DormeDwayne
DormeDwayne t1_jefs56z wrote
Reply to comment by Brandonmac10x in TIL In the West the largest meal of the day has historically been eaten at midday. It was not until Napoleon's empire there was the "abominable habit of dining as late as seven in the evening" as British travelers reported. The British adopted later dinners by 1850 from changes in work schedules. by jamescookenotthatone
Dinner is usually my biggest meal of the day, too, but unlike you I don’t skip lunch, I skip breakfast.
If I may ask, how is your weight and your sleep quality? Does a heavy dinner not make you sleep less well?
DormeDwayne t1_jcjk7nx wrote
Reply to Poor sleep in middle age can have a negative impact on brain health, according to a study by researchers at The Australian National University by chrisdh79
My whole takeaway from this study is that I turn middle age next Thursday and it hurts.
DormeDwayne t1_j8tehtg wrote
Reply to comment by ibbity in Little evidence to support health claims made on formula milk by Dodomando
The thing is a mom who formula-fed her baby is allowed to praise bottle-feeding… but a mother who breastfed isn’t allowed to praise breastfeeding without being accused of shaming any other option. Why is that?
DormeDwayne t1_j8t1gii wrote
Reply to comment by Littlebotweak in Little evidence to support health claims made on formula milk by Dodomando
So basically a mother who breastfed is not allowed to express her view that breastfeeding is best? And a person who has lost weight is not allowed to express the opinion that being normal weight is healthiest? And a happily married parent is not allowed to say out loud that two-parent families are best for kids? Etc etc. Their opinion is automatically prohibited bcs it can only possibly come from a place of smugness and not that they have tried both and find one preferable or whatever? Sounds dangerously censoring…
DormeDwayne t1_j62sua6 wrote
Reply to comment by X-the-Komujin in Boarding school ignored teen’s sickness complaints before she died, ex-staff say by ninjascotsman
Thank you for taking the time to write such a detailed and well-substantiated response. I’ve profitted from it a lot. I am not a total ignorant, I’m a teacher who is teaching and has taught lightly autistic people before (high school atm, middle school and primary school in the past). I am also not American, but rather European and had an autistic classmate in primary and middle school. That was before this diagnosis was available here so nobody knew he was actually autistic until years later, we just knew he was different and had soecial needs the school did its best to accomodate.
It is a topic therefore, which I must and want to understand well from all sides, not just from the point of view of a teacher, but also an ex-classmate, and mother to neurotypical kids who might have an autistic classmate, friend or partner in the future.
Again, thank you very much.
DormeDwayne t1_j62jml9 wrote
Reply to comment by X-the-Komujin in Boarding school ignored teen’s sickness complaints before she died, ex-staff say by ninjascotsman
That sounds horrible.
I’m really interested in your perspective here; how should the education system operate when it comes to special-needs and troubled children on varying ends of the needs continuum? It’s completely obvious that a lot of them function just normally in regular school, but should everyne be included in the same schools? Of not, where is the cut-off line? If some are not enrolled in regular school, what does their school look like? Obviously not like a prison, but what subjects are taught and how, how much stress it put on social aptitude instead etc.
DormeDwayne OP t1_ixmja9q wrote
They also urge their national football teams to push for FIFA restructuring with the goal of tackling corruption, and especially to only allow countries with good human rights records to host world sporting events.
More here:
Submitted by DormeDwayne t3_z3npk0 in worldnews
DormeDwayne t1_jefuqxj wrote
Reply to comment by Brandonmac10x in TIL In the West the largest meal of the day has historically been eaten at midday. It was not until Napoleon's empire there was the "abominable habit of dining as late as seven in the evening" as British travelers reported. The British adopted later dinners by 1850 from changes in work schedules. by jamescookenotthatone
Yeah, that doesn’t sound very healthy, I admit, but whatever workd for you! You’re probably a man, bigger than me, and likely younger, as well, so you probably have much higher caloric needs than I do.