• @[email protected]
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    1402 months ago

    You know how they say “kids are resilient” but really it leads to them needing therapy as adults?

    I’m convinced a lot of the random physical pains of old age are the delayed effects of those childhood injuries we jumped up from and immediately forgot.

    • @[email protected]
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      622 months ago

      Children’s bones are more flexible since they are still growing. So they are able to take a beating more than adults.

      That is why kicking toddlers is fine! /s

    • @[email protected]
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      322 months ago

      A buddy of mine was talking to his doctor not long after he turned 50 and he was complaining about some random pain. The doctor told him “You know all that stupid stuff you did when you were younger? That’s what hurts now.”

      • @Smoogs
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        12 months ago

        I’m dubious if a doctor would say that. That could be dismissing types of arthritis that has nothing to do with injury.

        Additionally some injuries don’t just immediately stop hurting when you are young. They can linger and get more fragile as you’re older.

        The ones that don’t hurt later like stubbing toes, sure. That is realistic. Getting mowed by a car, not so much.that would stick with you.

    • @[email protected]
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      92 months ago

      Partially so, but a lot of adult pain is due to bad posture, and weak muscles from lack of exercise. (Weak muscles don’t directly result in pain, but it does mean that stuff like “looking in the mailbox weird”, or sneezing, or lifting something off the floor can result in stuff going wrong.)

  • @NegativeLookBehind
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    2 months ago

    I sneezed at an angle this morning and fucked my back up. Also, why the fuck does a large portion of my body and weight sit atop a single column of bones precariously cushioned by jelly and rubbery bits? And if said jelly/rubbery bits get squeezed a bit too hard, the bones smash nerves that control my fucking extremities?

    Nature really fucked us.

    • MentalEdge
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      972 months ago

      Ah, see the warranty only covers you until you procreate.

      From that point on, who cares if your body evolved to crumble into dust immediately after?

      In fact kind of a lot of creatures literally die right after creating offspring.

      • @[email protected]
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        532 months ago

        So you’re saying that so long as I don’t have kids I can live as recklessly as I like and claim the damage on warranty?

          • @[email protected]
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            112 months ago

            Not even when you could responsibility have kids. Honestly, it’s all downhill once you’re like 12-14.

            • @confusedbytheBasics
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              82 months ago

              Some really unlucky people peak at 14 but for the vast majority the peak will hit in their early thirties. For those who prioritize sleep, play, and socializing that peak is a plateau until about 50.

      • @[email protected]
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        92 months ago

        I think the warranty stretches a little further. You also need to live long enough to ensure your offspring become moderately self sufficient, but anything above 30 is definitely buyer beware

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Wrong, at least in most primates a social web around the child formed from the parents, kin, and fellows is evolutionary advantageous

    • Boozilla
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      392 months ago

      So many poor “design choices” in human anatomy. (Note, I know there’s no intelligent design).

      The optic nerve. External testicles. Lack of decent fur. The way some nerves and blood vessels are routed make zero sense. An immune system that often wants to kill you. The list goes on. I’m sure a biologist or medical person could add plenty more. Many animals have some of these traits, too. If some trait or process is just barely good enough, nature will chug along with it for millions of years. Nature is all about some redneck engineering.

      • @Carnelian
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        352 months ago

        External* testicles are legit really cool though, they change their distance from your body to regulate temperature

        *they also can and will retract all the way inside your body if it’s cold enough

        • palordrolap
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          152 months ago

          Sloths and elephants don’t seem to have trouble with their internal testes.

          • @[email protected]
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            122 months ago

            Maybe they regulate better. Just ice your balls so they pop inside then just sloth around so you don’t break a sweat and drop your balls

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        Using the same tube for breathing and eating is a classic (I type while choking on my tea)

        • Boozilla
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          112 months ago

          Good catch, I forgot that one! And the other classic is having waste excreting plumbing and reproductive plumbing all bunched together.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      172 months ago

      Anyone who’s routed network cables can tell the spine is rookie work

      • @NegativeLookBehind
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        102 months ago

        I’ve spent a lot of time under false floors, routing cables in overhead trays, and neatly configuring cables in server racks so nothing gets pinched.

        Nature is a fucking amateur.

    • @Whelks_chance
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      122 months ago

      A horrible thought I heard once and can never get out of my mind:

      Our bodies originally had horizontal spines and everything hung down from it. Now we hold our spines vertically, but the internals now all hang wrong.

      No idea if true (seems like it’s simplifying eons of evolution), but it makes me very uncomfortable imagining it.

      • @NegativeLookBehind
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        92 months ago

        Nature: Bro, it’s fine. All the other animals will think you’re smarter if you stand up straight. You’ll look really cool too, all tall and hairless and shit. Chicks love that stuff.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        I also read that the human baby head is getting bigger while human hip bones are shrinking. Eww…

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        It’s not very true. Our bodies work fine for a good long time. It may be the cause of some of the problems we get as we age though

        Incidentally I have heard (no idea whether it was folk stories or science) that kids who don’t crawl (some roll and drag themselves and learn to walk very early) get bad backs young

        Most of the great apes are more or less upright much of the time

    • Troy
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      72 months ago

      Can’t wait for zero-g retirement homes :)

    • NoFuckingWaynado
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      62 months ago

      Used to be horizontal until some weirdo decided they wanted to use front legs to carry their car keys and guns. Imagine doing a wheelie on your motorcycle (not mine!) all the time because you think you can see better that way and don’t like SUVs.

