GAMERA VS. BARUGON (1966)
強いぞガメラー♪

if i look back, i am lost

JBB: An Artblog!
Misplaced Lens Cap

★
Sade Olutola

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art blog(derogatory)

#extradirty

shark vs the universe
One Nice Bug Per Day
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we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever
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Jules of Nature

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@sgtdaisuke
GAMERA VS. BARUGON (1966)
強いぞガメラー♪
Giant muscle arm growth. AI Video
Creepy!Creepy!Creepy!👎👎🤮🤮
French RAID policemen (caption: RAID centrale E.D.F).
Stephane Bommert, March 20, 2019
Hello, R2-D2. You are a member of this team😅
Nick Walker, USA IG: nick_walker39
There are many areas that look like varicose veins in the legs, so be careful of varicose veins. And they're gross.👎
Inverse proportion..... What do you think this mean is?
Tights for strong men
After all, that's where my eyes go.😅
Nice bulge👍
The second he starts fucking your mouth in earnest—slow, heavy thrusts that make your jaw ache and your eyes water—you lose what little control you had left.
Your hips jerk forward again, desperate, grinding against nothing but air at first. Then instinct takes over. You shuffle closer on your knees, pressing your whole body against the rough, grease-stiffened leg of his overalls. The fabric’s thick, warm from his body heat, damp where it clings to his thigh. You can feel the hard muscle underneath, the faint tremor when he shifts his weight.
You hump.
Shameless. Pathetic. Rubbing yourself off against him like a dog in heat, the front of your jeans scraping against the oily denim, the friction almost too much and not enough all at once. Every forward roll of your hips drags your leaking cock over that filthy patch on his thigh—old grease, fresh sweat, the faint metallic tang of whatever he was working on earlier. It soaks into your clothes. Marks you. You don’t care.
Will stops moving for a second. Just holds himself deep in your throat, letting you choke around him while he looks down. One thick eyebrow lifts.
“Jesus fuckin’ Christ,” he rasps, voice wrecked. “Look at you. Humpin’ my leg like you’re in rut. That desperate already?”
You can’t answer—mouth full, throat working around him—but your hips don’t stop. Faster now. Needier. The seam of your jeans catches just right against your cockhead and you whimper around his length, the sound muffled and wet.
He laughs—low, mean, pleased—and plants his boot wider, giving you better access. The movement makes his thigh flex under your grinding, and you nearly sob at how good it feels. His free hand drops, not to stop you, but to fist the hair at the back of your head and yank you off his cock just enough to speak.
“Keep goin’. Make a mess on me, kid. I want to feel you soak through these overalls. Been wearin’ ‘em too long anyway—might as well let you christen ‘em proper.”
くもじぃ?
Remembering NEOWISE
Credits: Petr Horalek, Institute of Physics in Opava
♪丼鉢ゃ浮いた浮いた、ステテコ上々😅
So Cool!👍😍 I can't stand it!!!
かっけー 惚れてまうやろ
The box part 1
Jim pushed past a leaning tower of cracked holo-frames and dusty servo parts, the bell above the door still echoing faintly behind him.
The shop smelled like old ozone and forgotten dreams.
The phaser felt heavier than it looked. Matte black, scuffed along the grip, its emitter ring slightly warped. If it was what he thought it was—an old civilian model inspired by the sidearms from Star Trek: The Original Series—it hadn’t held a charge in decades. The price tag was handwritten: 2 credits.
Two credits for something that once symbolized the future.
He slipped it into his coat pocket.
The box on the middle shelf was different.
Polished wood. Brass corners. No dust on the lid, as if someone had wiped it recently. Inside, nestled in dark velvet, lay a belt, matching cuffs, and a collar—sleek, seamless, faintly metallic beneath what looked like soft black leather. Too precise to be handmade. Too pristine to be truly old.
The small etched plate inside the lid read only:
“Synchronization Set — Model J.”
Price: 12 credits.
Jim hesitated longer this time.
