Finding comfort in darkness and decay mainblog: glitch-whore
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The heat has literally been kicking my ass😭 maybe I am a true vampire
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♱ ͏♱𝅼 🚬 ♱ ͏♱𝅼
slaughter summer🛶🔪happy Friday the 13th
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I lowk wanna try another style of hair but im not sure which to do. I feel like I’ve done just about everything (everything that’s easy to do anyways)
Although I’m thinking about doing another frohawk type thing.
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🪄🦄🧞♀️🧞🧚🏼🧚♂️🧙♀️🪻🌑🔮
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my diy goth bag is finished




- thrifted the faux leather bag
- handmade buttons, kandi braclets, bows, charms, beaded safety pins, n ribbon chains
- added leftover chains, enamel pins, + safety pin stars. cybersigilism butterfly is just a claw clip lol
its loud as fuck but i love her <333
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"The shift from the Afro-Caribbean zombie to the U.S. zombie is clear: in Caribbean folklore, people are scared of becoming zombies, whereas in U.S. narratives people are scared of zombies. This shift is significant because it maps the movement from the zombie as victim (Caribbean) to the zombie as an aggressive and terrifying monster who consumes human flesh (U.S.). In Haitian folklore, for instance, zombies do not physically threaten people; rather, the threat comes from the voduon practice whereby the sorcerer (master) subjugates the individual by robbing the victim of free will, language and cognition. The zombie is enslaved."
— Justin D. Edwards, "Mapping Tropical Gothic in the Americas" in Tropical Gothic in Literature and Culture.
Follow Diary of a Philosopher for more quotes!
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