#my man is so gorgeous
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existenceisaconcept Ā· 5 days ago
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You have my soul, @girlsflovtboyscry
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uhtredswordofuhtred Ā· 1 year ago
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my husband is alive and is so so fine! ā™”
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kelin-is-writing Ā· 1 month ago
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WORLD STOPā€”!!! EVERYONE!!! WE GOT NEW BLACK HAIR DABI CONTENT!!! MISSED HIM SO MUCH PLEASE šŸ˜­šŸ–¤
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mawguai Ā· 5 months ago
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Returning color to my world
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seokjinite Ā· 6 months ago
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SEOKJIN + looks i'm not normal about (cr. 0613data, apple tape)
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cheekylittlepupp Ā· 8 months ago
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The chokehold he still has on me is vile.
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melljam Ā· 2 months ago
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for the gitae fans <3
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blabberoo Ā· 5 months ago
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āœØSlaying in wedding outfits āœØ
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odoraful Ā· 5 months ago
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details in snowy serenity | zayne ā„ļø
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lethologicaee Ā· 1 year ago
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michal mrazik as jason todd is my new religion
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kelin-is-writing Ā· 5 months ago
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In love with him all over again šŸ„°
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canisalbus Ā· 2 months ago
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My auntie keeps Golden Guernsey goats on our island, like many of our local unique breeds of livestock they nearly went extinct in the starving during ww2 occupation surviving by only one smuggled flock. They're super friendly and energetic and their colouration might be of interest :eyes:
Oh OH these are very pretty
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riricitaa Ā· 12 days ago
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dash cleanse āœØ
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cheekylittlepupp Ā· 10 months ago
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I'm never getting over him..
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my-darling-boy Ā· 6 months ago
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(TW injury description)
I am SO glad you asked I lose my mind over this man. Sidney Beldam! Heā€™s most known for his miraculous recovery from a major facial injury sustained while he served as a young sergeant in the First World War. If youā€™ve read the Facemaker by Lindsay Fitzharris you might recognise him! Sources differ slightly about his story, so Iā€™ve pieced it together as best I could. The photos below were from about February 1919!
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Born in 1897, Sidney was about 17 living with his mother in Cambridge, England when the Great War commenced. While he didnā€™t enlist initially, he was soon conscripted when it came about in 1916 though thankfully he was in a non-combatant role driving lorries transporting soldiers to boats headed for France. Itā€™s where he learned he enjoyed driving! However in April 1917, Sidney was transferred to the Machine Gun Corps and eventually rose to the rank of sergeant where only 7 months later, his life would change forever.
During the battle of Passchendaele, one of the muddiest most gruelling segments of the war, Sidney was on the frontlines when a shell burst, sending a shrapnel fragment tearing diagonally through his nose and the right side of his face. The young soldier collapsed face first into the mud which ended up saving his life as falling backwards would have caused him to choke on his own blood. For three days Sidney laid in a mangled heap floating in and out of consciousness while vermin scurried about his body and the other dead and wounded around him. No one would ever know the details of those agonising three days, but the trauma he experienced there left him with a lifelong phobia of rats and cockroaches. After the initial wounded had been cleared out, a wandering band of stretcher bearers discovered Sidney alive after one man touched him with his boot fully expecting him to be dead. Miraculously, he was still clinging to life.
The 19 year old sergeant was rushed down the line and then transferred to two different military hospitals where his wounds were hastily stitched in an effort to save his life before infection could spread. Unfortunately, closing the gap where he was missing flesh in his cheek caused his upper lip to be pulled into a sneer and a sunken depression formed where most of his nose was missing around the bridge. Still, he was lucky to be alive, which he later used to remark. Well he was luckier still as he would be transferred to Sidcup military hospital in Kent where he would become a patient under Sir Harold Gillies, the man often considered the pioneer of modern plastic surgery. When he arrived at hospital in 1918, his wounds were healed but his face still bore the heavy trauma of his experience. If you want to see his photographs upon arrival, I wonā€™t post them here but if you search his name, the photos are everywhere. IMO theyā€™re not graphic but I know it can upset some people.