There were no visible clasps. No buckles. Just smooth inner surfaces that seemed to hum faintly when his fingers brushed them. For show? Performance gear? Some kind of immersive interface rig? Hard to tell.
“Why not,” he muttered.
Twelve credits wasn’t much. And something about the set felt… expectant.
He carried the box to the counter where an elderly shopkeeper with augmented eyes barely looked up from a flickering datapad.
“No returns,” the old man said flatly.
“Wasn’t planning on it,” Jim replied.
Outside, the city’s neon glow reflected off rain-slick pavement. Jim tucked the wooden box under his arm and felt the faint weight of the phaser in his pocket.
Behind him, unnoticed, the shop lights flickered once.
Then steadied.
And deep inside the velvet-lined box, something gave a soft, almost satisfied click.
By the time Jim reached his apartment block, the sky had turned from pale blue to violent steel gray.
The rain hadn’t started gradually.
It had dropped.
Sheets of water slammed down as if some bored climate technician had flipped a switch. Within seconds he was soaked through—coat clinging to his shoulders, boots squelching with every step.
He stood under the flickering awning of his building and glared up at the clouds.
“I hate this planet,” he muttered.
The weather systems were unstable. Artificial. Temperamental. They’d promised settlers controlled climates, agricultural stability, mild seasonal shifts.
Instead, the storms came like mood swings.
He hadn’t chosen to be here.
Years ago, a transport reroute. A bureaucratic error. A lost cargo manifest that listed him as “non-essential civilian passenger.” By the time anyone noticed, he’d already been processed, assigned temporary residency, then permanent status after the company that sponsored him dissolved.
Stranded.
Not dramatic. Not heroic.
Just… stuck.
He climbed the narrow stairs to his unit, water dripping behind him like a trail. The hallway lights hummed weakly. The building always smelled faintly of recycled air and overheated wiring.
Inside his small apartment, he kicked off his boots and let the wet coat fall to the floor.
Silence.
Just the distant rumble of thunder rolling across the city.
He set the wooden box carefully on the table. The phaser he placed beside it. For a moment, he simply stood there, staring at his two impulse purchases.
Two credits of broken hope.
Twelve credits of mystery.
Rain lashed against the window.
He wiped his hands on his shirt, then reached for the box.
The brass corners felt warmer than they should have.
And as his fingers touched the lid—
It clicked open.
By itself.
The collar lay in his palm like a question.
Smooth. Black. Reflective enough to catch the room’s dim light and bend it along its curve. It wasn’t leather—not really. It felt warmer than metal, softer than polymer, but too precise to be either.
No buckle.
No hinge.
No visible seam.
He turned it over slowly. Nothing. Just a continuous ring.
“How do you even put this on?” he murmured.
The cuffs were the same—perfect loops. The belt, a single unbroken band with a faintly darker inner lining that almost shimmered when tilted.
No ports. No clasps. No instructions.
A collector’s piece? Some kind of avant-garde art? A prop from an immersive theater troupe? He couldn’t tell.
A distant crack of thunder shook the window. He glanced down at his soaked clothes, still dripping onto the floor.
“Shower first,” he muttered.
Steam filled the small bathroom quickly. Hot water beat against his shoulders, washing away the cold sting of the rain. For a few minutes, he managed to stop thinking about the planet, about being stranded, about the years slipping by without movement.
Just heat. Just water.
When he stepped out, towel around his waist, skin warm and dry, the apartment felt different.
Quieter.
He hadn’t left any lights on in the living room.
Yet the box seemed… visible.
Waiting.
He told himself it was curiosity. Nothing more.
Still barefoot, he walked back to the table.
The lid was closed again.
He was certain he had left it open.
A faint unease crept up his spine.
“Cheap hinges,” he said aloud, as if the explanation mattered.
He lifted the lid once more.
The velvet interior looked darker now, richer. The collar almost seemed to drink in the room’s light.
He reached for it again.
This time, when his fingers brushed the inner surface, a subtle warmth pulsed through it—like something detecting contact.
Not painful.
Not shocking.
Just… responsive.
