- Joined
- Jul 31, 2021
I....I don't want to know what it smells like.
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I....I don't want to know what it smells like.
This is when it really hits home. Before then you can fool yourself but once you're literally elbow deep in there and it's impossible to see anything but that awful adipose tissue you can't turn around and say, "yeah being fat is okay".The cadaver paper is spot on. Up at 3am cleaning tissue to even make the muscles visible, scraping away oily ricotta, knowing the other cadaver of normal size took 15 minutes to show the relevant tissue. We had to prep a limited number for students, and knowing some classes would see muscular less clearly because it's impossible to entirely reveal it under all that sticky mass sucks. Your sleeves are soaked in oily, formaldehyde smelling yellow, your gloves are covered in sticky lumps, tools are difficult and cleaning is a nightmare. Opening up to see surgery after surgery that struggled to keep the person alive, replaced joints, missing parts, organs literally packed in fat you can hardly imagine functioning. It's all abstract before that.
POWERBULKING
Do they do this because their fupas are so big they usually need more room than the ass?Posting this for no other reason than to show Fran also does the "bikini bottom on backwards" thing. Do they do this with their underwear as well?
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Yes. They want the fupa coverage but are happy to have the backside look like it’s a thong.Do they do this because their fupas are so big they usually need more room than the ass?
That’s so cute that you think they are wearing underwear.Do they do this with their underwear as well?
The cadaver paper is spot on. Up at 3am cleaning tissue to even make the muscles visible, scraping away oily ricotta, knowing the other cadaver of normal size took 15 minutes to show the relevant tissue. We had to prep a limited number for students, and knowing some classes would see muscular less clearly because it's impossible to entirely reveal it under all that sticky mass sucks. Your sleeves are soaked in oily, formaldehyde smelling yellow, your gloves are covered in sticky lumps, tools are difficult and cleaning is a nightmare. Opening up to see surgery after surgery that struggled to keep the person alive, replaced joints, missing parts, organs literally packed in fat you can hardly imagine functioning. It's all abstract before that.
Yet what the authors want the students to understand is... all of this is not true? That fat is amazing? I am not quite sure. They seem to implicitly push the idea that all health issues related to being obese are due to stigma and poor doctor-patient relations, and not to actual physical/mechanical limitations of being fat.
Our analysis of interview and survey data suggests that students perceived gross anatomy as influencing their feelings and attitudes about fat through a complex process wherein academic pressure and classroom commentary that cast adipose tissue as ‘disgusting’ and dissecting larger bodies as ‘difficult’ amplified their pre-existing weight biases and body image issues.
Does your body donation program have a weight limit? Many of them do; the program I'm most familiar with does not accept bodies weighing more than 250 lb (113 kg). Muh fat discrimination! Quite honestly, even 250 lb seems like a generous limit, considering the extra work involved in cadaver preparation. The local program also does not take body donations from decedents who are missing organs other than corneas. Sometimes I read posts here suggesting that one of the deathfats should "donate her body to science", but it's really not a feasible or worthwhile proposition. It's been mentioned in the Tard Baby thread as well; I think it comes from a good place, but most normies just don't realize that deeded body programs are mostly intended to educate new doctors about normal human physiology.The cadaver paper is spot on. Up at 3am cleaning tissue to even make the muscles visible, scraping away oily ricotta, knowing the other cadaver of normal size took 15 minutes to show the relevant tissue. We had to prep a limited number for students, and knowing some classes would see muscular less clearly because it's impossible to entirely reveal it under all that sticky mass sucks. Your sleeves are soaked in oily, formaldehyde smelling yellow, your gloves are covered in sticky lumps, tools are difficult and cleaning is a nightmare. Opening up to see surgery after surgery that struggled to keep the person alive, replaced joints, missing parts, organs literally packed in fat you can hardly imagine functioning. It's all abstract before that.
Are they using "outie" to refer to genitalia? It sure seems like it.
In my state they only accept bodies where the BMI is less than 30, but also not emaciated. I always thought that would be fairly standard. Once a person crosses the line from overweight to obese, they’re out of the program. There are all sorts of other disqualifications as well, like no major surgical alterations, no infectious diseases, for obvious reasons autopsy is also a disqualification. They want normal, healthy bodies suitable for teaching normal human anatomy. Fatness aside, the fact both Chantal and Amberlynn would be disqualified due to their total hysterectomies and BSOs.Does your body donation program have a weight limit? Many of them do; the program I'm most familiar with does not accept bodies weighing more than 250 lb (113 kg). Muh fat discrimination! Quite honestly, even 250 lb seems like a generous limit, considering the extra work involved in cadaver preparation.
We got sloppy seconds from a medical school, so they gave us the crap corpses. Probably about half were obese, other half was emaciated. First one i had to work on was at least 250lbs.In my state they only accept bodies where the BMI is less than 30, but also not emaciated. I always thought that would be fairly standard. Once a person crosses the line from overweight to obese, they’re out of the program. There are all sorts of other disqualifications as well, like no major surgical alterations, no infectious diseases, for obvious reasons autopsy is also a disqualification. They want normal, healthy bodies suitable for teaching normal human anatomy. Fatness aside, the fact both Chantal and Amberlynn would be disqualified due to their total hysterectomies and BSOs.
I do recall seeing on that super skinny super fat (kids version) many years ago, they took the obese teens to a facility where obese bodies had full height slices taken, and they were somehow preserved and covered in resin. Maybe there is opportunity to for a very limited number of deathfats to horrify the living into taking better care of themselves.