    • @danc4498
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      62 months ago

      I don’t think we were meant to live this long. Science can’t just let us live longer without fixing our shitty bodies.

      • @NegativeLookBehind
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        2 months ago

        Science: Lol fuck you, you’re 62 years old, here’s a Tylenol, go to work. Maybe your overlords will let you rest in 3 years (if you have the money)

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        People since ancient times have lived as long as modern people

        More of us make it to the very old ages than twenty thousand years ago, but even back then those who survived childhood had a good chance of making it to old age

    • IninewCrow
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      52 months ago

      “Intelligent design” … let’s install the main components of the central nervous system that connect to every major and minor part of the body inside the main support structure that carries the entire body.

    • @SpruceBringsteen
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      42 months ago

      I’m not going to link the same Louie clip for the third time this month, but we’re using a clothesline as a flagpole.

    • TheLowestStone
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      22 months ago

      I sneezed on the toilet and tweaked something in my hip. It still hurts sometimes.

    • @ChocoboRocket
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      2 months ago

      The spine seems to be working pretty well for every other vertebrate though 🗿

  • The Giant Korean
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    562 months ago

    I’m 50, and a back injury from my 20s is like “Bonjour my friend, we meet again, ho ho!” It does come back to haunt you.

      • The Giant Korean
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        92 months ago

        I always picture my injuries speaking to me in a French accent.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 months ago

          Mine is always like “Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You fell off a skateboard 20 years ago. Prepare to die.”

        • @[email protected]
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          42 months ago

          Mine always strolls up to me with a playful smile on his tiny goatee, arms stretched wide across a striped black and white jumper, an accordion begins to play, before he nuzzles up close to my ear and whispers: “ich bin immer dabei, du arschlitrötchen”

    • @shalafi
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      122 months ago

      I’m 53 and some of my pains have totally disappeared.

      Neck used to lock if I twisted my head just right while looking in the mirror. Walked around for 3 days at a time like C3PO. Knee blew out. Broke my femur and that hurt on and off for 10-years. None of that now. Weird.

      • The Giant Korean
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        2 months ago

        That’s really awesome!

        I haven’t had issues with my back in years (actually maybe over a decade), but it just came back recently.

    • @Passerby6497
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      82 months ago

      I feel that. I fell on one of my knees on the ice when I was in middle school, and it aches pretty regularly and clicks like a zip drive when I walk.

    • KaRunChiy
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      72 months ago

      As a kid I fell out of a tree flat on my back with the only part not hitting concrete being my head. Still feel that injury come back from time to time

    • @[email protected]
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      Legit thought people where being a bit dramatic with back injuries when I was younger, well a few years back and a couple of herniated discs later coupled with sciatica, and… I now think those people where doing very fucking well tbh! Some insanity next level pain!

  • @DarkCloud
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    462 months ago

    Exercise everyday, then you at least know you are the cause of your pains.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 months ago

      Light weightlifting and stretching really helped me my back pain.

      Do it correctly and consistently. I only go like 2 or 3 times a week. It also helps me sleep better.

      • @[email protected]
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        202 months ago

        “Only” 2 or 3 times a week is 2 or 3 times more than most people. Don’t do yourself an injustice, you’re doing great - carry on.

      • @[email protected]
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        72 months ago

        Yep I’m on a fairly serious routine but not overboard, basically got it down to about 45min sessions 3/4 times a week (every other day kind of), and I feel better than in my 20s!

  • @paddirn
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    342 months ago

    A few weeks ago, I was lying in bed. Literally all I was doing was moving to turn and I pulled a muscle in my leg. Getting old fucking sucks.

    • @kerrypacker
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      22 months ago

      My last major back injury was from hanging washing on a clothes horse.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Just picturing someone clothespining their laundry to a horse’s mane. Don’t correct me please :)

  • @[email protected]
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    242 months ago

    I woke up with horrible neck pain because apparently I did that thing I’ve been doing every day for my entire life, sleeping, wrong.

    • @Nomad
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      82 months ago

      See that’s where you went wrong. You gotta sleep right. Train your subconscious to not… Who am I kidding, I’m in the same boat. I now have an alarm an hour before I need to get up just so I can take some motrin. Gives it enough time to kick in so I can get up with less pain.

  • @apfelwoiSchoppen
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    I simply used my arm to grab something light within my reach and my back buckled. Now I’ve had sciatica for seven weeks. Piriformis syndrome is no fucking joke! Fuck the human body!

    • @Mango
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      32 months ago

      If you insist. 😏

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    72 months ago

    This is my experience exactly. I’m sure the injuries of youth are why I’m so randomly and easily injured in middle age.

    Coincidentally, in my twenties one of my friends was hit by a car going 30 MPH, and he got up, and kept partying the rest of the night. No serious consequences at all.

  • @ilinamorato
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    62 months ago

    It really do be like that. But also, cars are too big and drivers are too selfish.

  • @cm0002
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    52 months ago

    No joke, not only are kids bones more “rubbery” and difficult to break, if they do manage to break it they’re gonna be in a cast for like a couple weeks and that’s it.

    If an adult breaks something that’s gonna be like 3 MONTHS of cast time (minimum) AND most likely some form of stupid physical therapy :/