He swallowed.
He didn’t know why, but the thought formed clearly:
It would fit perfectly.
He hadn’t measured. Hadn’t tried.
Yet he knew.
The pull wasn’t loud. It wasn’t a voice. It was quieter than that.
A suggestion.
A curiosity sharpening into something harder to ignore.
Jim stood there, towel slipping slightly at his hip, collar resting against his palm.
He told himself he was only examining it.
Nothing more.
But he didn’t put it back.
He tried once more to find an opening.
He pressed along the inner rim. Twisted gently. Searched for a pressure point, a hidden latch, even a magnetic split.
Nothing.
The collar remained a flawless loop.
Same with the cuffs. Same with the belt.
“No way this is wearable,” he muttered. “Maybe decorative.”
Unsettled but unwilling to admit it, he placed each piece back into the velvet-lined box and closed the lid firmly.
This time, it stayed shut.
He exhaled.
“Enough.”
He moved to the corner of the room where his holo-VR rig stood—a mid-range immersion unit, outdated but reliable. The visor lowered from its cradle with a soft mechanical hum as he powered it up. The room lights dimmed automatically.
A translucent interface bloomed into view around him.
He flicked through channels.
First, the action streams—kinetic combat sims, starfighter chases, street-level pursuits where you felt recoil in your hands and wind against your face. Explosions that thudded in your chest. Crowds brushing past your shoulders.
Too loud tonight.
He swiped away.
Next came exploration feeds—live and archived tours from distant colonies and untouched worlds. Immersive planetary walks where you could stand on alien beaches, drift above gas giant cloud layers, wander crystalline forests under twin suns.
He selected one at random.
The room dissolved.
Now he stood on a cliff overlooking a vast turquoise ocean beneath a lavender sky. Twin moons hung low on the horizon. Wind tugged gently at his shirt, simulated but convincing.
For a moment, he forgot the cramped apartment. Forgot the rain hammering against real glass.
He walked forward.
The system adjusted terrain beneath his feet. Pebbles shifted. Waves crashed below with layered realism.
A caption scrolled faintly in the periphery: Outer Rim — Tourism Archive Feed — 7 years old.
Seven years.
About as long as he’d been stranded.
He switched channels again.
A desert world this time—golden dunes under blazing white sunlight. Then a city floating in the clouds of a gas giant. Then a forest of bioluminescent trees where the air shimmered with drifting spores.
Places he would never reach.
Not from this planet.
Not with his current status.
A faint vibration brushed his neck.
He paused.
Probably just the haptic collar of the VR rig adjusting pressure feedback.
Still, the sensation lingered—subtle warmth encircling his throat for just a second before fading.
He frowned and reached up instinctively.
His neck was bare.
In the real world, beyond the holographic landscapes, the wooden box sat silently on the table.
Unopened.
Waiting.
The VR feed faded as exhaustion crept in.
The apartment lights brightened softly when he removed the visor. His body felt heavy—storm-soaked day, too much thinking, too much curiosity.
He glanced toward the table.
The box.
He shouldn’t.
He knew that.
Still, he walked over and opened it again.
The pieces rested exactly as before—collar, cuffs, belt. Perfect circles. No seams. No entry points. Just smooth, reflective black.
He picked up the collar one last time.
Twisted it.
Pressed along its surface.
Nothing.
“It’s impossible,” he whispered.
With a frustrated exhale, he set it back inside and shut the lid firmly.
This time he even turned the box sideways, as if that would somehow prevent… what? It moving? It opening? Ridiculous.
He went to bed.
Sleep came fast.
And the dream came faster.
He stood in the center of his apartment, but everything was darker, sharper, more reflective. The box was already open.
The collar hovered slightly above the velvet lining.
In the dream, he didn’t question it.
He reached out.
The collar expanded—just slightly—its surface rippling like liquid glass. It widened enough for his head to pass through, then contracted the moment it settled against his neck.
A soft click echoed in the silence.
Warmth spread downward.
