Cristina Hoch
h
d e v o n
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

★
hello vonnie
Sade Olutola
Cosmic Funnies

Love Begins
art blog(derogatory)
sheepfilms
Misplaced Lens Cap
One Nice Bug Per Day
Game of Thrones Daily
AnasAbdin
Monterey Bay Aquarium

izzy's playlists!

titsay

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Jules of Nature

pixel skylines
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@daughterofspirits
Cristina Hoch
“A Storm of Swords” With images by María José García Photography featuring the Algiz Vördr Totem
(also featuring a unique cape by Absenta Accessories and a dress by Avalon Saez)
En el Mar Art
― Haruki Murakami, Kafka on the Shore
鳥海山17・Mt.Chokai by anglo10.
TIL dogs on mushrooms is a thing
A Brown bear (Ursus arctos) eats watermelon whilst cooling itself down in a pool at the zoo in Rio de Janeiro, on January 9, 2013. AFP PHOTO/VANDERLEI ALMEIDA/AFP/Getty Images
Wondering around Alaska.
Prints//Instagram
Baldr
(Also Balder, Baldur)
“The son of the chief god Odin and his wife Frigg. Beautiful and just, he was the favourite of the gods.
for my fellow psychotics who struggle with thinking someone is in their house, a method I’ve found that really works are these guys:
i put them on my front door and anytime it opens they ring. that way if i think someone has broken in or i see someone who isn’t there i can think back to if the bells have rung, and if they haven’t i can assure myself it’s not real. obviously it’s not fool proof, like if you are prone to auditory hallucinations, but it has really helped me calm down in time to avoid major psychotic breaks. it’s a real lifesaver
nonpsychotics encouraged to rb
Andrea Young
me: *literally about to burst into tears for no fuckass reason*
me to me:
Hey witch community, I just saw a tiktok where a witch said trickster spirits can only lie twice. So like when you’re verifying a deity and they’re pretending to be them, do you have to ask 3 times then in order to be sure? Is this true, that they can only lie twice?
Trickster spirits LOVE tiktok. That’s the first place they lie to you from.
“Twilight-born, feral, water magic-foreboding face.”
— Yvan Goll, tr. by Donald Wellman, from “From what Tears,” written c. 1940