basically everything goes through the queue first ⋆°🍊⋆ he/it ⋆🍊.⋆ → to my main art blog
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i shouldn't have to Make a dnd campaign i should just Have the whole thing as soon as I get one idea
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“The Egg”, ca. 1901 - Alfred Kubin (Austrian, 1877-1959)
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this is how people on tumblr talk about men they like (x)
#need someone to talk about me like this#by the time this is posted i will have forgotten that i wrote this
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not to like out myself as having whatever problems I have but if Sam Reich gave me an extremely bizarre and detailed list of tasks and one year to not only complete it but complete it better than two other people, I feel like it would really fix my life. clarity of purpose would find me to an extent that it never has before.
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dreamin of bein butterfree ~ available as 12x12 & 18x18 limited edition archival prints
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[Fictional character who is worse than me in every way] save me
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strawberry imps for imp thursday.
strawberry season approaches (for me. where i live)
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Mini drawings🌱 Bonus for purchases over $100 before tax Online store will open tomorrow at 10AM EST Preview Here🌱

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Something I randomly think about a lot is how when very old castles, manors, and large country estates were built, they were built with the expectation of guests. In eras when you rarely travelled over a hundred miles from home, when one did travel guests stayed for long periods of time with friends and relatives. Wealthy people would have guests in their home frequently (virtually all the time, if you were royalty), so huge houses (and staffs) accommodated for multiple guests on long stays. More homes were multi-generational, too.
And now when people live in big houses it’s usually just themselves. Maybe 4-6 in a family, and when the kids get married and move away? Maybe only 1 or two. Guests rarely “sleep over,” and almost never longer than a weekend. I don’t know exactly what caused the cultural shift, but it fascinates me.
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whoever invented beds was a fucking genius im just all cozied up in here like u don't even know how cozy i am
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