pigeons are cute // he/it // 🏳️⚧️ // 20+ // LOS CAMP! 4 LYFcatboy but in an "abandoned in a cardboard box in the rain, eating from a dumpster" way
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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I am so close to leaving tumbr since I've already left all other social media behind but then I remember this is the only place I can go to see cool birds and respectfully look at men (two basic needs for this miserable gay nerd who never leaves his room)
#once I get medicated and touch grass and get a boyfriend I'm so outta here (<- wishful thinking)#boyfailure#who am I kidding I don't know how to speak to men#I'm just hoping they'll be endeared by me rambling about nonsense
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thought I was muted and just had this exchange with a coworker on a zoom call
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I changed a bit of that Berdly doodle and like it better now!
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Yaoi Jesus and disciples Kaworu Nagisa and Nagito Komaeda
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AU where berdly's gaming knowledge allows him to instantly recognize what's going on with kris but no one listens cause he's annoying
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(stepping onto someones elses 2 note vent post with my hand raised and my chest puffed out) i Also would like to kill myself
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I think I may never be sad ever again. There is a statue entitled "Farewell to Orpheus" on my college campus. It's been there since 1968, created by a Prof. Frederic Littman that use to work at the university. It sits in the middle of a fountain, and the fountain is often full of litter. I have taken it upon myself to clean the litter out when I see it (the skimmers only come by once a week at max). But because of my style of dress, this means that bystanders see a twenty-something on their hands and knees at the edge of the fountain, sleeves rolled up, trying not to splash dirty water on their slacks while their briefcase and suit coat sit nearby. This is fine, usually. But today was Saturday Market, which means the twenty or so people in the area suddenly became hundreds. So, obviously, somebody stopped to ask what I was doing. "This," I gestured at the statue, "is Eurydice. She was the wife of Orpheus, the greatest storyteller in Greece. And this litter is disrespectful." Then, on a whim, I squinted up at them. "Do you know the story of Orpheus and Eurydice?" "No," they replied, shifting slightly to sit.
"Would you like to?"
"Sure!"
So I told them. I told them the story as I know it- and I've had a bit of practice. Orpheus, child of a wishing star, favorite of the messenger god, who had a hard-working, wonderful wife, Eurydice; his harp that could lull beasts to passivity, coax song from nymphs, and move mountains before him; and the men who, while he dreamed and composed, came to steal Eurydice away. I told of how she ran, and the water splashed up on my clothes. But I didn't care. I told of how the adder in the field bit her heel, and she died. I told of the Underworld- how Orpheus charmed the riverman, pacified Cerberus with a lullaby, and melted the hearts of the wise judges. I laughed as I remarked how lucky he was that it was winter- for Persephone was moved by his song where Hades was not. She convinced Hades to let Orpheus prove he was worthy of taking Eurydice. I tugged my coat back on, and said how Orpheus had to play and sing all the way out of the Underworld, without ever looking back to see if his beloved wife followed. And I told how, when he stopped for breath, he thought he heard her stumble and fall, and turned to help her up- but it was too late. I told the story four times after that, to four different groups, each larger than the last. And I must have cast a glance at the statue, something that said "I'm sorry, I miss you--" because when I finished my second to last retelling, a young boy piped up, perhaps seven or eight, and asked me a question that has made my day, and potentially my life: "Are you Orpheus?" I told the tale of the grieving bard so well, so convincingly, that in the eyes of a child I was telling not a story, but a memory. And while I laughed in the moment, with everyone else, I wept with gratitude and joy when I came home. This is more than I deserve, and I think I may never be sad again.
Here is the aforementioned statue, by the way.
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i’ve some how managed to turn an old gay man on pinterest into a jerma stan by complete accident what is happening




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Fire Punch saved my life.
I made this for trans day of visibility, so... Yes. He is just like me, fr fr!
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