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#i’d had my last phone case 3 times in a row bc i loved it so much so this is a bit of a Change
tangerinesunbeam · 2 months
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sometimes u have a nose bleed and take selfies for the aesthetic but then ur really feeling your makeup especially after you’ve had half a bottle of wine and a mojito innit
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tlkfastromance · 6 years
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85 questions
tagged by: @roseamourr
1.) drink: seltzer bc im super lame and weird
2.) phone call: my dad; an angel
3.) text message: “yeah” — intriguing really
4.) song you listened to: babylon by 5sos
5.) time you cried: bout 5 days ago??
6.) dated someone twice: no, im wildly unattractive and a child and no one wants to date me
7.) kissed someone and regretted it: AGAIN, a child
8.) been cheated on: pain
9.) lost someone special: yes
10.) been depressed: hell fucking yeah
11.) gotten drunk and thrown up: nah
fave colors:
12.) light pink
13.) yellow
14.) blue
in the past year, have you...
15.) made new friends: yeah
16.) fallen out of love: no
17.) laughed until you cried: i think so
18.) found out someone was talking about you: not that i can remember
19.) met someone who’s changed you: yeah
20.) found out who your friends are: yup
21.) kissed someone on your fb friends list: 1) who the hell uses facebook?? 2) im the literal virgin mary
general q’s...
22.) amt of fb friends ik irl: i’d imagine most but like switch that to twitter and it’s not that many
23.) pets: 3 dogs, 2 cats, 2 birds, and a squirrel bc my mom is a psycho
24.) do you want you change your name: don’t think so
25.) what did you get for your last bday: clothes, dance stuff, money, etc
26.) what time did you wake up today: 8 am
27.) what were you doing at midnight last night: probably being sad about how i have nothing going for me and am,, the worst
28.) something you can’t wait for: times with friends this summer, panic front row soon
30.) what are you listening to rn: shark tank is on? music wise: new 5sos and panic albums
31.) have you ever talked to a guy named tom: i mean, yeah-
32.) something that gets on your nerves: my mother, selfish people, conservatives, the straights
33.) most used apps: youtube, twitter and pinterest i guess
34.) hair color: brown but i’d love to dye it silver or pink and be fun
35.) long or short hair: v long
36.) do you have a crush on someone: you betcha
37.) what do you like about yourself: not much tbh. my lips sometimes and sometimes my small boobs i guess? unpopular opinion.
38.) want any piercings: nose, nipple piercings are cute too so maybe?
39.) blood type: no clue
40.) nicknames: vic, vicky dubbs and other variations of vicky
41.) relationship status: painfully single
42.) zodiac sign: sagittarius
43.) pronouns: she/her
44.) fave tv shows: glee, new girl, acs versace
45.) tattoos: planning on getting some
46.) right or left handed: left
47.) ever had surgery: nah
48.) piercings: ears
49.) sport: im one of those dance-y people
50.) vacation: i miss la a lot
52.) just had some bomb mashed potatoes
53.) drinking: some h2o my dude
54.) about to watch: the new try guys vids
55.) waiting for: a long hug would be cool
56.) want: to be happy, a mom who doesn’t make me feel like shit, direction in my life, to suck less, less anxiety, less fear of the future, higher self esteem, to lose weight and be hot, to not feel so lonely all the time, to hug darren again, dye my hair and get tattoos, a gf, need i go on??
57.) get married: yeah
58.) career: lol J O K E S
which is better...
59.) hugs or kisses: hugs i guess
60.) lips or eyes: eyes
61.) taller or shorter: taller
62.) older or younger: around the same age i guess
63.) nice arms or stomach: stomach?
64.) hookup or relationship: relationship
65.) troublemaker or hesitant: troublemaker who’s cautious when necessary maybe?
have you ever...
