Unpopular opinion: completely changing a characters entire personality jus to make the supposed to b bad guy look better and not as bad just because you think he's hotter,,,isn't actually character development or good writing.
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Unpopular opinion: completely changing a characters entire personality jus to make the supposed to b bad guy look better and not as bad just because you think he's hotter,,,isn't actually character development or good writing.
reblog this with your sign and your best friend’s sign because I wanna see
spring is just like *wildly oscillates between feeling a gut-wrenching melancholy and happily basking in the sun like a cat*
How to Predict Timing with Tarot
When performing a Celtic Cross, there are three cards that can reveal when the event will happen: the advice, the outcome, and the card at the bottom of the deck. While your intuition will tell you which is most likely, it is best to acknowledge all three possibilities.
THE MAJOR ARCANA
The Fool – Whenever you are ready
The Magician – It has already begun
The High Priestess – You know exactly when
The Empress – During harvest season
The Emperor – It is almost done
The Hierophant – It is finished
The Lovers – As soon as you make the choice
The Chariot – In just a few moments
Strength – The minute you accept it
The Hermit – Only after you meditate on it
The Wheel of Fortune – During your first or next Saturn return
Justice – When you least expect it
The Hanged Man – When the circumstances change
Death – Whenever it is ready
Temperance – After the storm
The Devil – It is happening right now
The Tower – Soon, unexpectedly and suddenly
The Star – The more you believe, the sooner it will happen
The Moon – It cannot be determined at the moment
The Sun – In the summer or by sunrise
Judgement – Soon and inevitably
The World – In divine timing
THE MINOR ARCANA
THE SUIT OF WANDS
Ace of Wands – One day
Two of Wands – Two days
Three of Wands – Three days
Four of Wands – Four days
Five of Wands – Five days
Six of Wands – Six days
Seven of Wands – Seven days
Eight of Wands – Eight days
Nine of Wands – Nine days
Ten of Wands – Ten days
Page of Wands – As we speak
Knight of Wands – End of November to most of December
Queen of Wands – End of March to most of April
King of Wands – End of July to most of August
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I saw what you said abt The Taking of Persephone and ever since its really been weighing on me that I CAN'T know and understand these things as what they truly are because I have, and continue to be taught them, through an American-ized lense. So I was just wondering if you'd be willing to share some other misconceptions? Or maybe sources that teach them as what they truly represent? I've always wanted to study mythology but I'm reluctant to do so knowing how butchered/watered down it's going to be.
I understand it isn't your job to teach mythology and history on Tumblr dot com, so if this isn't something you're comfortable with or even want to do that's completely fine and I get it. I hope you have a wonderful day!!
Okay first of all. I love you, thanks for being so kind and open minded in the ask.
As far as I know there isn't a good modern book about the mythos going around, at least in English, most of the things I know are verbal traditions that my grandparents have passed down to me, and the thing with verbal traditions is that differ from household to household, so there isn't really a correct version. But since I am a huge mythology nerd too, I can suggest reading the ancient Greeks. Which… I admit, can be boring at times. Or this just may be the thousands of hours I have spent analysing them at school taking.
I think I am gonna list some good ancient books talking about mythos in the first half, and then some plays, because they are more interesting than just old men ramblings, but also have dodekatheism as a main theme.
(Pseudo-) Apollodorus' Bibliotheca: He literally wrote this for the purpose to be used as a school textbook, so he keeps things 'simple'. It consists of 3 books:
The link will automatically lead you to a site with the first book, but it has a helpful table of contents that can lead you to any myth you want, written in any of the 3 volumes.
Hesiod's Theogony: An epic poet like Homer, so it's basically The God's family tree but make it ✨✨fancy✨✨:
Homer's Epics: You knew this was coming. If you haven't read them before but know the story, you might think that "Hey… this is only the middle part" but no friend, Homer decided to start both those Epics by the later middle of the story as you know it, He sometimes use the good ol' method of "The hero narrates what happened in the beginning of the story at some point", emphasis on sometimes. And in the Iliad's case: simply not write the ending. So yeah, those sure are something. Anyway here's the Iliad and the Odyssey:
And for plays, I will try to include actual performance too bc, well its more fun than reading. Don't expect any professional actors though. (also disclaimer, the plays will not be 100% according to the source material ofc) I will also avoid the trilogies and dilogies, because.. Who has time for that?
Alcestis by Euripides: It's the acting of a version of the myth of Alcestis, who gave her life in exchange for her husbands.
