when you reblog something from someone and their partner reblogs it from you instead of their lover: homewrecker 😈
when your post gets 2 likes from a couple: got adopted👩🍼
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JBB: An Artblog!
cherry valley forever

blake kathryn
Not today Justin
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
taylor price
wallacepolsom

ellievsbear
styofa doing anything
todays bird
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Stranger Things
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Game of Thrones Daily

Janaina Medeiros

JVL

oozey mess

shark vs the universe
seen from United States
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seen from Germany
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@cvntyuchiha
when you reblog something from someone and their partner reblogs it from you instead of their lover: homewrecker 😈
when your post gets 2 likes from a couple: got adopted👩🍼
it’s so magical and beautiful that there are sprawling interconnected cave systems carved deep into the earth by various geological forces and you don’t have to go in them. there are miles and miles of stone passageways in total darkness that require you to exhale all the air out of your lungs to squeeze through parts of them and you don’t have to be there. some of these squeezes are underwater and require cave divers to take off their oxygen tanks and push them through ahead of them and me i am above ground looking at the sky as we speak. there are untold subterranean wonders no human has ever seen and i will not be the one to discover them #grateful #blessed
Went to the grocery store with my kindergartener. We weighed some bananas: 2 pounds even. We weighed a watermelon: 4 pounds even. We weighed some mangos: a little over 1 pound. We weighed the watermelon AND the bananas: 6 pounds even.
“That’s funny” said the child “because 2+4=6 and two pounds and four pounds is six pounds. It’s like the same as math!”
“What happens if you add 6+1?”
“SEVEN”
“What if we put one pound of mangos on the scale?” <mangos added>
“IT’S THE SAME!!”
“OK, what’s 7-4?”
“Three?”
“What if we take the four pound watermelon off the scale?” <watermelon removed>
“Mama! Are you telling me math works In Real Life? Think of all the things you could measure!!”
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀#¡✫ * SASUKE MANGA LAY꩜UTS
• like/reblog if u save/use
• don’t repost.
i think maybe my new favorite category of roman intaglio art is "insects doing human things" because it's so indicative of the human need for whimsy. now take a look at this 1st century BC/AD intaglio of a grasshopper in a chariot pulled by butterflies
I love music, it's great
What's your favorite song?
I really like the one that cicadas play during summertime
i liked how this one got spread around a lot back then but it made me sad when other bloggers cropped out the bottom "president of Georgetown University" because that was always part of the bit
Stranger Things season 1: beneath the superficial image of “peace and prosperity” in 1980s small-town America, there was the painful legacy of countless atrocities committed by the American government in the name of ‘freedom.’
Stranger Things season 4: evil Russians (not Soviets) have sent our All-American Hero to the gulags which apparently still exist in the 1980s and it’s up to us to save him 🇺🇸🦅🫡
There’s probably a term that already exists for this but if there isn’t I’m gonna call it ‘Rambofication’ in honor of its probably most well known instance: Rambo First Blood was about a soldier, John Rambo (that’s his actual name I’m not doing a bit), returning home from the Vietnam war, so traumatized by war that he brought the war home with him to a small town, unable to adapt to life without strict military discipline and hierarchy. Subsequent Rambo movies were about how John Rambo was the only supersoldier tough enough and patriotic enough to kill faceless hordes of dastardly foreign commies.
Ergo, ‘Rambofication’ is the process of a series starting with a relatively nuanced or subversive narrative before its sequels become a shallow embrace of the very narrative it originally subverted. It happens surprisingly often!
TIL
Getting cowpox prevents you from getting smallpox. So for about 140 years, routine, purposeful infection with cowpox was part of childhood. That's the original vaccine. From the latin "vaca", meaning "cow".
But cowpox is really hard to keep alive without refrigeration, which for a lot of that 140 years, didn't exist. So the second best way was to keep the cowpox alive in a human host- you infect someone with cowpox, wait ten days until they get pustules, harvest some pus, infect the next person, and so on.
This leads us to a really cool fun fact, which is that an orphanage in St. Petersburg, Russia kept a strain of cowpox alive this way for an unbroken 92 years between 1801 and 1893. 92 years of arm-to-arm transmission of cowpox. Saving countless children's lives from smallpox in the process.
Eight Different Types Of Narcissists-Source; familyinstitute.org
Grandiose-
