Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

ST3

1.2k members • Free

11 contributions to ST3
Hello
Looking forward to what looks like an interesting hour.
0
0
HELP INFORM OUR NEXT FREE INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE COURSE CONTENT!
We are working on informing our next Intimate Partner Violence Training. Can you help us with your input? All replies will be considered. We value all input and hope to receive a variety of answers to help form our training! PLEASE CLICK THE GRAPHIC BELOW SO THAT YOU CAN READ IT IN ITS ENTIRETY. You can comment here, send me a personal DM, or send us an email with your reply to this scenario. We are really trying to work through whether there is ANY Justification of ANY kind to the assault in this scenario that can be warranted. ( Ya'll keep asking us for these scenarios in training so we are looking to you to help us TRY to find these scenarios. I want you to try really hard to warrant this one, but we still want to hear from you if you try and you can't!) You can reach us directly at [email protected] Thank you!
HELP INFORM OUR NEXT FREE INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE COURSE CONTENT!
0 likes • 14d
Linda Shaw 19:52 (5 minutes ago) to ST3 The yelling appears to be mutually consented. She most likely likes the idea of getting a chance to tell someone off. The domination might be a small price to pay for the bitter joy of finally being free to get back at the ghosts of her own past. We understand the imminent escalation will not turn out well without some kind of intervention. First thought is that accountability for the physical altercation should be assigned to the male. There are many reasons but never any justification for any kind of abuse. Consider why she did not call 911 when she was trying to put the fire out herself, in pain and without help. Fear of the male waking, martyrdom. Technically she could also face endangerment charges. One thing is certain: they need to go their separate ways, but will they? Trauma recreates trauma to be acted out repeatedly. Expecting different results this time? Bottom line is that the authorities can initially charge them with minor offenses and some evaluations, particularly the male who was screaming, hitting, and then went back to sleep while a fire burned in the house. Since the police might think a warrant to search for illicit drugs could assist with further charges and opportunities for more mental health explorations, it would also prevent neighbors from being put in danger.
NOTE ON HOW TO GET YOUR COMPLETION CERTIFICATE PLEASE EMAIL [email protected] WHEN YOU COMPLETE A COURSE
Our automation is still being implemented so please email when you complete a course so that we can issue your certificate! PLEASE EMAIL [email protected] WHEN YOU COMPLETE A COURSE Thank you so much! Dr. C
0 likes • Mar 30
I emailed you last week that I finished both 1 credit freebies when you first opened. I did them again and emailed you. Just in case here’s Another Email. I’m in no hurry I’m good til Dec. Thanks Crystal Linda Shaw
2 likes • 21d
Thank you for my certificates
Someone sent this forward to be posted
Sooooo.... what is your take on this? please click it to enlarge the entire graphic.
Someone sent this forward to be posted
0 likes • 23d
Yes I understand that. There are so many layers to go through to get there. There must be a strong sense of self to begin to deal with harm they cause without beating themselves up.
0 likes • 23d
Interesting takes. I have a 3:30 I’ll catch up later. Interesting debate
👉 41 Deaths. One New Drug. Most People Have Never Heard of It
⚠️ NEW DRUG IN EAST TENNESSEE KILLING PEOPLE AND MOST PEOPLE HAVE NEVER EVEN HEARD OF IT ⚠️ I need you to read this. Seriously. There is a new synthetic opioid showing up in East Tennessee that has already been connected to 41 deaths in just a few months across Knox County and surrounding areas. It’s being called “cychlorphine” (N-Propionitrile Chlorphine). And here’s the part that should scare you: 👉 It may be STRONGER than fentanyl 👉 It is NOT approved for human use 👉 It is being mixed into other drugs without people knowing 👉 And most test kits DON’T EVEN DETECT IT Let that sink in. People are not choosing to take this. They think they are taking: • a pill • cocaine • meth • something “safe” or “normal” for them And instead, they are getting hit with something so strong it can shut their breathing down in minutes. This is not the same world anymore. There used to be a level of predictability with street drugs. That is gone. Now it’s: 👉 unknown chemicals 👉 mixed substances 👉 extreme potency 👉 zero warning You cannot see it You cannot smell it You cannot test for it reliably Even people who have used for years are dying. Not because they suddenly used more. Because what they took was not what they thought it was. And before anyone says “this doesn’t apply to me” Read this carefully: This is showing up in non-opioid drugs too. That means people who have never used opioids in their life are overdosing. One bad mix One time One dose That’s all it takes now. Straight truth There has never been a more dangerous time to use street drugs than right now. Not occasionally Not recreationally Not “just once” Right now = highest risk we’ve ever seen. This is real. This is here. And it is killing people who never saw it coming.
👉 41 Deaths. One New Drug. Most People Have Never Heard of It
0 likes • 28d
No panic yet, takes a few before they notice.
0 likes • 25d
@Suzanne Clancy the same as it was in the beginning when we didn’t have any weapons to use against overdose. Have to stay on our toes and chase the new ones and hope there Is a New Weapon. It is rxhaustin
1-10 of 11
Linda Shaw
1
2points to level up
@linda-shaw-2058
Helping where I can

Active 21h ago
Joined Feb 20, 2026
Powered by