(:P)

Fuck your questions.   I am a process, an evolution of observations and deductions, impulses and interactions, life and death, happiness and sorrow, truth and lies, love and loss, belonging and isolation.

This has been a great year. Lots of ups and downs. But it’s near the end of the year and I wanted to thank you all for sticking with me this year on Tumblr. To thank everyone who’s appreciated my art and supported my work, I’ve decided to do a giveaway! Yes! For this giveaway, I will be giving away some of my art prints - and you get to decide which one! Just reblog this post and follow the rules and you’re good to go. I’ll pick a winner on my birthday, January 24th! I will be picking winners randomly through a generator. Will only pick winners when there are more than 600 notes. There will be three winners, two of them will get two large prints. They’ll either be 20 x 30 or 24 x 36 inches. The other winner will get a single 24 x 36 print.

To enter:

  • You must be following this blog and my Portfolio blog.
  • You must have this page on Facebook as a like.
  • You can reblog up to 10 times.
  • Likes don’t count.
  • Sending me a message won’t increase your chances but it’ll be sweet.
  • I will ship worldwide.

I will notify the winners on January 25th, so make sure your ask box is open! You will get to choose which artwork of mine you want as prints. The ones above are just a selection of my work. You can look at more of my work here.

Thank you guys for all the support, again! Happy early new year!

x Jump

(via dontfuckwithmugler)

— 4 months ago with 1930 notes
ishownowisdom:

the-star-stuff:

A new drug that could cure everything from colds to HIV

According to MIT research scientist Todd Rider, we’re closer to such an antiviral than ever before. He’s developed a drug named Draco, which he says has successfully vanquished 15 different viruses in lab trials on mice and human tissue. Those viruses include a quite literal murderer’s row: dengue fever, polio, the swine flu, and the particularly nasty Ebola virus. And, yes, the common cold has also been tested, and Draco was able to get rid of it as well.
So how does Draco work? According to Rider, it combines his backgrounds in engineering and biology, wiring together a pair of proteins. The first protein detects that a virus has entered a cell, which triggers the second protein. In turn, that protein acts as a kill switch, destroying the infected cell to cut off the spread of the virus. That sacrifice represents a grimly practical solution, and so far, it seems to be working.
Either way, even though Rider has already put Draco to work on human tissue, that doesn’t mean we’re ready for human testing. There’s a long road ahead for this drug, which will require tests on multiple rounds of larger animals before it’s ready for human trials. Because viruses and human cells become so closely intertwined during an infection, it can be hard to control for all the side effects of an antiviral.
Draco has some similarities to interferon - they’re both protein-based, which means Draco could also provoke an immune response. According to Rider, there’s been no immune response so far in the mice who have received the drug. That’s good news, but it may not directly correlate to the experience humans would have with the drug.
If Draco or one of the other antivirals works out, it would change the face of global health overnight. The ability to cure minor infections like the common cold could save people from a few days each year of ill health - which across an entire population would add up to a vastly more efficient workforce. And, looking even more broadly, the existence of an all-purpose antiviral would do a lot to reduce the health scares caused by new viral outbreaks, equipping us with a ready-made tool for the next big pandemic.
Via BBC News. Image by Sebastian Kaulitzki, via Shutterstock.


Well done Draco.

ishownowisdom:

the-star-stuff:

A new drug that could cure everything from colds to HIV

According to MIT research scientist Todd Rider, we’re closer to such an antiviral than ever before. He’s developed a drug named Draco, which he says has successfully vanquished 15 different viruses in lab trials on mice and human tissue. Those viruses include a quite literal murderer’s row: dengue fever, polio, the swine flu, and the particularly nasty Ebola virus. And, yes, the common cold has also been tested, and Draco was able to get rid of it as well.

So how does Draco work? According to Rider, it combines his backgrounds in engineering and biology, wiring together a pair of proteins. The first protein detects that a virus has entered a cell, which triggers the second protein. In turn, that protein acts as a kill switch, destroying the infected cell to cut off the spread of the virus. That sacrifice represents a grimly practical solution, and so far, it seems to be working.

Either way, even though Rider has already put Draco to work on human tissue, that doesn’t mean we’re ready for human testing. There’s a long road ahead for this drug, which will require tests on multiple rounds of larger animals before it’s ready for human trials. Because viruses and human cells become so closely intertwined during an infection, it can be hard to control for all the side effects of an antiviral.

Draco has some similarities to interferon - they’re both protein-based, which means Draco could also provoke an immune response. According to Rider, there’s been no immune response so far in the mice who have received the drug. That’s good news, but it may not directly correlate to the experience humans would have with the drug.

If Draco or one of the other antivirals works out, it would change the face of global health overnight. The ability to cure minor infections like the common cold could save people from a few days each year of ill health - which across an entire population would add up to a vastly more efficient workforce. And, looking even more broadly, the existence of an all-purpose antiviral would do a lot to reduce the health scares caused by new viral outbreaks, equipping us with a ready-made tool for the next big pandemic.

Via BBC News. Image by Sebastian Kaulitzki, via Shutterstock.

Well done Draco.

(via rebirthcrusader)

— 4 months ago with 284 notes