Do you think I could just leave this part blank and it'd be okay? We're just going to replace the whole thing with a header image anyway, right?
You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
i've gotten 2 pairs of headphones
ones that were rated comfterble and studio quality
however my frist pair that was $50 was rlly comfy and broke easy
but both of the new headphones i bought feel like they're pushing into my skull
so does this logic make sense:
headphones -> push into skull
drink lot of milk -> more skull bones -> less push into skull
Offline
"Most of us were taught at a young age that drinking milk builds strong bones, and it's true that getting adequate calcium from foods is beneficial for skeletal health. However, new research linking high milk intake to increased risk of fractures is raising eyebrows this week."
Source, note: 2014
thanks zoey aaaaaaaaaaaand thanks latif for the avatar
Offline
i've gotten 2 pairs of headphones
ones that were rated comfterble and studio quality
however my frist pair that was $50 was rlly comfy and broke easybut both of the new headphones i bought feel like they're pushing into my skull
so does this logic make sense:
headphones -> push into skull
drink lot of milk -> more skull bones -> less push into skull
"Most of us were taught at a young age that drinking milk builds strong bones, and it's true that getting adequate calcium from foods is beneficial for skeletal health. However, new research linking high milk intake to increased risk of fractures is raising eyebrows this week."
Source, note: 2014
To answer your originally proposed question, No, no it does not make sense in the case that you are trying to explain this to a peer or an elder but yet in the case you are talking to an 8 year old kid or younger.
Offline
"Most of us were taught at a young age that drinking milk builds strong bones, and it's true that getting adequate calcium from foods is beneficial for skeletal health. However, new research linking high milk intake to increased risk of fractures is raising eyebrows this week."
Source, note: 2014
I only ever drink milk. It's been at least 3 days since I last drank water from the tap and I only tend to have 1 glass or less per week. I drink at least 3 cups of water per day, often more. I have never broken or fractured a single bone in my body despite being very accident prone. Furthermore, I still have a baby tooth despite being 16 years old which has been wobbly for almost a year and is yet to fall out (and I don't think it will anytime soon). So from my anecdotal experience, milk (calcium) does indeed strengthen bones.
drink lot of milk -> more skull bones -> less push into skull
The answer is no, milk will not give you more skull bones. No matter how much milk and calcium you drink you are stuck with the same amount of bones in your skull. However, drinking milk may make your current skull bones stronger but I doubt that the increased strength will be noticeable when it comes to the pressure you feel on your skin. (Unless of course your skull currently bends inwards due to the pressure of your headphones in which case a difference would be very noticeable and you should problem seek medical attention if that is the case).
Online
You could try repeatedly pulling the headphones apart to reduce the grip strength a bit. Be careful though.
One bot to rule them all, one bot to find them. One bot to bring them all... and with this cliché blind them.
Offline
Hey this is fun
tl;dr: ninja, go ahead and pinch yourself. Done? OK. Now, did your bones help prevent that?
"Most of us were taught at a young age that drinking milk builds strong bones, and it's true that getting adequate calcium from foods is beneficial for skeletal health. However, new research linking high milk intake to increased risk of fractures is raising eyebrows this week."
Source, note: 2014
also: "The authors of the study urged caution when interpreting these findings, and emphasized that more research needs to be done before considering any changes to current dietary recommendations. The researchers also stated that the results may reflect what is known as reverse causation; the women drinking the most milk may have increased their intake because they had been told by their doctors that they had low bone density or a high risk of osteoporosis, and thus were already at an increased risk of having a fracture."
Since the study wasn't designed to be a solid argument concerning milk, you're going to have to argue with or against the stance of "well this is pretty interesting if you hold it up to the light and squint."
To answer your originally proposed question, No, no it does not make sense in the case that you are trying to explain this to a peer or an elder but yet in the case you are talking to an 8 year old kid or younger.
Good point. It'd be pretty peculiar for someone to try this unless they were the latter category you mention
I have never broken or fractured a single bone in my body despite being very accident prone. Furthermore, I still have a baby tooth despite being 16 years old which has been wobbly for almost a year and is yet to fall out (and I don't think it will anytime soon). So from my anecdotal experience, milk (calcium) does indeed strengthen bones.
well your anecdotes slightly make sense. While I can't argue that your "I haven't broken anything" is valid anecdote, I doubt your tooth is relevant. Are you suggesting that if we had all our children drink lots of milk (which is a common idea as you present) they would not lose their deciduous teeth? At some point that doesn't make sense because then we'd have folks never losing their teeth because they drank milk lol
I doubt that the increased strength will be noticeable when it comes to the pressure you feel on your skin. (Unless of course your skull currently bends inwards due to the pressure of your headphones in which case a difference would be very noticeable and you should problem seek medical attention if that is the case).
haha I couldn't have said it better. Though, the brain doesn't have the pain-sensing nerves in there. Yeah, the issue is all superficial pressure on the skin. Or, alternative here is that ninja has an exoskeleton.
You could try repeatedly pulling the headphones apart to reduce the grip strength a bit. Be careful though.
Could we turn this into an engineering experiment? Is it possible to take a piece of metal (a hanger, perhaps?) and brace the headphones with that? I suppose probably not.
Offline
ok well i always have my headphones sitting on a longer-then-usual thing so the headphones are constantly expanding themselves and it never seems to be of any good.
also p.s.: the milk comes from the goats we have on the farm, and we only feed them the most organic and highest nutritious grain and hay ( keep in mind that we're not rich so we don't feed the the ABSOLUTE best, e.g. we don't give our goats two GTX 1080 Tis in SLI because that'd not make sense, a gtx 1080 would suite their needs in computer nerd terms, if anybody could translate that to english.).
would that kind of milk affect anything
Offline
well your anecdotes slightly make sense. While I can't argue that your "I haven't broken anything" is valid anecdote, I doubt your tooth is relevant. Are you suggesting that if we had all our children drink lots of milk (which is a common idea as you present) they would not lose their deciduous teeth? At some point that doesn't make sense because then we'd have folks never losing their teeth because they drank milk lol
No, I was just implying that my excessive calcium consumption may be the cause of my tooth remaining for longer than usual and the lack of damage to my bones despite my frequent accidents due to them being strengthened from said calcium. Also I wasn't aware that it was common to drink lots of milk? I thought that water was the most common drink for most people with milk being an occasional thing.
Online
?oi you finna do it, ?utting on those ?eadphones without drinking ?ILK
have you heard of ?one hurting juice my ?igga, straight out
understandable, have a great ?ay
Offline
?oi you finna do it, ?utting on those ?eadphones without drinking ?ILK
have you heard of ?one hurting juice my ?igga, straight out
understandable, have a great ?ay
http://i.imgur.com/7gtBAgf.png
/r/deepfriedmemes
Offline
Pages: 1
[ Started around 1739306289.8114 - Generated in 0.102 seconds, 12 queries executed - Memory usage: 1.61 MiB (Peak: 1.8 MiB) ]