Hisđđ
dirt enthusiast
cherry valley forever
đȘŒ
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art

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we're not kids anymore.

Andulka
One Nice Bug Per Day

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
RMH
YOU ARE THE REASON

Janaina Medeiros
Game of Thrones Daily
Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă
taylor price

blake kathryn
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
sheepfilms

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@pialushka
Hisđđ
This is the Goose of Outrageous Self Assuredness. Take from her example, her ludicrous and excellent poise in the face of bullying, and be confident in your place, your course, your equal validity.
Iâm always amazed by the amount of fucks geese refuse to give.
This is it, this is everything you need to know about geese in one video.
I want to live by myself when I move out of my parent's place but I'm really afraid of money problems? I'm afraid that the only place I can afford will be in the ghetto and it'll all be torn apart and I'll only be allowed to eat one granola bar a week. I'm really stressing out about this. I don't know anything about after school life. I don't know anything about paying bills or how to buy an apartment and it's really scaring me. is there anything you know that can help me?
HI darling,
Iâve actually got a super wonderful masterpost for you to check out:
Home
what the hell is a mortgage?
first apartment essentials checklist
how to care for cacti and succulents
the care and keeping of plants
Getting an apartment
Money
earn rewards by taking polls
how to coupon
what to do when you canât pay your bills
see if youâre paying too much for your cell phone bill
how to save money
How to Balance a Check Book
How to do Your Own Taxes
Health
how to take care of yourself when youâre sick
things to bring to a doctorâs appointment
how to get free therapy
what to expect from your first gynecologist appointment
how to make a doctorâs appointment
how to pick a health insurance plan
how to avoid a hangover
a list of stress relievers
how to remove a splinter
Emergency
what to do if you get pulled over by a cop
a list of hotlines in a crisis
things to keep in your car in case of an emergency
how to do the heimlich maneuver
Job
time management
create a resume
find the right career
how to pick a major
how to avoid a hangover
how to interview for a job
how to stop procrastinating
How to write cover letters
Travel
ULTIMATE PACKING LIST
Traveling for Cheap
Travel Accessories
The Best Way to Pack a Suitcase
How To Read A Map
How to Apply For A Passport
How to Make A Travel Budget
Better You
read the news
leave your childhood traumas behind
how to quit smoking
how to knit
how to stop biting your nails
how to stop procrastinating
how to stop skipping breakfast
how to stop micromanaging
how to stop avoiding asking for help
how to stop swearing constantly
how to stop being a pushover
learn another language
how to improve your self-esteem
how to sew
learn how to embroider
how to love yourself
100 tips for life
Apartments/Houses/Moving
Moving Out and Getting an Apartment, Part 1: Are You Sure? (The Responsible One)
Moving Out and Getting an Apartment, Part 2: Finding the Damn Apartment (The Responsible One)
Moving Out and Getting an Apartment, Part 3: Questions to Ask about the Damn Apartment (The Responsible One)
Moving Out and Getting an Apartment, Part 4: Packing and Moving All of Your Shit (The Responsible One)
How to Protect Your Home Against Break-Ins (The Responsible One)
Education
How to Find a Fucking College (The Sudden Adult)
How to Find Some Fucking Money for College (The Sudden Adult)
What to Do When You Canât Afford Your #1 Post-Secondary School (The Sudden Adult)
Stop Shitting on Community College Kids (Why Community College is Fucking Awesome) (The Responsible One)
How to Ask for a Recommendation Letter (The Responsible One)
How to Choose a College Major (The Sudden Adult)
Finances
How to Write a Goddamn Check (The Responsible One)
How to Convince Credit Companies Youâre Not a Worthless Bag of Shit (The Responsible One)
Debit vs Credit (The Responsible One)
What to Do if Your Wallet is Stolen/Lost (The Sudden Adult)
Budgeting 101 (The Responsible One)
Important Tax Links to Know (The Responsible One)
How to Choose a Bank Without Screwing Yourself (The Responsible One)
Job Hunting
How to Write a Resume Like a Boss (The Responsible One)
How to Write a Cover Letter Someone Will Actually Read (The Responsible One)
How to Handle a Phone Interview without Fucking Up (The Responsible One)
10 Sites to Start Your Job Search (The Responsible One)
Life Skills
Staying in Touch with Friends/Family (The Sudden Adult)
Bar Etiquette (The Sudden Adult)
What to Do After a Car Accident (The Sudden Adult)
