My blog about everything and nothing. Occassionally NSFW🍋🍋🟩 (I'm an adult made in the 90s). Also my drawings💛
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RICK AND MORTY 4.10 - Star Mort Rickturn of the Jerri
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Ow, what the hell?

Source
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New commission reveal! 😺📚
Something a little different from my usual work, created for a local second-hand bookstore owner. Their cat, Plato, is the shop’s mascot and a true “bookworm”; he’s often seen napping among the boxes and shelves. I wanted to pay tribute to him by turning him into an intellectual cat!
If you’re interested in a custom commission like this (yes, I draw pets as characters too), I still have 2 slots available! Send me a DM for more info.
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St. Wilgefortis: Supposedly in the middle ages, images of Jesus on the cross, wearing robes instead of a loincloth, were misinterpreted as being a bearded woman. A legend thus developed that a young woman named Wilgefortis was being forced into marriage, and when she prayed to be rescued from the predicament, she spontaneously grew a beard. Her fiancé no longer wanted to marry her, and her father was so furious he crucified Wilgefortis. She was revered as the patron saint of women trapped in abusive relationships.
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Although Joe tolerates Millie's husband, he still finds his disguise game pretty weak. So he's showing Moxxie how to pull it off like a pro.
Tryna keep to weekly themes for these Hella Dumb stickers so the stickers aren't *too* random. This week was obviously Millie's family, but next week, we're tackling the next famous family group: the Goetias! See you guys on Monday for that!
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by 子夜
art republished with artist’s permission
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“Beauty” (from the Beauty & the Beast fairytale), pen
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Rainbow Guadalupe collage- prints on society6
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Queen of Heaven, Empress of Hell 🥀
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Medieval devotional sources saw a direct connection between Mary’s roles as Queen of Heaven and Empress of Hell, ascribing to her the power to influence both the highest heights and lowest depths of the afterlife. John Mirk’s fourteenth-century Festial, a collection of Middle English sermons, includes a passage where Mary herself described her double roles as she sought to save a Christian possessed by the devil: “I am God’s mother, and I pray that my son gets this soul a place in heaven. I am also empress of hell, and have power over all you enemies."... Her influence is so great that even those in hell are not beyond her protection, and she descends into the underworld to tangle with the devil. In these fights, Mary does not simply condemn the devil with her words, but issues physical punishments that reinforce her authority... Equally fascinating are the times when she engages him in skillful debate... [In these cases,] Mary does not use trickery or brute force, but is able to free the woman’s soul from the devil’s clutches by out-arguing him. The devil, notably, does not dismiss her as inept or out of her sphere, but instead views her as a powerful adversary.
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Mater Dolorosa
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