styofa doing anything

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Sade Olutola
h
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
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sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin

Andulka
d e v o n

Product Placement
YOU ARE THE REASON

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@aestheticallyafangirl
write your fanfiction before the hyperfixation’s gone
My Hogwarts Legacy character Urina Malick and Hogwarts screenshots 🫣🤭
A dream of the fields
study
Insomnia, Casey Childs
I just realized that Ramses calls Moses a "Snake Charmer" in The Prince of Egypt when he turns his staff into a snake. There’s more to this than I initially recognized; it serves as foreshadowing. When they bring Zipporah to Ramses, referring to her as a “Desert Flower,” he calls her a “Desert Cobra” because she tried to bite him. Moses then responds, “You aren't much of a snake charmer.”
So, when Moses later brings his wife, Zipporah, with him and performs God's miracle by turning his staff into a cobra, Ramses isn’t just calling him a "Snake Charmer" because of the staff. He’s also acknowledging that Moses won over Zipporah and married her.
 Furthermore I've always wondered why Ramses never prosecuted Moses. Moses was doing things that went beyond Egyptian understanding—things considered wrong, breaking laws, and crimes against the gods. Yet, Ramses, the Pharaoh, seemingly took no action. The movie portrays this as brotherly love, but if you pay attention during the scene where Moses arrives at the Pharaoh's throne room, the high priest mentions the crime Moses committed against the gods—killing a man. Ramses responds that he is the Pharaoh “the morning and the evening star” and then pardons Moses for all current and future crimes against the gods. This means Moses was forgiven for everything he did against Egypt, which explains why no measures were taken to stop him until Ramses finally pursues the Israelites at the very end.
When the author of a fanfic recommends a song for the chapter and its buns
18+ mdni
that reality check hitting after reading smut
Opposite
Embedded In The Walls
— Aldous Huxley, from “Brave New World.”
shoutout to slow learners. shoutout to people who take a very long time to parse and grasp new concepts. shoutout to people who struggle to follow directions. shoutout to people who can't perform a task just after watching someone else do it. shoutout to everyone who needs learning aids, needs to take notes, needs to try multiple times, and needs to be told the explanation repeatedly.
you're not dumb. you're not lesser. you're not doing it on purpose. everyone learns at their own pace, and people forcing you to learn faster than you can are the ones causing a disruption in your ability to learn. it's not your fault.
Every day I wake up and I'm still not a vampire living in an old gothic castle.