Grow Up and Buy Your Own Groceries (The Responsible One)
How to Survive Plane Trips (The Sudden Adult)
How to Make a List of Goals (The Responsible One)
How to Stop Whining and Make a Damn Appointment (The Responsible One)
Miscellaneous
What to Expect from the Hell that is Jury Duty (The Responsible One)
Relationships
Marriage: What the Fuck Does It Mean and How the Hell Do I Know When Iâm Ready? (Guest post - The Northwest Adult)
How Fucked Are You for Moving In with Your Significant Other: An Interview with an Actual Real-Life Couple Living Together⹠(mintypineapple  and catastrofries)
Travel & Vehicles
How to Winterize Your Piece of Shit Vehicle (The Responsible One)
How to Make Public Transportation Your Bitch (The Responsible One)
Other Blog Features
Apps for Asshats
Harsh Truths & Bitter Reminders
Asks Iâll Probably Need to Refer People to Later
Apartments (or Life Skills) - How Not to Live in Filth (The Sudden Adult)
Finances - Tax Basics (The Responsible One)
Important Documents - How to Get a Copy of Your Birth Certificate (The Responsible One)
Important Documents - How to Get a Replacement ID (The Responsible One)
Health - How to Deal with a Chemical Burn (The Responsible One)
Job Hunting - List of Jobs Based on Social Interaction Levels (The Sudden Adult)
Job Hunting - How to Avoid Falling into a Pit of Despair While Job Hunting (The Responsible One)
Job Hunting - Questions to Ask in an Interview (The Responsible One)
Life Skills - First-Time Flying Tips (The Sudden Adult)
Life Skills - How to Ask a Good Question (The Responsible One)
Life Skills - Reasons to Take a Foreign Language (The Responsible One)
Life Skills - Opening a Bar Tab (The Sudden Adult)
Relationships - Long Distance Relationships: How to Stay in Contact (The Responsible One)
Adult Cheat Sheet:
what to do if your pet gets lost
removing stains from your carpet
how to know if youâre eligible for food stamps
throwing a dinner party
iâm pregnant, now what?
first aid tools to keep in your house
how to keep a clean kitchen
learning how to become independent from your parents
job interview tips
opening your first bank account
what to do if you lose your wallet
tips for cheap furniture
easy ways to cut your spending
selecting the right tires for your car
taking out your first loan
picking out the right credit card
how to get out of parking tickets
how to fix a leaky faucet
get all of your news in one place
getting rid of mice & rats in your house
when to go to the e.r.
buying your first home
how to buy your first stocks
guide to brewing coffee
first apartment essentials checklist
coping with a job you hate
30 books to read before youâre 30
whatâs the deal with retirement?
difference between insurances
Once youâve looked over all those cool links, I have some general advice for you on how you can have some sort of support system going for you:
Reasons to move out of home
You may decide to leave home for many different reasons, including:
wishing to live independently
location difficulties â for example, the need to move closer to university
conflict with your parents
being asked to leave by your parents.
Issues to consider when moving out of home
Itâs common to be a little unsure when you make a decision like leaving home. You may choose to move, but find that you face problems you didnât anticipate, such as:
Unreadiness â you may find you are not quite ready to handle all the responsibilities.
Money worries â bills including rent, utilities like gas and electricity and the cost of groceries may catch you by surprise, especially if you are used to your parents providing for everything. Debt may become an issue.
Flatmate problems â issues such as paying bills on time, sharing housework equally, friends who never pay board, but stay anyway, and lifestyle incompatibilities (such as a non-drug-user flatting with a drug user) may result in hostilities and arguments.
Your parents may be worried
Think about how your parents may be feeling and talk with them if they are worried about you. Most parents want their children to be happy and independent, but they might be concerned about a lot of different things. For example:
They may worry that you are not ready.
They may be sad because they will miss you.
They may think you shouldnât leave home until you are married or have bought a house.
They may be concerned about the people you have chosen to live with.
Reassure your parents that you will keep in touch and visit regularly. Try to leave on a positive note. Hopefully, they are happy about your plans and support your decision.
Tips for a successful move
Tips include:
Donât make a rash decision â consider the situation carefully. Are you ready to live independently? Do you make enough money to support yourself? Are you moving out for the right reasons?
