[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 4 days ago

On the contrary, since growing my nails out my nails have been way more clean. There is an awkward period between no nails and long nails where stuff gets caught underneath, but once you grow them out (only two weeks or so), they're perfectly clean because there's just more space underneath and nowhere for gunk to get caught as the angle is wider.

my nails, for reference (sorry my power is out

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 4 days ago

(Classic guitar players have long nails)

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 week ago

I feel no need to be protected in my day to day life. My partner provides love, companionship, empathy, and a listening ear. Sure, some women might care about protection and toughness or whatever you're on about, but attraction varies from person to person. Most other women I know want to be heard and loved. People are allowed to want to fuck "fragile" men. They can be hot without needing to be "manly." You're putting so much stock in traditional gender norms, not realizing that it's not women that actually care about those. It's the men that are trying to be that. Some women will, of course, but women aren't a monolith. Want an example? Timothy Chalamet is very commonly considered to be an extremely attractive actor, and he's far more androgynous and "fragile," as you put it, than your traditional masculine ideal. Just as many women might be attracted to any number of different appearances, because people are different! The days of needing a strong man to support us frail women are over. Your insecurities and ideas of masculinity are clouding your judgment.

To answer your question succinctly: No, they aren't fragile looking, they're just slim. No, they don't look "dehumanized," they look like people. The dehumanization happens in industry, not with their faces. I know people that look similar. Some women find them hot, and want to fuck them, and idolize them, because they are hot! They're very attractive people, if that aesthetic is what you're into! If your only metric is how likely they are to win a fight, sure, they probably aren't at the top of the scale, but the vast majority of people DON'T CARE.

They told you to look into therapy because you have an unhealthy idea of what women are attracted to and what masculinity should be. They called you insecure because you sound insecure (why do women like the weak little boys and not big manly men :(( they look so frail and weak, don't women know they can't protect them??). Whether or not that's how you're actually thinking, it's how it comes across. Instead of realizing that some people do like strong men, you took it to a place of jealousy and defensiveness.

TLDR: Different strokes for different folks. Don't obsess over people you don't find attractive still being attractive to others, as it isn't good for your mental health and isn't a good look.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 weeks ago

The Barnsley Fern was constructed specifically to resemble the species of fern that it does. There are versions of it that have been modified to resemble other ferns. The fractal isn't some secret mathematical code for why ferns look like they do, it's more like a drawing of a fern. If someone made a fractal to look like another leaf, it would be just that, not an advancement into the secrets of botany.

The short answer: no. The two do not connect beyond the fact that ferns have a design reminiscent of a fractal, which is likely what inspired the fractal's creation.

How "real" is it? It is a real set of functions, but if I design a set of functions to look like William Dafoe, it doesn't mean I've cracked the matrix code into his genetics.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 weeks ago

What radicalism? What part of that ideal is radical? Also, a bizarre reaction. "My beliefs were challenged in the slightest, therefore this person must be silenced." Weirdo.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago

Every vegan

Factually incorrect and anecdotal

the concept of death doesn't even exist in most animal minds

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8602129/

Good read, though anyone that's seen a pet mourn their owner or their friend knows that's not true already.

can't take you seriously anymore

It's a portmanteau of debater and statist. Frankly, I don't care what you think about me. You're clearly biased beyond any reason as to the motives of others, to the point of making false blanket statements about entire groups. Any time someone says "all _____ are _____," there is a problem and they should be questioned. Did the vegans you approach solicit your question? If they did not, then mind your own business. If they did, and "flip their shit," (X to doubt on the reliability of this narrator) then that one person had an issue. The sheer fact that you can easily find very chill vegans online or irl without much effort means you're a statistical anomaly, an asshole, or misrepresenting the truth.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago

The premise of your previous comment was that regardless of the health effects (ie: if vegan cat food is healthy), the cats didn't consent to it. That argument doesn't make any sense. I don't disagree that cats need proper nutrition, again, I feed my cat meat. I just think your argument based on consent is not well founded and there are better ways to argue your point without making a strange implication about ignoring consent. I don't think forcing a cat to be vegan is okay, unless that diet is properly supplemented with all the nutrients the cat needs, which may or may not be possible. I don't know. Again, I'm not arguing for cats to be fed vegan. I'm arguing against using consent as the angle against veganism, because that opens up a whole can of worms as to hypocrisy. I'm not vegan, and there are perfectly good reasons to be or not be vegan, but animal consent definitely isn't an argument to be made against veganism unless you want to confront the issues with animals just as intelligent as cats, or more, being consumed as food.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 2 weeks ago

Weird personal attack there. Care to explain?

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago

You sound like what I like to call a "debatist." No one wants to be challenged on their personal choices. You don't seem to be approaching this concept with an open mind. Can you define what makes anything they say unreasonable? I am not vegan, but I can recognize, definitively, that veganism is better for the environment (by far), healthy (if you make sure you're getting all the nutrients you need, just like any diet), and less cruel to animals. You can choose to disagree that those conclusions mean you need to cut out animal products, but those aren't opinions up for debate. Farming meat is far worse for the environment, vegan diets are perfectly healthy, and obviously, killing animals isn't something the animal wants.

Again, you can disagree with their conclusion that those reasons mean you shouldn't eat animal products, but denying that they're true is like denying climate change. I'm not vegan, so clearly I didn't come to the same conclusion, but I'm not trying to purport that anyone that does is somehow unreasonable.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Having personally known several perfectly normal and sane vegans, maybe your "reasonable conversation" is a bit more combative than you believe. Vegans are just normal people. Some will be crazy. Some will be normal. If your experience with your hundreds of vegans you've met is 100% unreasonable, then you're definitely the problem. Someone choosing to avoid animal products for personal health or environmental reasons, or any other personal reason, is inherently not unreasonable. They might be unreasonable if they try to force their ideas on others, but defending their own choices isn't unreasonable. Tone down your confirmation bias and aggression, and you might find that just like every large enough group, people are still people and they vary.

Edit: for the record, I'm not vegan.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 weeks ago

That seems like a very blanket statement to make about an entire group of people. I'm not vegan, btw. The vegans I know make that choice entirely independently for the sake of the environment, because they hate the conditions in factory farming, or any number of other totally reasonable reasons. They aren't forcing it on anyone else, or their pets for that matter. What makes you feel this way? They seem reasonable to me, even if I have no problem personally with drinking milk or eating eggs.

[-] erin@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 2 weeks ago

Dude, what are you on about. Plenty of vegans I know go vegan because it's better for the environment. That's a big part of why I'm vegetarian. Why make it such an "us and them" dilemma? They're just people, even if you don't ascribe to their choices. It seems like you're more concerned about being right than being correct.

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erin

joined 1 year ago