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#but i can't justify spending money on food i don't need... unless?
emmavakarian-theirin 11 months
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will trade drawing for burrito/tiramisu/cobb loaf ingredients 馃憖
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hearth-and-veil 1 year
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Random Opinions on Magical Shit
With magic, the circumstances of one's birth are (virtually) irrelevant and don't affect anything. Nobody is born more or less magical than anybody else. I do believe in one exception: the seventh child of a seventh child. The seventh son of a seventh son is supposed to be a Healer, while the seventh daughter of a seventh daughter is a Seer. I don't believe these things are tied to sex, but I do believe the seventh child of a seventh child has some extra potential in these areas. My mother is the 7th of a 7th and she is the most powerful witch I have ever met. (I'm a little jealous, but she also faces greater challenges than me, so....)
"There are no rules, do what you want" is nothing more than a way to justify cultural appropriation. In my experience, the only way people who approach magic like this have even marginal success is because they do so many things that one of them is bound to work. Additionally, if anything goes, then nothing matters, and you really don't even need to do magic because what's the point?
Similarly, if you take a concept from an established practice/culture/tradition, strip it of its actual meaning and context, then say that it only means what you say it means, you are being hella disrespectful and I wish you a life of stepping on Legos. You're literally saying that the original culture/tradition/practice didn't know what they were talking about in their own practice, that you know better than they do, and that their concepts have no actual meaning aside from what you have assigned to them. Literally go step on a Lego.
Manifestation does work, but you also have to do the work. If you're trying to manifest your dream job, but you aren't networking or applying or anything, it isn't going to happen. How are you going to manifest winning the lottery if you don't buy a ticket? How are you going to manifest good friends if you don't go out and meet people? "All magic comes at a price," is the most accurate thing Disney has ever said about magic. That price, the "sacrifice," is usually work.
King Soon's money mantra is the best there is. Like by a huge margin. I would recommend just chanting his money mantra over virtually any other kind of money spell. It's especially good if you spend a few minutes chanting it with your money bowl.
Blowing cinnamon into your house on the first of the month is overhyped. Cinnamon for money is overhyped, period. The reason cinnamon is associated with wealth is because it's a spice. Spices historically indicate wealth. Cassia cinnamon (which is what's most prevalent around the world, and is what you're buying unless the package specifically says otherwise) is actually super cheap. Ceylon cinnamon is the expensive one. Functionally every other spice would be more effective for a money spell than cassia cinnamon.
The best thing I can recommend for wealth involving spices is buying spices and donating them to a food bank. Giving spices to those who can't afford them will generate far more positive energy than just throwing it onto the ground or in a jar. Buy some salt and pepper and give it to your local food bank, and tell me shit doesn't start looking up for you.
[Specific note for Hellenic Polytheists: Stop leaving food at crossroads or your front door on Hekate's Deipnon. The purpose of doing that was to feed travelers and the less fortunate. It is much more in line with the purpose of the action to donate some money to a food bank. Don't waste food.]
Your money bowl doesn't have to use rice as its base. Any staple crop will function the same way. If your "staple" is oats, use oats. If your "staple" is dried beans, use dried beans.
These things are all just my opinions. If you get your panties in a bunch, please be aware that I don't give a fuck. If it doesn't apply, let it slide.
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bartletforamerica 4 years
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How the Bartlet Administration Reacts to COVID-19
Abbey: is not taking any chances. After losing the fight to get the President to retreat to the farm or Camp David, she gets him to agree to limit himself to the oval office and the residence, with as few in person meetings as possible. Even before they鈥檝e pulled together a White House task force, she鈥檚 made sure that everything is being disinfected and that her entire schedule is either canceled or made virtual. Her staff is the first to be working from home (and oh boy does she scold if she finds out any of them did something she thinks is foolish), with most of the rest of the White House staff following shortly after. She makes it her mission to do PSAs on what people should be doing and even does a virtual Sesame Street collaboration to teach kids how to wash their hands.