Draw up a realistic budget â donât forget to include âhiddenâ expenses such as the propertyâs security deposit or bond (usually four weeksâ rent), connection fees for utilities, and home and contents insurance.
Communicate â avoid misunderstandings, hostilities and arguments by talking openly and respectfully about your concerns with flatmates and parents. Make sure youâre open to their point of view too â getting along is a two-way street.
Keep in touch â talk to your parents about regular home visits: for example, having Sunday night dinner together every week.
Work out acceptable behaviour â if your parents donât like your flatmate(s), find out why. It is usually the behaviour rather than the person that causes offence (for example, swearing or smoking). Out of respect for your parents, ask your flatmate(s) to be on their best behaviour when your parents visit and do the same for them.
Ask for help â if things are becoming difficult, donât be too proud to ask your parents for help. They have a lot of life experience.
If your family home does not provide support
Not everyone who leaves home can return home or ask their parents for help in times of trouble. If you have been thrown out of home or left home to escape abuse or conflict, you may be too young or unprepared to cope.
If you are a fostered child, you will have to leave the state-care system when you turn 18, but you may not be ready to make the sudden transition to independence.
If you need support, help is available from a range of community and government organisations. Assistance includes emergency accommodation and food vouchers. If you canât call your parents or foster parents, call one of the associations below for information, advice and assistance.
Where to get help
Your doctor
Kids Helpline Tel. 1800 55 1800
Lifeline Tel. 13 11 44
Home Ground Services Tel. 1800 048 325
Relationships Australia Tel. 1300 364 277
Centrelink Crisis or Special Help Tel. 13 28 50
Tenants Union of Victoria Tel. (03) 9416 2577
Things to remember
Try to solve any problems before you leave home. Donât leave because of a fight or other family difficulty if you can possibly avoid it.
Draw up a realistic budget that includes âhiddenâ expenses, such as bond, connection fees for utilities, and home and contents insurance.
Remember that you can get help from a range of community and government organizations.Â
(source)
Keep me updated? xx
Reblogging for myself
reblogging for those that follow me that may be starting to move out
Signal boosting: because who knows who may need this today� :)
I am a(n):
âȘ Male
âȘ Female
đ Writer
Looking for
âȘ Boyfriend
âȘ Girlfriend
đ An incredibly specific word that I canât remember
*wakes up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat*
WAIT ITâS CALLED A THROW PILLOW
here is a super helpful website for this kinda thing!
the first result isnât always the one youâre looking for but when you press enter itâll give you a ton of words related to your query thatâll probably have what youâre wanting, or something better
hereâs some examples:
Reblog to save a writerâs sanity.
T h a n k y o u k i n d s i r .
THANK YOU REBLOG TO SAVE A LIFE
Translation: I told this girl sent next to me on the bus that her guide dog was cute and she said âAw I wouldnât knowâ and I choked on my coffee
đđ
I think this is the first one of these that i literally couldnât understand a damn thing written
Natural phenomenon of diffraction of light transforms black hummingbirdâs wings into tiny rainbows
~photo credit: Christian Spencer~
You really should add your pronouns in your bio
i get this ask a lot and like. itâs a lil frustrating bc the whole reason ppl starting pushing everyone to put pronouns in their bio was so trans ppl werenât outed or othered for having their pronouns listed.
but now itâs used as a dog whistle to lyk whoâs âwokeâ and who isnât (even tho plenty of the ppl w their pronouns in their bio are still bigoted in many ways). so now everyone is assumed to be cis and pressured into putting their pronouns in every social media they have, thus once again othering trans ppl and forcing them to out themselves
im not cis. im not entirely sure which pronouns i prefer or will use. ppl going âyou should list your pronounsâ either outs me or forces me to pick pronouns that may feel misgendering just to appease a largely cis crowd.
she/he/they are fine. i also have no desire to list that for thousands of ppl to see. i am referred to as she/her irl by p much everyone. sometimes it sucks, but it also kinda sucks getting used to using he/they only to know i am not in a position to use that irl at this moment.
