uihhhm waiter. theres a challenging theme in my soup
this ask polly comment..
fuck yesssss they just gavwe me early access to all of the future grief i could possibly imagine for myself 😍
Everything costs me money and it's not even that good
I’m watching Splash (1984) which is a romcom about a guy who falls in love with a mermaid, and when she chooses a human name she chooses Madison and guy says “that’s not a real name, but alright” which seems to imply that Madison was not a name until at least the 80’s and all girls named Madison are actually named after the mermaid. thought you should know
I think...you might be right
what the fuck
My piece for Eternal Ephemera: A Fine Art Zine for Witch Hat Atelier (@whafineart). My work of choice was a book plate illustration from Harold Nelson (1871—1948) of St. George Slaying the Dragon, with our lovely Tetia!
Once you start thinking about humans as a species in a biome, it affects your entire way of looking at normal things.
The other day I referred to female morning joggers as an 'indicator species' in that if you see women jogging in the dark it means that the environment provides migration pathways (sidewalks, clear signs) and doesn't have any known predators of female morning joggers (guy with knife, bear, BigTruck, male morning joggers).
Though, I think that people consider framing humans as animals reacting to their environment as rude.
does anyone want to hire me to be their evil advisor
i mean normal advisor
I deman you to do it ?
(ashes into the open mouth of your pointless infant child while you arent looking) hmm..? i think it is crying because, it can sense a great darkness beneath the peeling facade of this world
i dont care if mondays rife,tuesday qednesday full of strife, thursday fuck my baka life, its friday im in sucks
love the word seminal. yeah this was super influential on later work, like cum
cum was seminal in its creation in fact
My piece for Eternal Ephemera: A Fine Art Zine for Witch Hat Atelier (@whafineart). My work of choice was a book plate illustration from Harold Nelson (1871—1948) of St. George Slaying the Dragon, with our lovely Tetia!