Zoey: Is not super pleased to be stuck in the Residence 24/7. She鈥檚 doing classes from her bedroom, so yay to not having to get out of bed early, but she can tell people are super disappointed that her camera is set up so that she has only a blank wall behind her [it turns out the secret service is very touchy about where you take video calls]. She also gets officially hired and given a security clearance for the sole fact that she鈥檚 one of the only people allowed to be near her dad who is tech-literate. She ends up doing some of her reading on the couch in his office so that she's on hand for when he's supposed to be skyping with the senior staff and can't figure out what link to click. She spends a lot of time worrying about Ellie, who helping do research about the virus, and texting her friends.
The President: is not happy to be closed up away from people. He also thinks that Abbey is overreacting where he's concerned. He misses actually getting to be around the younger staff. He and Zoey do a cooking from home video at C.J.'s suggestion, so that the country can see he's alive and to encourage people to not go out. They make chili and fight over whether it needs more cumin or oregano while Abbey records it and pipes in from behind the camera. The country is treated to a history of chili and a diplomatic incident nearly happens because apparently Mexicans deny having any association with it, even though most food historians say it has Mexican roots. The flaming debate doesn't stop a second episode at Thanksgiving where the country is treated to the history of the yam and all the secret spices that go into the President's stuffing. A large portion of the country gives him flack for putting Oysters in his stuffing. [In a small bedroom in an Illinois apartment a woman finally figures out why Joe Bethersonsen sounded so familiar.]
Leo: moved into the Residence because there was no way he was going to talk the President off ledges via skype for however long this lasted. He can only do so much. Zoey helps him learn to use Skype and he finds himself missing Margaret desperately even when he spends most of the day with a computer dedicated to having her on Skype so he can turn to it and ask her questions. She insists he get exercise and eat healthy (something he thinks she鈥檚 collaborating with the first lady on behind his back鈥攖hey say very similar things much of the time). He skypes with Mallory on Sunday mornings over breakfast in his room and they pretend they鈥檙e at a hotel having a fancy brunch.
Charlie: is not particularly happy. He got sent home with everyone else because he鈥檚 not particularly necessary to have on hand if the president isn鈥檛 going anywhere. He鈥檚 still getting paid and he does do some work (the most important bit being hanging out on the phone with the president so he can ramble about history so Zoey can get her own reading done, Leo can browbeat the staff, and the first lady can do her own job) but he鈥檚 been ordered by the president and first lady to focus on getting extra school done while he can.
Donna: started freaking out the first day there was a rumor of a new disease in China. Then the White House shut down and even senior staff got sent home unless they absolutely needed to be in the building (basically just C.J. and some of her staff). And her roommate (not the one she'd really liked, who had a cat, but one she hopes is only temporary) works for a GOP congressman who thinks the whole thing is a hoax and bans masks in his office, so Donna is not at all happy and spends time she should be working cleaning things her roommate touches and that's sixty percent of how she ends up living with Josh.
Josh: is struggling with not being allowed to leave the house on pain of the first lady taking him to task (something about his lungs and the bullet). Even when he was putting his nose to the grindstone to make it through college and law school, he liked being around people while he studied, so he was usually in the library or a cafe rather than his room. He works best when he can bounce ideas off people and take in new ideas. When he was grounded after surgery it absolutely sucked and that was why he drove everyone crazy calling them all the time. Yeah he was bored, but he was also lonely. Plus he's not the best with technology. He very nearly went on national tv with his boxers showing, if not for Donna skyping him beforehand and making sure he fixed the camera. Between needing not to be alone and needing his assistant to be able to actually help him, the invite for Donna to stay with him slips out when she's complaining about her roommate. She shows up two hours later with two suitcases of clothes and two suitcases with pasta, toilet paper, and flour.