Gillies went to work trying to restore Sidneyā€™s face. This required him to reopen the wound in his cheek where a skin flap was grafted to allow his upper lip to return to normal. He also folded down a skin flap from his forehead in order to create a new nose. Behind his facade, a series of tubes and canals had to be inserted for proper sinus drainage and other unnamed functions. While his initial handful of surgeries did most of the work to reconstruct his face, Sidney underwent over 40 surgeries between 1918 and the 1930s, some reconstructive and some to evacuate the tubes behind the flesh, meaning the common cold was a routinely painful affliction for him. Gillies understood operations were traumatic for the men at Sidcup, especially since most required more than one, and so made a point about creating a lighthearted ward environment, one Sidney says was quite jolly with the staff doing everything they could to make them feel comfortable and dignified as possible. And while I thought the topmost photos were the most updated case study photos for his recovery, I stumbled upon another set from 1920 in the Faces of War by Andrew Bamji I have not seen posted anywhere!
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And lads listen. In such a sweet little twist, while Sidney was still recovering from the bulk of his major surgeries, a local pianist by the name of Winifred volunteered to play for the resting servicemen, all of whom had some form of disfigurment or amputation. Carrying in her sheet music, she and Sidney laid eyes on each other for the first time and she later remarked how his smile instantly lit up the whole room! For them, it was love at first sight. The two were soon married, and although it was in the 1920s, I donā€™t have an exact year for this. This most likely came after Sidney was finally discharged from service in 1921. There is a photo of their wedding and yā€™all look how SWEET!!
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Between his initial surgeries and army discharge, Gillies asked if Sidney would be his personal chauffeur, an offer he took up quickly as he loved driving from his time with lorries during the war. One somewhat humorous account tells of Gilliesā€”who was a bit scattered at timesā€”asking Sidney to renew his driverā€™s license as the surgeon left it until the last day to take care of; Sidney in a rush waited in a long line at the county hall before jumping the queue and begging the administrator to expedite his employerā€™s license as it was needed to drive him to the hospital the next day. The man refused, even for a surgeon to get him to his patients. Sidney went to another staff member who was friends with Gillies and begged him the same. The man cheerily agreed but was still in need of a signature from the stubborn administrator who again refused... at least until he found out Harold Gillies nearly won a golfing championship, at which point he took Sidney to his personal office to expedite the license as he was happy to do business for a skilled golfer (apparently saving peopleā€™s lives doesnā€™t matter as much??). A no doubt perplexed Sidney was finally able to get back to the hospital on time!
After his army discharge and most likely about the time of his marriage, Sidney moved back to Cambridge where he worked for the council as a rent collector. He was so well liked, apparently even from the people he collected from, that he soon worked his way to Housing Manager for Cambridge. About this time, he had a daughter, Pam. Every account I read of him, people gush about how sweet he was. His wife recalls how Sidney was always adored by all his family and friends. His granddaughter Marilyn McInnes in an interview said, ā€œHe was the most warm and optimistic and loving man. I adored my grandfather, I was constantly on his lap as a small child. I never noticed anything funny about his face, I guess I thought all grandads looked like mine.ā€
Sadly, Sidney Beldam passed away from cancer at about 80 years old in 1978. But considering the man was given 6 months to live and ended up living for 60 years more surrounded by a large and loving family, Iā€™d say he certainly had a full life. There is a picture of him and his wife in the 60s and they are absolutely charming!!
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But anyway thatā€™s me done rambling Iā€™ve a massive crush on him. His story makes me genuinely happy to tell and Iā€™m so glad you asked!
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fighting-naturalist Ā· 7 months ago
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the Iconic Face Journeysā„¢ of "Full Circle"
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