astarion is cheating
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

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Cosmic Funnies
Cosimo Galluzzi

JBB: An Artblog!

titsay
Acquired Stardust
todays bird
đŞź

â
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Not today Justin

Product Placement
RMH

pixel skylines
cherry valley forever
Jules of Nature
$LAYYYTER
styofa doing anything
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@barbibs
astarion is cheating
challengers 129 ac
Bell's Hells as Major Arcana.
rest in peace, king.
Sometimes I look at you and I canât understand how someone before me didnât notice a whole beautiful universe hidden within you ~ insp
The Originals - alternate ending: âThe Missing Arcâ
The same finale, but with one last twist that changes everything.
big mood
All the cute nicknames Victor Frankenstein called his son throughout the book:
catastropheÂ
miserable monster
demoniacal corpse to which I have so miserably given life
an ugly mummy
a thing such as even Dante could not have conceived,
the filthy daemon to whom I have given life
no human
the wretch whom I had created
sight tremendous and abhorred
unearthly ugly being
too horrible for human eyes
miserable head
vile insect
abhorred monster
wretched devil
you, whose joint wickedness might desolate the world
too horrible for human eyes to behold
the filthy mass that moved and talked
wretch whom I dreaded
villain
monster of my creation
fiend
figure most hideous and abhorred
+ bonus - all the cute ways captain Robert Walton described Victorâs son on 1 page:
a form which I cannot find words to describe
never did I behold a vision so horrible as his face, of such loathsome, yet appalling hideousness
tremendous being
scary and unearthly in his ugliness
Tag yourself Iâm âthe filthy mass that moved and talkedâÂ
3- W.I.T.C.H. Womenâs International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell.
3- W.I.T.C.H. Womenâs International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell.
âIf you are a woman and dare to look within yourself, you are a witch.â
In New York City on Halloween of 1968, an offshoot of the New York Radical Women group founded W.I.T.C.H. At the time, there was a division in the womenâs liberation movement between those who felt that womenâs liberation should be achieved through fighting only the patriarchy, and those who saw liberation couched firmly alongside of other social justice causes. A group of the latter who felt that increasing the scope of activism to include fighting for all forms of civil rights, anti-war causes, and anti-capitalist movements went on to create W.I.T.C.H.
While originally an acronym for Womenâs International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell, various local groups altered the acronym to suit the specific needs or causes they were fighting for (Women Indentured to Travelerâs Corporate Hell, Women Inspired to Tell their Collective History, Women Interested in Toppling Consumer Holidays, etc.). W.I.T.C.H. adopted guerrilla theatrical tactics, most notably dressing up in full witch attire to grab attention and raise awareness for their various causes. By taking directly to the streets in a loud and captivating way, W.I.T.C.H. hoped to bring the fight for justice to the doorsteps of the patriarchy.
The group was highly controversial in its time, even amongst other subgroups within feminism. Many criticized their shock and awe tactics, and took issue with them having a kind of purity gauge for total liberation. W.I.T.C.H. groups were quickly established across the country, and made various public protests to raise awareness for a spectrum of causes. The first protest by W.I.T.C.H. was a march down Wall Street to curse the financial district, aligning the movement with anti-capitalist and socialist causes. Other notable protests include a 1969 protest of a bridal convention at Madison Square Garden, and Inauguration protests of Richard Nixon.
W.I.T.C.H. reclaimed the image of a witch for a tool of liberation. Seeing it as an amalgamated archetype representing various forms of oppression, the figure became a political device used in hopes of elevating all social causes. While not all members had a religious or spiritual understanding of witchcraft, focusing instead on the political nature of the organization, W.I.T.C.H. nevertheless did promote an understanding of the history of witchcraft and the history of womenâs oppression. The two being firmly aligned, W.I.T.C.H. upheld the witch-cult hypothesis of Murray (#91). W.I.T.C.H. in many ways set the tone for various forms of modern Witchcraft and Paganism, in its activism and feminism, and contributed directly to the early philosophy of Dianic Wicca.
While W.I.T.C.H. was considered on the fringe of the greater womenâs liberation movement at the time, the past several decades have seen itâs central philosophy become more mainstream. In 2016, W.I.T.C.H. was reborn in Portland, Oregon in response to the growing injustices and visibility of systemic oppression. Now with an limitless acronym and a replacement of Terrorist for Troublemaker, W.I.T.C.H. continues the purpose of its predecessor. As the original W.I.T.C.H. did for Nixon, the modern covens of W.I.T.C.H.es protest Trump, in classic full black regalia. Bringing back the original theatrical nature of the group, modern W.I.T.C.H. similarly employs shock tactics to raise awareness for various issues, most notably immigration.