just came across a tiktok where someone was like âI hate when weâre going around introducing ourselves w our names and pronouns and some cis guy is like âI donât have a preferenceâ oh yeah steve? Youâll be okay if we call you she/herâ
and itâs like. how do you know theyâre cis!!!! yes, i get that transphobes hate the pronoun thing and always have dumbass responses but you canât assume that everyone who doesnât immediately divulge specific pronouns or isnât comfortable sharing them is a cisgender transphobe. i know most ppl assume im a cis woman even tho im nonbinary and itâs disheartening how many ppl would label me transphobic(?) for saying i donât have a preference on pronouns atm.
another tiktok was showing a clip of a group of people being asked their pronouns and they all said âliterally anything it doesnât matter to usâ and all the comments were âwhy was the group of women so aggressive abt it :/ just say she/herâ and one of the people from the clip had to comment and say âhey, weâre all questioning our gender rn so we donât have an answer pls donât assume weâre cis womenâ and they shouldnât have to fucking do that just bc yâall decided you were entitled to out people!!
and itâs sm worse for tma nonbinary and trans people who are often excluded from the conversation entirely.
Also wanted to add that being visibly trans & being prompted to disclose ur pronouns could very well be a dangerous thing
iâm obsessed with thisïżŒ
and then, two months later....
đ„ș
âI think thereâs a rich ream of horror, from The Haunting of Hill House to Ghostwatch, that delves into the idea that certain places can simply go wrong â and once these bad environments have been established and ostracised by society, they canât be exorcised. They simply keep accruing power through the individual stories that play tragically out in their shadow.
âI mention a real-life example of that kind of bad architecture in one episode; the Pope Lick Bridge in Kentucky, a place that looks and feels so sinister that it developed its own local folklore about a goat-man who attacks people who stray too close to the edge â and which has ended up resulting in deaths as visitors peer over the side trying to get a peek at the monster.
âI find this kind of stuff fascinating, because it plays into my own paranoia about environments, and my dislike of ghost stories with explicably human antagonists. Like David says in the first episode, people arenât frightening. Places are frightening.
âIf Iâm sitting alone at home on a dark and stormy night, and I glance nervously up towards the bedroom doorway, my fear is not that my house is being haunted by a spirit called Mabel who died in the 19th century at the age of fourteen and is constantly seeking her favourite teddy bear⊠because all of these details both humanise her and make her ridiculous.
âMy fear is that there will be something standing in the doorway, because the doorway is where things come to stand.
âBecause unoccupied spaces, in our imaginations, must find something to fill them.â
â from âThe Saturday Interview: âI Am in Eskewâ podcastâ
For the people who are out there âfighting the good fightâ and âtrying to make fandom a better place,â I have two important questions for you:
1. Is the author dead? x
2. Is your baby in the bathwater? x
What do I mean by those things? Letâs start with #1. The Death of the Author is a type of literary criticism, the extreme cliff notes version of which is that art exists outside of the creatorâs life, personal background, and even intentions. Iâm using it slightly differently than Barthes intended, but thatâs okay, because the author is dead and Iâm interpreting his work through my own lens.
In fandom, the author is dead. In fact, the author was never alive in the first place, not really. The author has only ever been the idea of a person, because unlike published fiction, the only thing we know about a fanfic author is that which they choose to tell us about themselves.
Why is that important?
Because it might not be true. Hell, that happens in real life with published authors, who have SSNâs on file with their publishers, who pay taxes on the works they create and have researchable pasts. If the author of A Million Little Pieces could fake everything, why canât I? Why canât you? Why canât the writer of your favorite fic in the whole wide world?
Stop me if youâve heard this before: âyou can only write about [sensitive subject] if [sensitive subject] has happened to you personally, otherwise youâre a disgusting monster that deserves to die!!â Or maybe âyou can only write [x racial or ethnic group] characters if youâre [x racial or ethnic group] otherwise youâre racist/fetishizing/colonizing!â
You can play this game with any sensitive subject you can come up with. Iâve seen them all before, on a sliding scale of slightly chastising to literal death threats.
Now, I could tell you that Iâm a white-passing Latina whose grandmother was an anchor baby. I could tell you that I speak only English because my family never taught me to speak Spanish, something which Iâve been told is common in the Cuban community, though I only know my own lived experience. I could tell you that Iâm mostly neurotypical. I could tell you that Iâm covered in surgical scars. I could tell you lots of things.
Are any of these true? Maybe! I could tell you that my brother has severe mental development problems, so uncommon that theyâve never been properly diagnosed, and that he will live the rest of his life in a group home with 24-hour care. Is that true? Am I allowed to write about families struggling with Americaâs piss-poor services for the handicapped now?