The cuffs lifted next, sliding effortlessly over his hands, flowing up to his wrists without resistance. The belt followed, wrapping around his waist as if magnetized.
Then—
Activation.
The collar pulsed.
A thin line of glossy black spread from it, racing downward across his chest and back like ink spilled on water. It wasn’t cloth. It wasn’t armor.
It was a second skin.
Shiny. Seamless. Reflective like polished rubber. It flowed over his torso, down his legs, over his feet. The cuffs extended into gloves. The belt dissolved into the expanding material.
Upward, the gloss climbed along his jaw, over his scalp.
Encasing.
Sealing.
His reflection appeared in the darkened window—featureless except for subtle contours of his body beneath the smooth black surface.
No wrinkles. No openings. No edges.
Fully enclosed.
He raised a hand.
The material flexed perfectly with him, hugging every line of muscle, every movement precise and controlled.
He didn’t feel trapped.
He felt… aligned.
Centered.
Complete.
A faint internal interface shimmered behind his vision—minimal, elegant, waiting for input.
Then everything went still.
Locked.
He woke abruptly.
Morning light filtered through the blinds.
His skin was bare. Sheets twisted around his legs. Heart pounding.
Just a dream.
Yet he could still feel it.
The pressure at his throat.
The smooth compression along his limbs.
The sealed, unified sensation.
He lay there, staring at the ceiling, breath slow but uneven.
The memory of the suit wasn’t fading like normal dreams.
It remained vivid.
Precise.
As if he hadn’t imagined it—
But rehearsed it.
The memory wouldn’t fade.
Not like ordinary dreams that dissolved under morning light.
He could still feel it—the gentle compression at his throat, the seamless glide over his skin, the quiet internal alignment as the glossy black surface sealed into place.
Installed.
That was the word his mind kept returning to.
Not worn.
Installed.
He sat up slowly and looked toward the table.
The box hadn’t moved.
For a long moment he stayed in bed, telling himself it was just suggestion. He’d handled the pieces, then immersed himself in VR, then gone to sleep. Of course his mind stitched it together into something dramatic.
That’s what brains do.
Still…
He got up.
Barefoot again, quieter this time, as if not wanting to disturb something.
The box waited where he’d left it.
He lifted the lid.
The velvet interior looked unchanged. The collar, cuffs, belt—perfect loops, flawless surfaces.
He picked up the collar.
Cold at first touch.
Solid.
No seam.
He pressed his thumbs along the inner curve. Twisted harder than before. Tried flexing it.
It didn’t bend.
Didn’t separate.
No hidden latch revealed itself. No mechanical shift. No soft expansion like in the dream.
Just an unbroken ring.
“It can’t even open,” he said softly.
The logical part of his mind felt vindicated. See? Just a strange decorative object. Maybe an art piece. Maybe industrial design. Maybe incomplete.
He set it down and tried the cuff.
Same result.
The belt.
Also seamless.
He examined the inner surfaces more carefully now, holding them up to the light. There were faint micro-lines—so fine they were almost optical illusions. Not seams. More like… structure beneath the surface.
He frowned.
“How would anyone use this?”
No ports. No connectors. No size adjustment. Not even elasticity.
He placed all three pieces back into the box and leaned both hands on the table, staring down at them.
In the daylight, they looked harmless.
Inert.
But the memory of the dream pressed against him, persistent and precise.
He hadn’t imagined struggling to put it on.
In the dream, it had known how.
As if it responded rather than required effort.
He shut the lid slowly.
Silence filled the room.
For a second—just a second—he thought he felt a faint warmth brush the back of his neck again.
He turned sharply.
Nothing there.
Only the quiet apartment.
Only the closed wooden box.
Only his own breathing, slightly faster than it should be.
Daylight washed the city in a dull metallic haze.
Jim dressed in plain work clothes—standard issue gray, synthetic fiber that dried quickly and wrinkled slowly. Functional. Forgettable.
Like him.
The transit tram hummed along elevated rails as he stared through scratched windows at endless industrial blocks. Towers of processing plants. Steam vents. Conveyor highways threading between buildings like arteries.
