in animal models." — Harvard Medical School news (2019)
this tuesday I got diagnosed with adhd it wasn't a surprise, yet my mind is blown by the amount of things in my life that make sense now
this tuesday I got diagnosed with adhd it wasn't a surprise, yet my mind is blown by the amount of things in my life that make sense now