Any uniform arrangement of small holes or spaces induces revulsion in me, accompanied with a slight “flight” response.
I see they removed the "fight" portion of "fight or flight", any bets if that's because the author is just aware they can't fight their way out of a paper bag, or because they think fighting back is a disgusting, outdated, patriarchal response to dealing with threats so they're erasing it from the language?
I see they removed the "fight" portion of "fight or flight", any bets if that's because the author is just aware they can't fight their way out of a paper bag, or because they think fighting back is a disgusting, outdated, patriarchal response to dealing with threats so they're erasing it from the language?