The contemporary incarnation of the group was brought to media attention by the Portland and Boston covens, however, W.I.T.C.H. protests have been occurring across the country. With stark black and white signs, pointed hats, and covered faces, modern W.I.T.C.H. follows itâs predecessors in aligning itself firmly with various groups, such as Black Lives Matter. Channeling the power of the archetype of the witch from centuries of oppression, W.I.T.C.H. uses the iconography as a catalyst for greater social change.
I find this organization, and its periodic resurgence, utterly fascinating. The figure of a witch is always in the depths of the human mind, resurfacing in moments of great societal fear and hysteria. I find W.I.T.C.H.âs reclaiming of this archetype, repurposing it to fight for social change, to be highly representative of the history of witchcraft. Instead of the witch resurfacing as an arbiter of darkness, she now appears as a symbol for change and freedom.
âFeminist Witches have stated that Witchcraft is not incompatible with politics, and further that the Craft is a religion historically conceived in rebellion and can therefore be true to its nature only when it continues its ancient fight against oppression.â - Margot Adler (#84), 1979.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_International_Terrorist_Conspiracy_from_Hell
http://witchpdx.com https://www.witchboston.org/about/
https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/43gd8p/wicked-witch-60s-feminist-protestors-hexed-patriarchy
https://www.topic.com/witches-brew
1- Hecate
1- Hecate
Greek Titan of Witches, Witchcraft, Sorcery, and Crossroads.
When I first began this project, I knew that I wanted to end with Hecate. She is simultaneously the final and the first, our alpha and omega of Witchcraft. She dominates popular witch lore, but you would never know it as she resides in the shadows, side plots, and brief mentions. Only when you seek her out does she reveal herself to you, lighting your path while casting shadows and ghosts. Many, if not all, modern Witches, Pagans, and Wiccans see Hecate as a Goddess of Witches, amongst other appropriate attributes, and continue her worship and reverence now several thousand years ongoing.
As is the case with most of Greek Mythology, Hecate has multiple origin myths and genealogies. This is most likely the result of her originating outside of the Greeks, and being adapted and merged with the existing pantheon. Most traditions have Hecate as the daughter of the Titans Perses, titan of destruction, and Asteria, titan of falling stars and nocturnal prophecy. Hecate was their only child, and was able to retain her powers post Zeusâ coup as she helped him fight the Giants. As child of Asteria, her grandmother was the Titan of the Moon, Phoebe, and her cousin was Olympian lunar all-star Artemis.
There are various stories in which Hecate plays a part. Her most notable and appropriate for this time of year, however, is her integral role in assisting Demeterâs search for her beloved daughter, Persephone. Upon Persephoneâs decent into Hades, Hecate, through the light of her torches, helped Demeter discover her daughter in the underworld. As such, Hecate has become a chthonic Goddess, and Persephoneâs yearly attendant and psychopomp to the underworld. Her position as gatekeeper and guide to Hades solidifies many of her numerous attributes.
Hecate is associated with ghosts, necromancy, and magic. She is identified with crossroads, torches, and dark hounds. She was a common household deity for the Athenianâher shrines placed in doorways and city gates to both protect from restless spirits and bestow blessings and safe passage. Her worship and cult was as extensive as her various attributes, with temples and shrines scattered across the Mediterranean. As a key figure in the Persephone saga, Hecate was integral in the ancient Eleusinian Mysteries, impacting secret societies and occult rituals to this day.
Out of all her characteristics, her association with the crossroads is perhaps the most pertinent to my series. Most often, we think of crossroads as the intersection of two roads, yielding four directions. This was not always the case, however, as it was more common to have a proverbial âfork in the roadâ, yielding three directions. This is the kind of crossroads in which Hecate resides. Her statues depict her in triplicity, forearms outstretched, holding torches, keys, serpents, daggers, etc. One face in each direction, Hecate is the arbiter of passages, and in this way is the consort of the God Hermes.