Donna and Josh: are handling the pandemic much better now that they're together. Josh can bounce ideas off Donna without it tying up his phone line. And she can listen in on his calls to the various members of congress about the stimulus package that they're working on. It's an even better look at Josh's job than she had before, and while it makes some of her work harder to focus on, she feels like she understands some things better than she ever has before. Josh even starts listening to her about how to sway certain congressmembers to their side. When they're not working, Donna forces Josh to cook with her so they're not entirely subsisting on delivery. They tried making bread and managed to spill half a bag of flour on the floor in the process but they ate all of it, even though it tasted pretty bland. Josh finally got Donna into baseball when it came back. Toby spit out his beer when he was on speakerphone with them and he heard Donna accurately yelling at the Mets for screwing up. Donna wears Josh's clothes more than her own, since she doesn't have to be on camera most of the time. They're platonically sharing a bed because they haven't found a convertible sofa for his living room that they like, they say, and it doesn't make sense for one of them to sleep on the couch, which they say has a spring that makes it uncomfortable to sleep on, even though Donna lounges on it all day with no problem. They are absolutely not dating and so they tell all their friends.
C.J.: spends five minutes laughing every time she gets off the phone with Josh or Donna. She loves her friends but god they're so completely in denial. It does, however, give her a much needed break. Her job has always involved a lot of people and knowing what venue to meet them in to ensure that she gets or passes on the information she needs. COVID protocols mean no more one-on-one meetings with journalists in her office, no more gaggles following her through the halls. The press corps were not happy when they moved all briefings outside and insisted on face masks and shields in addition to everyone sitting six feet apart. She gets asked about the president's health at least once a day and they start doing weekly waving from the balconies just so the press corps can get footage of him, healthy and shouting down to Danny and some of the others. Someone makes a cartoon of the president in the tower, with Abbey as his dragon keeper and though no one is willing to justify a cartoon with a comment, privately C.J. thinks it's accurate. She's always admired Abbey's fierce protectiveness of her family, even when she doesn't agree with every way it expresses itself or when it interferes with C.J.'s job. She has to come up with new ways to push the White House agenda (keep the economy afloat, stay home, no, don't listen to the GOP governors or those running for the primary, those ideas are not good, go the fuck home and stop having parties) and while some work, others bomb. It would help if everyone would stay on message and not screw up.
Sam: would like to make it clear that he did not know how many people would be at that gathering. He thought he was going for an outdoor meal with just a few old friends who could help raise money for the democratic party, not a fifty-person birthday party. The media fallout nearly gets him fired. Instead he gets yelled at by C.J., then by the First Lady. Mallory even sends him a card about how stupid he was. He's pretty sure that having Donna around is the only reason that Josh hasn't made the same mistake by now. It had to have been a toss up as to which of the two of them would screw up. Sam just isn't lucky enough to have a Donna (Sam is very happy that Josh has a Donna, Sam just wants Josh to realize that he talks about Donna the same way most men talk about their wives, because it's really hard not to respond to "why do I put up with finding her hair clogging the shower drain" with "because you love her and can't live without her, stupid"). He instead has adopted a cat for company. It tries to scratch him every time he tries to pet it. Sam spends his days trying to find a way to say "fuck the economy until we've beaten the virus" in a way that is palatable to the American people while trying to remind Toby that they can't actually say that outright. This is not an easy task.
Toby: would like to tell most of the American public to shut up, stay indoors for two months, pretty much nobody excepted, and if you don't, then you get tossed out to sea. He's come within an inch of telling anti-mask people they deserve to get sick on the record and is strongly advocating that the federal government figure out a way to mandate that every person in the country, minus those with legitimate medical exceptions, get the vaccine as soon as possible. He is also about to get evicted because it turns out his neighbors do not appreciate having rubber balls bounced against the walls for hours on end. Apparently, the thud is rather annoying. He worries about everyone, though this is delivered brusquely. Out of everyone he's taking the new work from home situation the best. No one can pop in to distract him, or comment on his eating habits. And if he doesn't want to talk to someone, he can always turn his phone to silent and pretend not to have seen they called. He's not pleased the Yankees lost to the Rays (necessitating rooting for either the Dodgers or the Rays, one of which beat his team and the other which betrayed New York), but he can at least take solace in the fact that the Mets didn't even make the playoffs.
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