This is also known as the “classic” or stereotypical narcissist and what many think of when they use this term. These individuals are typically described as arrogant, entitled, charming, grandiose, superficial, and vain. Dr. Durvasula describes these individuals as “show-offs” and “overly confident”, and frequently not accompanied with an accurate assessment of their abilities. They tend to lack empathy and have a proclivity for lying and being antagonistic. When these individuals are disappointed, they will exhibit rage. We and others may find ourselves attracted to them, and rather quickly, because they tend be very charming and successful. These individuals may also be rather prominent in their communities.
When interacting with these individuals, one-on-one conversations tend to be one-sided. They will often be very talkative, but it is about themselves. When you attempt to talk, they may seem uninterested and act busy.
Covert/Vulnerable-
The covert/vulnerable narcissist is characterized by a lack of empathy, entitlement, hypersensitivity, passive aggressive behavior, sense of justice, resentment, insecurity, low levels of self-esteem, and higher levels of depression. Contempt is pervasive and prominent in these individuals. In the extreme of this presentation, these individuals tend to exhibit behaviors consistent with sociopathy.
These individuals frequently engage in projection. Projection is a defense mechanism unconsciously used to regulate anxiety we may feel about ourselves. An example of what this looks like is when someone is being aggressive, and then proceeds to accuse the person they’re talking to as being aggressive instead of acknowledging their own behavior. When we cannot tolerate an aspect of ourselves, we have to “discard it.” This can lead to conflict, distress and gaslighting.
The hypersensitivity is related to perceived hostility from others as well as feeling criticized by others. Their interaction with others often feels hostile, and they often interact with others with a hostile attribution bias. This means they experience others as hostile, and because there is the perception that others are being hostile towards them, they will respond in kind. What can further contribute to the covert/vulnerable narcissist’s hostility and contempt for others is the grandiose belief they hold in themselves, which displays in a less obvious way than the grandiose narcissist that was described above. These individuals may present as though they are misunderstood and/or their special abilities are not well understood, which further leads to their feelings of being slighted by others and perceiving others as hostile.
Additionally, with regards to a sense of justice, the covert/vulnerable narcissist feels as though the world and others owe them and may be described as brooding, as they feel they are due and deserve some retribution. Their resentment is about their perception that others have a better life than them.
Communal-
Communal narcissists are wholly engaged in the community and post everything online about their pursuits in changing the world. “Communal narcissists may feature frequent posts on their social media or personal website showing them interacting with those ‘less fortunate’ than them and drawing attention to their charitable deeds with hashtags like #savingtheworld, #feelsgoodtogiveback, #charitygoals, #iloveeveryone, or #elephantsarepeopletoo. Then they sit back, expect validation from their followers (‘Wow, you are amazing,’ ‘You have the biggest heart ever,’ ‘Keep saving the world – and you look hot in your bikini’) and then bask in likes and comments about their giving nature” (pg. 93).
These individuals perceive themselves as altruistic, which is in contrast to the three above types that would perceive themselves as successful. Dr. Durvasula makes a point of caution that there are people who can truly give of themselves to others and not be a communal narcissist. She stresses that the difference, and important factor to consider, is the motivation behind the altruistic behaviors and actions.
Malignant-
According to Dr. Durvasula, this is the most toxic and aversive type of narcissist. She writes, “This form takes the grandiose narcissist and adds a more exploitative, antagonistic, Machiavellian, and, at times, seemingly psychopathic overlay… Malignant narcissists drive people to the edge and leave them feeling betrayed, fearful, manipulated, tricked, and devastated” (pg 88).
The malignant narcissist is often referred to as the Dark Triad (psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and narcissism) or Dark Tetrad (psychopathy, Machiavellianism, sadism, and narcissism). These individuals are quite charming, yet political, manipulative, and often lack remorse. Due to their exploitative nature, they can truly cause a lot of devastation and damage to others. These are individuals who may not only bend or break the rules, but also abuse their power. These individuals often see others as disposable and a means to an end.
Leaving a relationship with a malignant narcissist can be very difficult due to fear of the narcissist and what they may d
Neglectful-
Neglectful narcissists do not engage with anyone unless they want something from them. People are seen as conveniences for them and not as individuals to have genuine relationships and connections with.
Benign-
Benign narcissists often exhibit a lack of empathy, entitlement, and grandiosity, however, other experience their lack of empathy as being clueless, their entitlement as being clumsy, and their grandiosity as being childlike. These are the individuals that only talk about themselves or work to make your story, or what you are saying, about them.