Am I allowed to write about being Cuban? After all, I did just say that Iâm Cuban. But is it true? Can I instead write a character thatâs Panamanian? Maybe I really am Panamanian, not Cuban. Maybe Iâm both. Maybe Iâm neither. Maybe Iâm really French Canadian. Should we require people to post regular selfies? I canât count the number of times Iâve had someone come up to me speaking Arabic, and Iâve been told that I look Syrian. Whatâs stopping me from making a blog that claims that I am Syrian? Can you even really tell someoneâs race and ethnicity from a photo?
Am I allowed to write about being a teenager? Am I allowed to write about being a college student? Am I allowed to write about being an âadultyâ adult? Can I write a character whoâs 40? 50? 60? How old am I?
All of this is to say: you canât base what someone is or is not âallowedâ to write about on a background that may or may not be real. No matter how good your intentions. And I get it - this usually comes from a place of well-meaning. Youâre trying to protect marginalized groups by stopping privileged people from trampling all over experiences that they havenât suffered. I get that. Itâs a very noble thought. But you canât require a background check for every fic that you donât like.
If you say âyou can only write about rape if youâre a rape victim,â then one of three things will happen:
Real survivors will have to supply intimate details of their own violations to prevent harassment
Real survivors will refuse to engage and will then have to deal with death threats and people telling them to kill themselves for daring to write about their own experiences
People who arenât survivors will say âyeah sure this happened to meâ just to get people to shut up
Has that helped anyone? I mean really - anyone??
So now letâs get to point #2: is your baby in the bathwater?
If your intention is to protect marginalized people from being trampled upon, stop and assess if your boot is the one thatâs now stamping on their face. Find your baby! Is your baby in the bathwater? Which is to say: find the goal that youâre advocating for. Now assess. Are you making the problem worse for the people youâre trying to protect? Does that rape victim really feel better, now that youâve harassed and stalked them in the name of making rape victims feel safe?
Letâs say you read a fic that contains explicit sex between a 16 year old and a 17 year old. Is this okay? Would it be okay if the writer was 15? 16? 17? Should teenagers be barred from writing about their own lives, and should teenagers be banned from exploring sexuality in a fictional bubble, instead of hookup culture? Is it okay for a 20 year old to write about their experiences as a teenager? Is it okay for a 20 year old to write about being raped at a party as a teenager? Is it okay for a 30 year old? How about a 40 year old? Is it okay so long as it isnât titillating? Is it okay if taking control of the narrative allows the writer to re-conceptualize their trauma as something they have control over? Is it okay if their therapist told them that writing is a safe creative outlet?
Is your author dead?
Is your baby in the bathwater?
Now letâs take a hardline approach: no fanfiction with characters who are under 18 years old. None. Is the 16 year old who really loves Harry Potter and wants to read/write about characters their own age better off? Should they be banned from writing? Should they be forced to exclusively read and write (adult) experiences that they havenât lived? Will they write about teens anyway? Should they have to share it in secret? Should 16 year olds be ashamed of themselves? Should we just throw in with the evangelicals and say that the only answer is abstinence, both real and fictional?
Letâs say that no rape is allowed in fiction, at all. None. What happens to all the hurt/comfort fics where a character is raped and then receives the support and love that they deserve, slowly heal, and by the end have found themselves again? Are you helping rape victims by banning these stories? Are you helping rape victims by stripping their agency away, by telling them that their wants and their consent doesnât matter?
Is your baby in the bathwater?
Fandom is currently being split in two: on one side, the people who want to make fandom a âsaferâ place by any means necessary, even if that means throwing out all of the marginalized groups they say they want to protect - and on the other, people who are saying âif you throw out that bathwater, youâre throwing the baby out too.â
The whole point of fandom is to be able to explore all kinds of ideas from the safety and comfort of a computer screen. You can read/write things that fascinate you, disgust you, titillate you, or make your heart feel warm. This is true of all fiction. People who want to read about rape and incest and extreme violence and torture can go pick up a copy of Game of Thrones from the bookstore whenever they want. Sanitizing fandom just means holding a community of people who are primarily not male, not straight, not cis, or some combination of those three, to higher and stricter standards than straight white cis male authors and creators all over the world.