66.) kissed a stranger: nah
67.) drank hard liquor: nope
68.) turned someone down: not really
69.) sex on a first date: child
70.) broken someone’s heart: no
71.) had your heart broken: not literally, no
72.) been arrested: nope, shocking ik, these answers are like SUPER eventful
73.) cried when someone died: yup
74.) fallen for a friend: nah
do you believe in...
75.) yourself: here’s the thing... no
76.) miracles: i think so
77.) love at first sight: maybe a little
78.) santa: obviously no but like, part of me wishes i could still have that belief in magic again
79.) angels: not sure
misc...
80.) ever color: what the hell does this even mean? fuck it, maroon
... i am just now realizing im a fucking idiot and that most likely meant eye. in that case, brown.
81.) best friends names: julia, julia, olivia, mads, bri
82.) favorite movie: love simon
83.) actor: darren criss 💓💞💗💘
84.) favorite cartoon: don’t really have one, i love animated movies tho bc again im a, wait for it: child
85.) favorite teachers names: mr. elder and mrs. cooper
i tag: @kjttens @tattookiisses and like no one else bc like, i am illiterate in tumblr and have no friends, ok cool.
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poop4u · 4 years
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Preventing Separation Anxiety in the Time of Covid
#Poop4U
  If you’ve been home more often than not because of Covid Safe at Home, this is a good time to ensure that your dog doesn’t end up with Separation Anxiety (SA) when you go back to work. I’m concerned, as are many of my colleagues, that there is going to be a surge in separation anxiety cases once people aren’t home as often. I suspect that this is especially true of all the dogs that have been adopted from shelters during the Covid crisis, and have yet to experience being home alone.
Here are three tips that can help:
1. Keep calm and come home: Teach your dog that your arrivals and departures are nothing to get excited (or anxious) about. I’ll admit that it’s hard to not get excited when you get home and there’s a wriggly, puddle of love waiting for you, but calm is key. Keep your greetings quiet and low key–this doesn’t mean you can’t love up your dog as much as you’d like. Just do it without lots of highly arousing expressions of joy; quiet and calm is the key here.
That’s goes for departures too. As a friend once said when I told her I felt guilty leaving my dogs home, she noted that they were going to spend the morning lying on the couch while I worked my ass off in my office to bring home the dog food. Now I say quietly, with true warmth and affection,”Love you, be good” when I go, and leave it at that.
        Please don’t be this person, says the dog while trying to get away.
  2. Begin a desensitizing and counter conditioning plan. The good news is that it’s not hard to condition a dog to being comfortable when you leave the house. The bad news is that, depending the dog, it can take focus and energy, qualities in short supply for most of us right now.
Here’s the simple version: Leave your dog with something that makes her happy while you leave the house. Here’s the oh-so-important detail: Start by leaving for just seconds or minutes at a time. Where you start depends on what your life is like right now, and how dependent or independent your dog is. If your dog is often alone in the house while you and the family are out in the garden, then just add in a quick drive around the neighborhood while your dog chews on a stuffed Kong or bullystick.
If you think about it and realize your dog has simply never been alone in the house lately, then start by having everyone walk to the mailbox while your dog snarfs up kibble tossed onto the floor. What’s important is to start small: Really, really small. If your dog already has SA, then “small” means “walk to the door and put your hand on the doorknob” five times in a row while your dog eats some treats. Or pick up your keys, or put on your coat, ten times in a row to desensitize your dog to that action.
This is the tricky part to explain, because it depends on so many factors, most importantly, your dog’s behavior when you leave the house. If you have a new dog that you got while you stayed Safe at Home, start by noticing how often you leave the dog alone in the house and what you can guess about your dog’s behavior behaves if/when you’re gone. (Taping your dog is a great thing to do and can actually be entertaining.)
I wrote a booklet titled I’ll Be Home Soon: How to Prevent and Treat  Separation Anxiety that goes over this in great detail. It’s concise, only 38 pages, and might be worthwhile if you need some more advice about how to proceed. Dogwise and I agreed to put it on sale, basically at cost, in order to help out anyone who could use it.
