I wonder if it would be possible to find an option at an actual university that still aligns with her interests. Thinking more along witchy lines than medical lines, would something like anthropology interest her? There’s specialisms like ethnomedicine which would explore traditional/herbal medicine from a more academic perspective.
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undeadotter@sopuli.xyzto
Cooking @lemmy.world•Frozen Fruit and Vegetables appreciation post
5·9 months agoYes! I’ve really gotten into actually making use of my freezer recently. It’s also great for spices and herbs that you use less frequently.
- Fresh tumeric and ginger: just grate off what you need and pop it back.
- Chillies: freeze whole and cut up and use as needed
- Herbs: how well they freeze depends. Things like sage, thyme, curry leaves freeze really well. Basil and coriander will be very soggy when they defrost but are fine if you’re just using them in a sauce.
undeadotter@sopuli.xyzto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Hey Lemmy! What is your most beloved and hated British slang?
2·9 months agoI love ‘dreich’ (rhymes with ‘greek’) because it perfectly sums up British weather most of the time.
Also a fan of ‘banging’, as in top, class, right good.
This made me think of an article I read today about the Nazi occupation of Rome during WWII:
Marjorie Scaretti, my great-aunt, lived in Rome for much of her life. She was in the Apennines after the armistice talks of July 1943 and returned to Rome on 20 October, two days after the remaining Jews of the Roman ghetto were sent by train to Auschwitz. Her husband, Enrico, was a banker, some of whose property and businesses were appropriated by Mussolini after he refused to join the Fascist Party. Aunt Marjorie kept a diary, and in its pages she writes about the furtive lives Romans led during the occupation: the ceaseless speculation about where the Allies were; whether the Nazis would destroy Rome by defending it from an Allied attack, turning it into another Stalingrad; at which prison or police station someone was being held and how to get them out – many arrests in the months of the occupation were entirely arbitrary.
[…] She wrote of ‘the hair’s-breadth escapes, the adventures, the amazing and often fantastic existence of thousands of fugitives, coupled with the fear, the secret anxiety, the danger and the want, the heroic, the ludicrous and the vile – all packed into the daily life of the harassed citizen’. Josette Bruccoleri, an interviewee in Trevelyan’s book, spoke of the same unease: ‘Everyone seemed to be in possession of some great secret which they did not dare reveal. People hardly spoke to each other and if they did it was only for a moment. I myself felt like a time bomb ready to explode, but like everybody else I did my best to look as innocent as possible.’
Not exactly the same, but every day it feels like there are more and more echoes of the past.
undeadotter@sopuli.xyztoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•Toronto Star using a proper headline for their opinion piece about Trump
6·10 months agoThe actual article, in case anyone’s interested: https://archive.is/qfunJ

You can get bath crayons for kids that let you write directly on the wall of the shower or w/e. Searching brings up lots of options…