(kudos to actress that plays Thanatos on this one for being amazing and the actor of Herakles for turning serious lines into joke lines, love it)
<!--quoteTitle> by Euripides, part of the Internet Classics Archive
Oedipus Rex by Sophoclis : the original mothefucker. Its based around the myth of well, Oedipus, who is haunted by a prophecy that says he will kill his father and marry his mother. It is as weird as it sounds.
<!--quoteTitle> by Sophocles, part of the Internet Classics Archive
Helen by Euripides: okay I leave this for last because its not exactly mythos as much as fanfiction. Basically the Helen that Agamemnon got from Troy was nothing but an early version of an anime body pillow made by Hera. The real Helen is in Egypt and Agamemnon randomly ends up there and learns the truth. So the two lovebirds try to escape the crazy king of Egypt that wants to marry Helen.
<!--quoteTitle> by Euripides, part of the Internet Classics Archive
I got curious and made this. Which do you see when you read?
In fifth grade a boy tried to impress me by swallowing a whole tadpole live and I punched him so hard that he puked and the tadpole was fine.
I kept it in a terrarium and it became a normal 🐸 despite everything. About a year afterward (I thought) it died, so I sadly put it in a shoebox in the shed until the ground thawed enough for a proper funeral but when that day came I opened the box and the frog was fine.
This is funnier than anything I have ever said.
so i made a quiz on what role you'd have in a period drama..
i worked somewhat hard on it so you should take it
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Richard Siken, Little Beast // Sarah McLachlan, Circles // Mccafferty, Old Men Hate This Town // Counting Crows, Round Here
am i truly a she/they OR am i a they/them whose experience as a woman is so interwoven with their past & present life they will forever be unable to let go of it completely
let's talk more about deeper stuff. yes. go ahead and ask me about my opinions on soulmates, about what i think about stars, tell me about that cute cat you saw on your way to school, about a bunch of flowers you bought for your mom. tell me how you would describe this world, your aesthetics, your visions and dreams, about secret adventures still oblivious to your parents. ask me about the time of history no one cares about, about art and poems, talk about a favorite tattoo you would like to have, your favorite songs and what they mean to you, that movie which made you cry. describe that person you are in love with and your plans about confessing to them. do you like rooftop conversations or sleepovers? do you regret something so badly it keeps you up at night? what is your story? how do you want it to be? what do you want to be? tell me more. tell them all.
Reposting cuz the op was transphobic
How to add a “read more/keep reading” on mobile:
1. Just type what ever you want to be above the cut.
2. Hit enter. Then type :readmore:
3. Hit enter again and continue typing
*the :readmore: has to be on its own line or it won’t work
TO SAVE LIVES
You absolutely NEED to click enter when typing :readmore: ! You can’t just click underneath to start a new line
Was wondering how people did this (not that I have ever come up with a post long enough to warrant it or ever will but it’s nice to know) thank you
there is a sweetness in the early morning silence.
wHY DOES THIS HAVE JUST 308 NOTES???? THE ENTIRE WORLD SHOULD BE SHARING THIS. CHINA IS LITERALLY COMMITTING THE HOLOCAUST, ONLY THIS TIME ON MUSLIMS AND Y’ALL ARE SILENT?
i have 495 people following me right now, including several mutuals. i better see y’all reblogging.
People might not be reblogging this because the first tweet makes unnecessary (and untrue) Holocaust comparisons. Taken from @nat_slay on Twitter (I don’t know the original source):
The “ways to help” info seems good afaik but feel free to correct me if I’m wrong there too.
As a Jewish person, I appreciate those saying that this is not okay and that it is misinformation. No, 6 million Uyghur Muslims have not been murdered.
And, as a Jewish person, I know that 6 million very well could be murdered. This is not another Shoah, but it very well could become another. As a Jewish person, I feel we must say “never again.”
Never again.
“Never again” does not mean “this event was so uniquely horrible, it could never happen again.” It means “this event was horrible, but not unique. We have to make sure it never happens again.”
Never again.
The Uyghur death count isn’t 6 million, that is misinformation. But “never again” means we have to make sure it doesn’t become 6 million.
If you are not Jewish or Romani, do not draw comparisons to the Holocaust. All that provides is shock value and misinformation. What you can do is support Uyghur Muslims.
