- Joined
- Aug 4, 2019
I always thought Endora was more of a grandiose narcissist type.I’m a failed munchie. Ask me anything/about my personality disorder.
How does one fail at munching?
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I always thought Endora was more of a grandiose narcissist type.I’m a failed munchie. Ask me anything/about my personality disorder.
24k members. She has the dollar amount disabled which is cringe but we can make a good estimate. The default pledge is $5/month, but some are going to pledge less and some are going to pledge more. I think conservatively she's making $100k+ a month where before December she was probably making around half that, which was still insane money.
The 'fancy' treatment for it twenty years ago was metformin, so I would expect your forecast to be right and the GLP-1s to be deployed in due course as well. The weight loss that comes with them also drives down the hormone imbalance, so double win.I wonder if the GLP-1 drugs like ozempic might be useful for this as well?
step 1: purchase one (1) bottle of affordable vodka.
Steps 2-6: ????
Step 7: wake up to digital stickers.
I wonder if the GLP-1 drugs like ozempic might be useful for this as well?
The 'fancy' treatment for it twenty years ago was metformin, so I would expect your forecast to be right and the GLP-1s to be deployed in due course as well. The weight loss that comes with them also drives down the hormone imbalance, so double win.
Another thing about PCOS is that it tends to cluster in families, but although being a common cause of female infertility, is easily diagnosed and generally fairly easily treated. Antiandrogens as first line, then clomifene, then IVF if everything really won't happen.
So more folk with PCOS are having kids - daughters - now than they might have done before. It is probably passed on significantly more than it used to be.
I know you’re at higher risk of T2 if you’ve had gestational diabetes but I didn’t know PCOS made you more at risk too (I learn something every day…) I suspect it’s some underlying mechanism that creates insulin resistance. Everyone will get diabetes at a set point for themselves - once the lipids have stuffed all easily available niches and are spilling over and insulin resistance hits a certain point it is inevitable. I think (and this is just my opinion not really what’s known) that the changes in pregnancy can tip you over that threshold point for you very quickly.It is, I know, a major risk factor for gestational diabetes, which in turn is a major risk factor for type 2.
Probably your specific genetic background gives you a set point for that threshold. It’s a different point for everyone - some people can get pretty fat and not get it, others much lighter - past that I don’t know. Maybe we have some endocrinologists on here?With it being endocrine, could it be related, however tangentially, to a family history of diabetes? Maybe your generation doesn't have or develop T1 or 2, but the genetic predisposition translocates to a different area... Or it's a mosaic copy that causes, basically, acne of the ovaries.
I know you’re at higher risk of T2 if you’ve had gestational diabetes but I didn’t know PCOS made you more at risk too (I learn something every day…) I suspect it’s some underlying mechanism that creates insulin resistance. Everyone will get diabetes at a set point for themselves - once the lipids have stuffed all easily available niches and are spilling over and insulin resistance hits a certain point it is inevitable. I think (and this is just my opinion not really what’s known) that the changes in pregnancy can tip you over that threshold point for you very quickly.
Probably your specific genetic background gives you a set point for that threshold. It’s a different point for everyone - some people can get pretty fat and not get it, others much lighter - past that I don’t know. Maybe we have some endocrinologists on here?
Do you know the supposed diagnosis? It’s a little difficult to form an opinion without it but here are some things I would consider red flags:There is a situation unfolding IRL that I find highly concerning.
Yeah I have no plans to snitch on anybody. Not nearly enough info.Do you know the supposed diagnosis? It’s a little difficult to form an opinion without it but here are some things I would consider red flags:
- ubiquitous social media posting about the kid’s medical situation
- parents throwing around lingo like “complex medical issues” while vague on the actual diagnosis
- parental financial gain from the situation
- parents’ claims about child’s symptoms contradict what you see with your own eyes
- changing narrative or diagnoses, doctor shopping, mistrust of health care professionals (that’s a bit tricky because many doctors are assholes, but if every doctor they’ve met is one I’d be suspicious)
- parents always on the hunt for new interventions but less focused on the child going to school, having friends etc
- child behaves differently when parents are present
However: it’s possible to tick all the boxes but the child may actually have a severe disability anyway and the parents are just weird. PL: the hospital where I work has an absolutely insane child abuse team that has accused many innocent parents of medical child abuse, so I’ve seen what devastation that can cause. Tread carefully, fren!
Sorry if this has already been pointed out but the wrist thing reminds me of Amy Pohl, who has almost 3 million followers and has been documenting her wrist being stuck in that exact position since 2020 along with a lot of other health problems, including neurological health problems (FND) that she needs a power wheelchair to manage. (Amy's doctors don't think she has FND anymore)
Amy's videos first started getting major traction around June 2020, but had had a few blow up before this (March 2020 onwards) Rose's hand thing and her use of a power wheelchair seems to have started around the same time as this.
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We have a rail thin T2 as well. Probably something linked to the same HLA complex as the psoriasis stuff.sometimes the most improbable people end up with gestational diabetes. Like a rail-thin vegan gal I know.
No listen to your gut.Tell me I am full of shit and there's an obvious explanation.
You're not full of shit for caring about the well-being of a defenseless child, even if it turns out that your concerns are unfounded.I spend too much time looking at the worst people in the world online. Tell me I am full of shit and there's an obvious explanation.
Yada yada I know "invisible disability" is a thing, I am aware of the wide range of the conditions that could cost someone their mobility, but nothing adds up. I don't see the usual signs you would see- either floppiness or wasting or spasticity or signs of other developmental problems or chromosomal issues. Kid has good core strength- sits right up from a full recline and stays that way, until mom says lay down. And then lays back down with full control.
Trust your instincts; you seem like a pretty levelheaded and rational person. Of course, this could all be nothing, but if it's something, it's something pretty bad.
Does the kid have an IEP? Will he or she return to your school next year? Are you a mandatory reporter?
No listen to your gut.
Gotta plead the 5th on all of the above.Does the kid have an IEP? Will he or she return to your school next year? Are you a mandatory reporter?
This, this, and more this. If you're a mandated reporter, you gotta think hard about this. Happy to discuss over DMs if you want a medfag's opinion.
I'm automatically suspicious of anybody who exclusively uses "invisible disability," "chronically ill," or just "disabled" to describe themselves and actively avoids giving a diagnosis or specifier. Unless it's Chron's or Ulcerative Colitis, then I get dancing around it, but otherwise everybody I've known who frequently describes themselves in vague internet-speak ways has always turned out to have munchie red flag issues. People who refer to themselves frequently as simply "mentally ill" or talk about "my mental illness" to the exclusion of specific diagnoses or symptoms are pretty much always borderlines or teenagers."Invisible disability" is something of a deceiving term.
This in particular is throwing the biggest red flag and ringing alarm bells for me, honestly. I can't think of any especially convincing reasons this would need to be done regularly.boosting meds (or something) into the line in the middle of an activity in front of the whole group rather than timing it for before or after so it could be done privately.