There is nothing you can find on AO3 that you canât find in a bookstore. Any teenager can go check out Lolita, or ASOIAF, or Flowers in the Attic, or Stephen Kingâs It, or Speak, or hundreds of other books that have adult themes or gratuitous violence or graphic sex. The difference is that AO3 has warnings and tags and allows people to interact only with the types of work that they want to, and allows people to curate their experiences.
Are these themes eligible to be explored, but only in the setting of something produced/published? Books, movies, television, studio art, music - all of these fields have huge barriers to entry, and theyâre largely controlled by wealthy cishet white men. Is it better to say that only those who have the right connections to âmake itâ in these industries should be allowed to explore violence or sexuality or any other so-called âadultâ theme?
Does banning women from writing MLM erotica make fan culture a better place?
Does banning queer people from writing about queer experiences make fan culture a better place?
Is M/M fic okay, but only if the author is male? What if heâs a trans man? What if theyâre NB? Who should get to draw those lines? Should TERFs get a vote? What if the author is a woman who feels more comfortable writing from a male characterâs perspective because sheâs grown up with male stories her whole life, or because she identifies more with male characters? What about all the trans men who discovered themselves, in part, by writing fanfiction, and realized that their desires to write male characters stemmed from something they hadnât yet realized about themselves?
How can we ever be sure that the author is who they say they are?
Who is allowed to write these stories? How do we enforce it?
Is it better for none of these stories to ever exist at all?
Have you killed your author?
Have you thrown out your baby with the bathwater?
I think a big part of why I read way more fanfiction than books is that thereâs just a hell of a lot less exposition
the first 10 pages of most books are always âthese are the main characters and hereâs some background on each of them and this is the setting etc etcâ and itâs such a fucking hassle getting to the plot sometimes
fanfic is just like âfuck it you know all of this already letâs goâ
Thatâs a really good point.
Same here but thereâs actually a point here of well written exposition. Take AUs for example. Even in the most complicated, as-far-removed-from-canon settings we get at most a single paragraph before the actual fic where the author gives us a quick rundown of the rules for that universe. The rest we are left to figure out on our own and it works. Weâre not spoon fed every trivial detail when all we want is to get to the plot. Everything thatâs important is said at the moment it is important, not sooner not later. Especially in long fics characters often take on such a unique characterisation that you get to know them all over again but the readers do so organically, in the situations that define those characters as they happen. Same with looks. The fic author generally assumes the readers know what the characters look like and donât spend paragraphs describing them, and only bring it up when it fits the plot. Iâve read a few fanfics from fandoms Iâve never been in and surprisingly it still worked out. I had generally a good idea of who these people were, what they did where and why and how they worked together. Point is, if youâre a writer writing original fiction, pretend itâs fanfic and everyone knows your setting and characters already. That way youâll only have to add a few details if and when your beta readers mention needing more information and chances are they wonât need a lot.Â
Point is, if youâre a writer writing original fiction, pretend itâs fanfic and everyone knows your setting and characters already. That way youâll only have to add a few details if and when your beta readers mention needing more information and chances are they wonât need a lot.
Bolding this fantastic advice.Â
Iâm going to add one teeeeeny caveat to this
Write your SECOND DRAFT like its fic.
First draft, youâre telling yourself the story. If you need to learn about the world, go off on every irrelevant tangent you like. Learn the world and how it works, then write your second draft like its fanfic of the first
This is one of the most original takes on writing that Iâve ever come across, and Iâm reblogging it because it⊠Itâs actually brilliant!
Of course, it depends on what youâre writing and the mood you want to set, but for action-paced stories or stories where you want to get going from the beginning, this is great advice!
oh my gosh
This is literally why I donât read many published books. And also made me realize even more the brilliance of @ceterisparibus116 writing.
stop making shows about americans in europe⊠try europeans in america instead. the outrage of not knowing exactly what something costs at a store,, no public transport,, everyone smiling in your face and waiters scaring you by constantly popping up at your table⊠ice in your water for some reason,, the kind of culture clash i want to see!!
fuck emily in paris i want françois in texas
HOLY SHIT???
God I love it when people mash classic arts and modern art together, it creates the most incredible things
a suspicious red-breasted nuthatch
an unenlightened downy woodpecker
a haughty blue jay
a content chickadee-dee-dee
a judgmental cardinal
an indignant golden-crowned kinglet