Author Topic: My sister broke both of her arms.  (Read 2471 times)

I'm sorry

at least young kids are suposed to heal better right

I'm sorry

at least young kids are suposed to heal better right
uh no
if a young child breaks a bone and it doesnt reform properly, they will be stuck like that for the rest of their lives unless they break the same bone again in the same spot




uh no
if a young child breaks a bone and it doesnt reform properly, they will be stuck like that for the rest of their lives unless they break the same bone again in the same spot
I always thought younger = more rubbery bones = less breakable = easier to heal.

why am I laughing at this?

I always thought younger = more rubbery bones = less breakable = easier to heal.
I tried this theory out on a kid in the street, turns out their limbs aren't any bendier than ours.

why am I laughing at this?


I tried this theory out on a kid in the street, turns out their limbs aren't any bendier than ours.




oh

that's why
« Last Edit: October 09, 2012, 01:00:12 PM by Cookiez664 »

and then you have the added difficulty or (god forbid) inability to use said arms.
yeah just a flesh wound!
you're an idiot. Gun shot wounds are serious. A shot to the shoulder can forget your arm up forever. I forget the precentage but it was pretty damn high. They aren't simple flesh wounds.

and then you have the added difficulty or (god forbid) inability to use said arms.
yeah just a flesh wound!



uh no
if a young child breaks a bone and it doesnt reform properly, they will be stuck like that for the rest of their lives unless they break the same bone again in the same spot
You can get therepy so it heals right.

uh no
if a young child breaks a bone and it doesnt reform properly, they will be stuck like that for the rest of their lives unless they break the same bone again in the same spot

uh yea I still am pretty sure I'm right

younger kids bones are still growing = heals quicker and stronger