Hiiiii, call me Azzy! Fae/Faer, Crow/Crowself, Eye/Eyes, Spider/Spiderself, Clown/Clowns, Ghost/Ghosts, Vamp/Vamps, Lie/Lies/Lieself, Click/Clack/Clickself, Star/Stars, Ink/Inkself, Silly/Sillies, It/Its, They/Them 19 yo, i just rb random things
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text

this is why you look up your destination before going btw
58 notes
·
View notes
Text
Its alive…ITS ALIVE !

Referenced from this Frankenstein illustration from 1983 by Bernie Wrightson
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
you may notice i use the phrase "my beloved" frequently. this is because i am in love with the world and everything in it. hope this clears things up <3
275K notes
·
View notes
Text
Reblog to give a trans person a fresh and perfectly ripe mango wait huh
It's the wikipedia image??? How big could it be
What
Huh???
120K notes
·
View notes
Text
actually as long as we're talking about realistic expectations of ageing, the nature of social media decontextualising people's personal posts has absolutely given some of you guys a false and potentially dangerous view of how your body is expected to change over time. I semi frequently see people sharing or repackaging commentary on experiences with disability as if it's an inevitable part of getting older. and like, yes, as you get older you are likely to develop new conditions, injuries or disabilities, but you need to understand your body's baseline well enough to identify those changes and interrogate them.
e.g. if you are seriously having such bad joint or back pain in your 30s that it hampers your day to day activities, you need to take that seriously. that is not 'just ageing', that's potentially an indicator of an underlying condition, unaddressed injury (which is quite common but will get worse if you don't notice and take care of it) or daily habits (poor posture, poor diet, sedentary lifestyle) causing cumulative damage to your body.
I know plenty of 30+ and 40+ year olds who are not especially athletic but who can still climb up and down stairs with ease, sit on the floor and get up again without discomfort, have floor or shower sex, ride a bike, wrestle a dog or a kid, climb a tree, maybe even do a handstand. there is no shame at all in developing pain or mobility issues which limit the kinds of things you can do comfortably, but it doesn't serve anyone to pretend that those changes are bound up with reaching a certain age. even in your 60s and 70s and beyond you should notice if you start feeling a new kind of pain or physical limitation. don't dismiss this shit just because someone told you "yeah that happens when you pass 30"
11K notes
·
View notes
Text
it is 2015. phineas and ferb, the amazing world of gumball, and steven universe are on the air. you are currently playing undertale
it is 2025. phineas and ferb, the amazing world of gumball and steven universe are back on the air. you are currently playing undertale

20K notes
·
View notes
Note
I saw that you said you didn't have any final destination blinkies and oh boy you're never gonna guess what I had sitting in my drafts
I made them a while ago and forgot to post them so here ya go you can have em
Omg yay!! If only I could tag the anon that asked for them before. Gang look, final destination blinkies!! Hope they see this lol, tysm!!
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
Victor Frankenstein syndrome aka you spent nights over nights crying and bleeding over this work and now that it's finally done you're just like "nvm. it's trash" and go to bed
72K notes
·
View notes
Text
SOOOOO funny when you’re having a strong emotion and your logical brain KNOWS you’re overreacting but you literally can’t do anything about it.
42K notes
·
View notes
Text
do not forget the patron saint of these weeks that we celebrate ourselves proudly and openly in the streets

her name was Marsha P Johnson, and we have her to thank for so much.
remember, the first Pride was a riot, and she was one of the brave souls who endured it to help carve the path which so many of us walk today. she helped found several activist groups regarding LGBT safety and wellbeing. and she was absolutely radiant, too.
thank you, Marsha. we remember you.
206K notes
·
View notes