Your daily dose of cat memes
macklin celebrini has autism

if i look back, i am lost
noise dept.

Love Begins

#extradirty

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KIROKAZE

Discoholic 🪩

gracie abrams
we're not kids anymore.

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tannertan36
taylor price
sheepfilms
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Show & Tell

★
The Bowery Presents
RMH
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@hunnyflower01
Your daily dose of cat memes
normalize hand tattoos for people with boring, normal careers 2023
Very hot of her
Although working in a library is not boring at all.
I took it all for granted
always moisturize after a shower
Not to be gay but [says something completely 100 percent homosexual]
instagram | passionflowersbyemmaspowage
jujutsu kaisen [ opening 1 ] ・ 廻廻奇èš
Inspiring Bedroom by @dd_visualization_interiors
Get Inspired, visit www.myhouseidea.com
KUKULCAN (pron. Koo-kool-kan) is the name of a feathered serpent god in the mythology and religion of Mesoamerica, in particular, the Yucatec Maya. He is also identified as the feathered serpent god Quetzalcóatl by the Toltecs and Aztecs, as Gucumatz to the Quiché Maya of Guatemala, and Ehecatl, the wind god of the Huastecs of the Gulf Coast.
Kukulcan and his other manifestations are all unified by the belief that each was considered a creator god and a bringer of rain and winds. The god is particularly associated with Chichen Itza where a large temple was built in his honour. Kukulcan is also the name of a 10th-century CE cultural hero in Yucatec Maya history, and he has a counterpart in the Toltec and Aztec histories where he carries the name Ce Acatl Topiltzin Quetzalcóatl. The feathered serpent god remains today a powerful symbol of Mexican indigenous cultural heritage.
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