They have a superficial immaturity and often resemble adolescents who are preoccupied with caring what others think about them, obsessively follow social media and likes, are thoughtless when they speak, and others are often dismissing their behaviors as someone who does not have a filter.
Relationships with these individuals may not be fulfilling and may be described as shallow and immature. In comparison to the other types of narcissists, these individuals do not cause as much damage or destruction. In many ways, they are very harmless.
Entitled-
Dr. Durvasula describes that entitlement is being seen everywhere today, which underscores that entitlement is taught; it is not a trait we are born with, like introversion/extraversion.
Entitlement is visible in the behaviors of others, and it is the belief that we deserve special treatment without cause or reason, even at the expense of another person. We can all think of examples of entitlement. The impatient person at the store who feels they do not need to wait in line, or the person who removes a “reserved” sign in a blocked off area at an event and sits in a restricted area anyways.
Entitlement is taught through modeling and reinforcement by parents who do not correct their children when they act entitled, and/or do not teach their children how to regulate their own emotions when they do not get what they want when they want it. Another example of how entitlement is fostered can be seen through instillment of the idea that everyone receives a trophy regardless of their team winning. This can create the false understanding within a child that special treatment, celebration, and recognition will always be extended. As these children age, these are sometimes the students in school who ask why they did not receive an A in a course, despite not completing any work or passing exams. They may argue that they attended, tried and thus are deserving of the A. As noted in the first installment, when children do not learn how to temper their wants and/or do not learn how to regulate and tolerate disappointment, they will be unable to tolerate situations in which they are being told “no,” are not recognized, promoted, or provided with constructive criticism.
Generational/Cultural
This type of narcissist is one of the most difficult to describe, even in the consideration of it being a form of narcissism. Dr. Durvasula even cautions that she is not completely convinced that narcissism would be accurate here due to the universality of histories.
In general, these are narcissists whose behaviors are reinforced by culture. This may look like when we say, “Our parent looks and acts narcissistic, however, we can understand it because we know their family history, where they came from, where they lived, etc”. This type of narcissist is reinforced throughout history through intergenerational traumas and other patterns of behaviors. Dr. Durvasula describes that these patterns of narcissistic behaviors are observed in cultures and societies characterized by stratification by authoritarianism, patriarchy, major differences in power, massive divides between “haves and have nots,” and cultures with a variety of pervasive -isms, such as racism, colonialism, etc. Insecurity is often pervasive in these societies, especially among those with power. They will act in ways to ensure their power. In this way then, narcissism becomes an adaptive trait, both by those with power and those oppressed. Entitlement now develops as a function of money, social status, etc. These behaviors and ways of societal functioning in turn do not support the development of empathy or even emotional depth in relationships. This can serve to dehumanize others and treat them as indispensable and a means to an end, and reinforces an earlier point about entitlement being taught rather than an innate trait.
I view reading fantasy/sci-fi stuff as "this work of fiction is being translated into english so that I can understand it, meaning some phrases should not be taken literally" lord of the rings style, and then I meet people who nitpick every word or phrase that "shouldn't exist in this story" and I'm like wow you guys are truly miserable and unimaginative. and also you tend to assume that english words all popped up in the 19th century and you never bother to check the etymology of the words you're claiming "shouldn't exist in this universe"
like sorry but in an apocalyptic alternate-universe earth, the phrase "train of thought" is plausible even in a world without locomotives, because the word "train" comes from the 14th century, and it meant "to drag"
that's why we call dress trains "trains". because they drag. the word wasn't invented for locomotives.
y'all say shit so definitively like idk man I think it depends. the english language is OLD AS FUCK. a lot of words you believe are modern just aren't
I want to see a work of fiction that reverses the "vampires are snobby upper class, werewolves are brutish lower class" stereotypes
Consider a vampire's reliance on blood as a metaphor for living paycheck-to-paycheck and depending on the kindness of others to get by, and the desparation that can make one slip into taking.
@tiredspacedragon's tags.
Tumblr and Pinterest are not romantic, not platonic, but a secret third thing
collecting these
HOW could i forget this classic
Collecting those rn
New Superhero Team I Invented