1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
voysubplots
voysubplots

Tom tries out Voyager's new diagnostic device (which allows doctors to experience patients' sensory input) with B'Elanna. Everything seems normal until Tom sees a new color visible only to Klingons. Soon, the whole crew is begging B’Elanna to let them see the "Klingon Color."

Torres resists on the grounds that she's "just not comfortable letting everyone on the ship feel her senses" but eventually relents and lets Harry try it.


The color was green. Tom is colorblind.

star trek star trek: voyager voyager star trek voyager b’elanna torres tom paris harry kim
seriouslymarythough
daenerys-targaryen

let’s talk about the early stages of hyperfixation where you can literally feel your brain getting doses of serotonin because of a show or a movie or a person or a character and mentally you’re like ‘ooooh no’ but it’s like a blackhole you can’t run or escape from so you just gotta ride it out knowing full well the next few months are going to be spent mindlessly obsessing over this thing

lordofseagulls
whothebuckisfucky

me realizing my experiences with sewing have been a lie this whole goddamn time:

image

Originally posted by yourreactiongifs

fuzipenguin

I don’t know about human surgeons, but that’s a suture pattern I use to close skin all the time and you can see why.

foreverabrokenfighter

The slip stitch (or invisible stitch) was created to hide seams and later used by surgeons.

My cousin is a surgeon and was sewing something and used that stitch and then froze and said “Wait this isn’t a person.”

Grandma said “We used it first keep going.”

duckbunny

remember not to embroider the patient