Sorry I took so long in making this, I liked very much my design, so I'm adding it to the alternative outfits for Lira xP
The second image I tried to make a more gender-neutral version of the clothes I designed, but I think at the end it looks the same, only the body type changed :'3
Original Template made by Eugene in Twitter :3
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So…this is my OC for my dear hatchet man
Her name is Sophie, she super shy like ( komi-san from, Komi can’t communicate). She get easily scare and do not really understand dirty jokes. When she was young her hair was rerally short and peoples things she was a boy, so she don’t wear pants anymore and refuse to wear it even during snowing days. About her familly, for now ( i may change it ) her mom is in a coma for years now and she hate her father. The only one she familly she have was her grandmother. She a little bit more smaller than Stu.
I really hop is not too cring, and sorry for the mistakes but im fighting with my auto-correct who don’t like me try to write english Words.
I will draw her parents one day… if someone care… ^w^”
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tired of cannibalism as a metaphor for love or sex. can we get into cannibalism as a metaphor for colonization.
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There’s that post that’s like ‘everyone should get into a tiny niche fandom at least once’ fully agree, that was really fun -- but I would like to add that everyone should get into a fandom where their opinions run counter to major fanon because it really teaches you about sticking to your guns and trusting your interpretation of the text without having to rely on peer validation
because WHAT are people talking about sometimes
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Grim is showing him the ropes
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Deadly poisonous if consume
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This one reads like a comedy
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How I sleep knowing I always cite my sources:
(First image from the film Drip Dippy Donald (1948); second image from season 4, episode 3 of the Simpsons, “Homer the Heretic” (1992).)
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“When I first heard it, from a dog trainer who knew her behavioral science, it was a stunning moment. I remember where I was standing, what block of Brooklyn’s streets. It was like holding a piece of polished obsidian in the hand, feeling its weight and irreducibility. And its fathomless blackness. Punishment is reinforcing to the punisher. Of course. It fit the science, and it also fit the hidden memories stored in a deeply buried, rusty lockbox inside me. The people who walked down the street arbitrarily compressing their dogs’ tracheas, to which the poor beasts could only submit in uncomprehending misery; the parents who slapped their crying toddlers for the crime of being tired or hungry: These were not aberrantly malevolent villains. They were not doing what they did because they thought it was right, or even because it worked very well. They were simply caught in the same feedback loop in which all behavior is made. Their spasms of delivering small torments relieved their frustration and gave the impression of momentum toward a solution. Most potently, it immediately stopped the behavior. No matter that the effect probably won’t last: the reinforcer—the silence or the cessation of the annoyance—was exquisitely timed. Now. Boy does that feel good.”
— Melissa Holbrook Pierson, The Secret History of Kindness (2015)
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