Hecate is one of the original Triple Goddesses of Witchcraft, if not the primordial one. Her triplicity has defined much of Modern Pagan theology, with her stance representing the three phases of the moon, Waxing, Full, and Waning (Maiden, Mother, Crone respectively). Her mythological genealogy as the granddaughter of Phoebe and cousin to Artemis has yielded Hecate as a Goddess of the Moon in her own right, most often known as the unseen phase of the moon, the New Moon (however she is just as often associated with all moon phases). In Greek/Roman Mythology, Hecate joins many lunar goddesses in addition to Phoebe and Artemis, including Selene and Diana. The five were often conflated, confused, and worshiped both in tandem and in conflict. This ever shifting, impossible to pin down, lunar association echos her transient nature of existing in the shadows.
Hecate is both mysterious and severe. Her face is hidden behind her torches, or on the dark side of the moon, however her presence is a constant. She is life, death, and rebirth. She is both light and dark magic. She was beloved in her association with rites of passage like childbirth, and feared in her role as Queen of Shades, present at the final rite of passage, death. Her nature has permeated my entire series in such a profound and indescribable way, I can only show you:
#93: Lilithâ often worshiped by modern Pagans in tandem with Hecate #92: Circe: Daughter of Hecate #89, #54, #39: Bewitched: A common expression âFor Hecateâs Sake!â Occurs throughout the show. #79: Aradia: Daughter of Lucifer and Diana. Often seen as the daughter of an amalgamated Diana-Hecate. #70: Medea: Priestess of Hecate #67: Charmed: The Halliwell Sisters: Appears in the episode âThe Wedding from Hellâ #56: Ceridwen: Often worshiped in tandem with Hecate as Dark Mothers by modern Pagans. . #52, #27: Practical Magic: The necromancy ritual the Owenâs Sisters perform, albeit pronounced incorrectly. âBlack as night, erase death from our sight. White as light, Mighty Hecate make it right.â #10: Willow Rosenberg: Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Mentioned in several episodes and referred to as âQueen and Protectress of Witches.â #7: American Horror Story: Coven: Supreme Fiona Goode invokes Hecate âCome to me Hecate, Mother of Angels, Cosmic World Soul.â #5: The Weird Sisters: Macbeth: Hecate is their master
This list is pretty fitting for a Goddess whose name etymologically may mean âshe that operates from afar.â She is seldom a central figure or even visible, however witches from the Owens to the Goodes, from Willow Rosenberg to Endora, invoke her name and ask for her spirit, guidance, and presence. Hecate, in many ways, is both the first witch, and the last. She is our alpha and omega. She is the embodiment of power and strength. As a Goddess of Witchcraft, she does not merely exist in the margins of society like the rest of usâShe is the margin itself.
Hail Hecate.
âHecate, Cerridwen. Dark Mother take us in. Hecate, Cerridwen. Let us be reborn.â Â
Offred
THIS
How to learn a language when you donât know where to start:
General Plan:
Weeks 1 and 2: Purpose:
Learn the fundamentals sentence construction
Learn how to spell and count
Start building a phrase stockpile with basic greetings
The Alphabet
Numbers 1 - 100
Subject Pronouns
Common Greetings
Conjugate the Two Most Important Verbs: to be and to have
Basic Definite and Indefinite Articles
Weeks 3 and 4: Purpose:
Learn essential vocabulary for the day-to-day
Start conjugating regular verbs
Days of the Week and Months of the Year
How to tell the time
How to talk about the weather
Family Vocabulary
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Weeks 5 and 6: Purpose:
Warm up with the last of the day-to-day vocabulary
Add more complex types of sentences to your grammar
Colours
House vocabulary
How to ask questions
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Forming negatives
Weeks 7 and 8: Purpose:
Learn how to navigate basic situations in a region of your target language country
Finish memorising regular conjugation rules
Food Vocabulary and Ordering at Restaurants
Money and Shopping Phrases
Present Tense Conjugations Verbs
Weeks 9 and 10: Purpose:
Start constructing descriptive and more complex sentences
Adjectives
Reflective verbs
Places vocabulary
Weeks 11 and 12: Purpose:
Add more complex descriptions to your sentences with adverbs
Wrap up vocabulary essentials
Adverbs
Parts of the body and medical vocabulary
Tips for Learning a Foreign Language:
Learning Vocabulary:
What vocabulary should I be learning?
There are hundreds of thousands of words in every language, and the large majority of them wonât be immediately relevant to you when youâre starting out.Typically, the most frequent 3000 words make up 90% of the language that a native speaker uses on any given day. Instead try to learn the most useful words in a language, and then expand outwards from there according to your needs and interests.
Choose the words you want/need to learn.
Relate them to what you already know.
Review them until theyâve reached your long-term memory.
Record them so learning is never lost.