(Cautionary note: I wrote the booklet in 2000, twenty long years ago, and used the phrase “leader of the pack”. Sigh. It had nothing to do with the meaning now associated with that phrase; it advised teaching your dog to be patient and polite. Needless to say, next time it’s printed I’ll change the wording.) (Cautionary note #2: The scariest thing about publishing something is that the words you wrote will live on. And on and on . . .)
If you’d like to read more on this topic, you might enjoy reading a post I wrote in 2011 about research that claimed counter conditioning wasn’t helpful in SA cases. The research is so flawed my head almost exploded, but it makes for amusing if not slightly frustrating reading.
  3. Never correct or punish your dog after the fact. This actually goes for ALL dog behavior, but is highly relevant to dogs who are anxious when left alone.  Your dog may look guilty when you come home to ripped up pillows or a pile on the carpet, but Brandy’s appeasing posture is designed to avoid your wrath, not because “she knows she shouldn’t do it”. (Read more about the “guilty dog fallacy” here). Scolding her when you get home will likely do nothing but make it worse the next time you leave.
  I’d love to hear what’s going on with you. Dogs fine home alone? Have a new dog who you’re not sure about? Had a dog with SA and now it’s fine? Let’s us know, we’d love to hear about it.
  MEANWHILE, back on the farm: Our life is revolving around Skip’s injured leg, with daily moist heat treatments, laser treatments and 3 sets of physical therapy exercises recommended by kick ass PT Courtney Arnoldy. (Who we managed to get in to see, sort of. I handed Skip off to her in front of the clinic and we worked hard to communicate by phone amidst a major construction project across the street.)
Skip gets one leash walk off the farm a day, which is the best part of his treatment for all of us for sure. We’re up to 35 minutes with no sign of it hurting him, so that’s good news. Prognosis is one to three months more, please please please let it be the former rather than the latter. I am working hard on accepting this reminder of life having “other plans.” I do better some days than others; he and I were just clicking as a working sheepdog team the week it happened, so I alternate between meditative acceptance and being pure and simply pissed off.  I give equal thanks to meditation most days, and gin on Friday and Saturday nights to get me through.
I hung back with Maggie to take this shot of Jim and Skip. All of us agree that leash walks are better than nothing, but don’t begin to make up for the joy of off leash walks.
Black Earth Creeks runs alongside one of the trails we have been enjoying lately with the BCs.
Here’s a happy sign of spring: Healthy triplets on the farm of friend Donna H, whose 13 ewes had more triplets (and some quads!) than anything else.
The Prairie Smoke in our garden is smoldering (wait til you see it when it seeds!):
  Below is a view from behind the house looking up toward our “DIY safari tent”. The piles you see are from the invasive Bush Honeysuckle that formed an almost solid wall in what used to be an oak/hickory/black cherry woods. I’ve never seen anything as invasive as this plant, it literally takes over entire areas and prevents anything else from growing. A crew from Quercus Land Stewardship spent two days cutting it and treating the stumps. They’ll come back in June to burn the piles, and will seed the area with native woodland flowers and herbs in fall. It’ll take years to get it back to health, and we’ll be dealing with massive amounts of wild raspberries for years, but it will all be worth it, even if it doesn’t come into its own until after Jim and I are gone. (Yes, raspberries are great to eat, but try walking through a patch of solid raspberries sometime.)
Jim and I look forward to staying overnight in the tent sometime soon. We’re waiting for nighttime lows above 50 F, hopefully not too long from now. We have lots more tent clean up to do before staying there though, (we say “your welcome” to all the mice who enjoyed living there last year), so we’re okay with another week of lows in the 40’s.
I loved hearing about what you are looking forward to last week, keep it up!
    Poop4U Blog via www.Poop4U.com Trisha, Khareem Sudlow
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