The link to the original post doesn’t work—here are other sources:
Source from The Silhouette
Source from Business Insider
Source from Middle East Forum
Source from India Blooms
Source #1 from Jewish News
Source #2 from Jewish News
Groups to donate to:
Charity Right’s Food for Uyghurs
Uyghur Human Rights Project
Petitions to sign:
Petition 1
Petition 2
If you have more relevant resources, please share them. Petitions are likely meaningless in contrast to the Chinese government.
For those who are able to, take action. For those who are unable to take action, please share.
It is important to reblog this version, with the commentary from metro and rainbow
“My child is fine” your child is disassociating to the song Soldier, Poet, King
the myth of persephone is about the trauma of the separation of mothers and daughters by marriage and this is the hill i will die on
To be clear I’m not against retellings that reinterpret the relationship between Hades and Persephone and present it as consensual and healthy– I do think there’s something incredibly powerful about looking at a story that’s been passed down to us through millennia about a girl being kidnapped and raped and saying “no. No, that’s not the kind of story I want to hear, that’s not the kind of story I want to tell, and that’s certainly not the kind of story I want my daughters to grow up on.” (Although I think it’s disappointing that these are now the only sorts of Persephone retellings we get, and at this point it’s really not a particularly revolutionary take, given how often it’s been done.)
But I also think we do a great disservice to the women of the ancient world by not remembering how this story, in that form, mirrored their very real pain. I’ve been thinking recently about how we can tell that women participated in the formation of their culture’s folklore because women’s trauma is embedded in it. (In Greek terms, the stories of Leto and Alcmene very clearly come out of women’s traumatic experiences with childbirth, and there are elements of women’s traumatic experiences of sexual assault embedded in, for example, the stories of Daphne or Callisto or Artemis and Actaeon) And the story of Persephone comes out of women’s experiences of being permanently separated from their mothers and daughters at marriage. (See also this post from @gardenvarietycrime.)
For an ancient woman sending her daughter off to be married, knowing that she will see her only rarely and that the odds of death in childbirth were high, Persephone meant something. For an ancient girl leaving her mother and her entire world for a man she may never have met knowing the same, Persephone meant something. I do think a lot of the conflation of death and marriage in the ancient world comes out of this: that a girl is dead to her mother and her family whether she leaves them to go to a husband’s house or the house of Hades. Maybe it’s a consolation to know that someone else has done this before you, to know that a goddess once lost her daughter and a goddess once lost her mother the same way you are losing yours. And that they survived it.
Essentially I think we need to remember that this myth (like all myths and all folklore) is not necessarily entirely the product of men, that women’s voices and women’s trauma remain embedded in it despite all of our written sources being men’s tellings of the story. And when we retell it we risk losing those voices if we are not careful and if we dismiss the myth as it survives today as solely men’s version of the story.
This myth from my culture teaches us how strongly mothers love their children and how marriage without the consent of the daughter and the mother (generally the important female figures in the family) can bring catastrophy - because women had power and nothing is more powerful than the wrath of a wronged mother. OP’s take isn’t hypothetical. THIS IS HOW THE TALE IS INTERPRETED IN THE CULTURE. Millions of Greek women have been in arranged marriages and this has only stopped recently. This tale gave strength to my female ancestors and the trauma they had to endure. I won’t have any of “this is a myth made entirely for men“ bullshit.
(I don’t have any problem with the retellings, of course. People can get inspired by anything they want and they can write whatever they want).
Yes finally someone says it! To be frank. This is the version of the myth us Greeks are taught. The name of the myth is “Η αρπαγή της Περσεφόνης” which translates too “The kidnapping/taking of Pershephone.”
Arranged marriage where the daughter had to go miles away from her family (and would be lucky to see them once a year!) only started to stop at our grandparents time. Many of our grandparents are in arranged mariagges.
The taking of Pershephone is a myth about the strong bond of a mother and her daughter, and how she took power in her hands. And I am thankful to my mother and grandmothers for teaching it to me.
And this myth still affects today’s women!
It’s the custom in Greece to name your children after your parents. First children take the father’s parents name, and the second son and second daughter can be named after the mother’s parents.
But when my mother gave birth to me, the first daughet, she chose to name me after her mother because, and I quote: “I re-read an old mythology book when I was pregnant with you, and I remembered the myth of Demeter and Pershephone. And I thought that I didn’t have to sit do what the men want, because you are my daughet, and I want to honor my mother first.”
What I try to say is that, retalling can be nice, but the original myth was supposed to empower women. And it still does today.