Injected as usual in vastus laterals right side on the leg and everything went smooth til i was gonna pull the needle out and i saw blood come in. This was after i was done injecting.
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Injected as usual in vastus laterals right side on the leg and everything went smooth til i was gonna pull the needle out and i saw blood come in. This was after i was done injecting.
you are fine the pin just sucked up a little blood as you where pulling out you may have nicked a vein or if you inject in the same place all the time there may be scar tissue that tends to be bloody when you pull a pin out because there is more blood in the scar tissue then there would be in a new injection spot imho...now you just relax as I'm sure the compound is now in depo in your muscle...
Wipe the blood off your leg.
Thought you werent going to cycle after the first pin shenanigans?
Oh boy....
Your going to die... just kidding no big deal. Like the other guy said wipe it off.
Aspirate BEFORE you pin dude!
You know this!
I’ve injected smallish amounts into veins before (I started too young and didn’t even know about aspirating then), and I can tell you; it is noticeable when it happens.
Instant woozy drunkish for a couple of minutes. And you taste it in your mouth.
Not to mention it can be dangerous.
What you need to do now is to walk five times around the dining room table, with a Bible, chanting “Domine Requim” five times and smacking the Bible on your forehead. That cures it!
But remember, it only works if you smack it very hard!
That’s right your Scottish, remember it now. Cool, I’m about to look little more into the Scottish revolutionary wars and their use of the pike.
This in turn influenced the English.
Henry V at Agincourt had learned how effectively you could stop cavalry with pikes.
Place longbowmen protected with spear and pikemen plus fortified positions and cavalry can’t charge head on anymore. The French hadn’t really picked up on this, and at Agincourt they were forced through a bottleneck when advancing, through a field that became a swamp.
Their knights stuck in the swamp, horses getting shot by the longbowmen, some arrow piercing armor or finding a weak spot now and then to cause more frustration. And eventually the bowmen draw their swords and bucklers and advance on the tired French knights stuck in the mud with their horses shot or fleeing.
Anyways, too bad Braveheart was so totally inaccurate as to how it portrays the battles (and really, it’s historically inaccurate in more ways it is accurate), but that’s the price of getting interested in such things.