Use them in meaningful human conversation and communication.
How should I record the vocabulary?
Learners need to see and/or hear a new word of phrase 6 to 17 times before they really know a piece of vocabulary.
Keep a careful record of new vocabulary.
Record the vocabulary in a way that is helpful to you and will ensure that you will practice the vocabulary, e.g. flashcards.
Vocabulary should be organised so that words are easier to find, e.g. alphabetically or according to topic.
Ideally when noting vocabulary you should write down not only the meaning, but the grammatical class, and example in a sentence, and where needed information about structure.
How should I practice using the vocabulary?
Look, Say, Cover, Write and Check - Use this method for learning and remembering vocabulary. This method is really good for learning spellings.
Make flashcards. Write the vocabulary on the front with the definition and examples on the back.
Draw mind maps or make visual representations of the new vocabulary groups.
Stick labels or post it notes on corresponding objects, e.g when learning kitchen vocabulary you could label items in your house.
How often should I be practising vocabulary?
A valuable technique is âthe principle of expanding rehearsalâ. This means reviewing vocabulary shortly after first learning them then at increasingly longer intervals.
Ideally, words should be reviewed:
5-10 minutes later
24 hours later
One week later
1-2 months later
6 months later
Knowing a vocabulary item well enough to use it productively means knowing:
Its written and spoken forms (spelling and pronunciation).
Its grammatical category and other grammatical information
Related words and word families, e.g. adjective, adverb, verb, noun.
Common collocations (Words that often come before or after it).
Receptive Skills: Listening and Reading
Reading is probably one of the most effective ways of building vocabulary knowledge.
Listening is also important because it occupies a big chunk of the time we spend communicating.
Tips for reading in a foreign language:
Start basic and small. Childrenâs books are great practice for beginners. Donât try to dive into a novel or newspaper too early, since it can be discouraging and time consuming if you have to look up every other word.
Read things youâve already read in your native language. The fact that you at least know the gist of the story will help you to pick up context clues, learn new vocabulary and grammatical constructions.
Read books with their accompanying audio books. Reading a book while listening to the accompanying audio will improve your âear trainingâ. It will also help you to learn the pronunciation of words.
Tips for listening in a foreign language:
Watch films in your target language.
Read a book while also listening along to the audio book version.
Listen to the radio in your target language.
Watch videos online in your target language.
Activities to do to show that youâve understood what youâve been listening to:
Try drawing a picture of what was said.
Ask yourself some questions about it and try to answer them.
Provide a summary of what was said.
Suggest what might come next in the âstory.â
Translate what was said into another language.
âTalk backâ to the speaker to engage in imaginary conversation.
Productive Skills: Speaking and Writing
Tips for speaking in a foreign language:
If you can, try to speak the language every day either out loud to yourself or chat to another native speaker whether it is a colleague, a friend, a tutor or a language exchange partner.Â
Write a list of topics and think about what you could say about each one. First you could write out your thoughts and then read them out loud. Look up the words you donât know. You could also come up with questions at the end to ask someone else.
A really good way to improve your own speaking is to listen to how native speakers talk and imitate their accent, their rhythm of speech and tone of voice. Watch how their lips move and pay attention to the stressed sounds. You could watch interviews on YouTube or online news websites and pause every so often to copy what you have just heard. You could even sing along to songs sung in the target language.
Walk around the house and describe what you say. Say what you like or dislike about the room or the furniture or the decor. Talk about what you want to change.This gets you to practise every day vocabulary.
Tips for writing in a foreign language:
Practice writing in your target language. Keep it simple to start with. Beginner vocabulary and grammar concepts are generally very descriptive and concrete.
Practice writing by hand. Here are some things you can write out by hand:
Diary entries
Shopping lists
Reminders
What could I write about?
Write about your day, an interesting event, how youâre feeling, or what youâre thinking.
Make up a conversation between two people.Â
Write a letter to a friend, yourself, or a celebrity. You donât need to send it; just writing it will be helpful.
Translate a text youâve written in your native language into your foreign language.
Write a review or a book youâve recently read or a film youâve recently watched.
Write Facebook statuses, Tweets or Tumblr posts (whether you post them or not will be up to you).
Write a short story or poem.
Writing is one of the hardest things to do well as a non-native speaker of a language, because thereâs no room to hide.Â
There are lots of ways to improve your writing ability, but they can be essentially boiled down to three key components:
Read a lot
Write a lot
Get your writing corrected
Reblog if English isn't your native language
[insp.]