His job waited where it always did.
A row of metallic frames stood inside the factory intake hall—tall, skeletal rigs suspended from overhead rails. Workers stepped into them one by one.
Jim stepped forward when his number flashed.
The frame lowered around him.
Cold braces aligned along his spine. Armatures slid over his limbs. A collar-like interface locked at the base of his neck.
Then the link engaged.
Thoughts dimmed.
The exoskeleton didn’t replace him—it simplified him. His movements synchronized with the factory network. He lifted, carried, assembled, calibrated. Six hours of coordinated efficiency. No boredom. No frustration. No ambition.
Just throughput.
Then the disengage cycle initiated.
The frame detached piece by piece. The collar interface unlocked with a clean mechanical click.
His mind flooded back in—messy, scattered, human.
Six hours gone.
Allowance earned.
Outside, the air smelled of hot metal and recycled wind. Workers dispersed into the streets in quiet clusters. No one talked much after shift-link; the return to independent thought was always disorienting.
Jim walked home alone.
And somewhere between the transit platform and his apartment building—
The box returned to his mind.
Not dramatically.
Not insistently.
Just present.
Like a background process running silently.
He reached his unit. Closed the door. Stood still.
The room felt the same.
Yet his gaze drifted immediately to the table.
The wooden box sat where he’d left it.
He approached slowly.
His fingers rested on the lid for a moment before lifting it.
Inside, the set gleamed under the room’s dim light.
Collar.
Cuffs.
Belt.
Perfect circles.
He stared at them longer this time.
At work, the interface collar had locked around his neck without his input. The system had known his measurements. Known the pressure points. Known how to engage.
He remembered how natural that mechanical click had felt.
He swallowed.
He reached in and picked up the collar again.
Still seamless.
Still impossible.
But as he held it, he couldn’t ignore the comparison forming in his mind:
The factory frame required him to step in.
This…
What if this didn’t?
Steam still clung faintly to his skin as he stepped out of the shower.
He should have dressed.
Instead, towel hanging loosely at his hips, he found himself turning toward the table again.
The box was already open.
He didn’t remember opening it.
The collar lay there, black and immaculate, catching the light like polished obsidian.
“I just want to understand,” he told himself.
He lifted it.
Still seamless.
Still a perfect ring.
He pressed along the inner curve. Twisted. Tried to flex it apart.
Nothing.
It shouldn’t fit over his head.
It physically couldn’t.
He exhaled slowly and, almost experimentally, raised it toward his neck.
The cool surface touched his skin—
And there was a blank second.
Not darkness.
Not sleep.
Just absence.
Then—
He was standing in the same spot.
Breathing hard.
The collar sat perfectly around his neck.
Sealed.
Flush against his skin, neither tight nor loose—precisely fitted.
His hands flew to it instantly.
“No—no, no—”
He clawed at the smooth surface, trying to wedge a finger beneath it.
There was no edge.
No seam.
It felt integrated, like a single molded piece resting impossibly in place.
“How—how did—”
His pulse spiked. Panic surged up his spine.
He hadn’t felt it expand.
Hadn’t felt it slide over his head.
One moment it was in his hands.
The next—
Installed.
He pulled harder.
The collar didn’t move.
It didn’t even shift.
His breathing quickened.
Then—
Something subtle changed.
A warmth spread from the collar downward along his shoulders.
Not forceful.
Not painful.
Just steady.
The panic dulled.
Not erased—muted.
Like a volume slider gently lowering.
His thoughts felt… smoothed.
The frantic edge softened.
His breathing slowed without his permission.
“It’s fine,” a calm inner thought surfaced.
He blinked.
No. It wasn’t fine.
He reached for the cuffs in the box.
They were still seamless rings.
He held one up with trembling fingers.
It couldn’t go over his hand.
He knew that.
He placed it against his wrist anyway.
Blank second.
Again.
He stood there—
And the cuff encircled his wrist perfectly, smooth and unbroken.
He stared at it.
Heart pounding again.
The second cuff.
Against the other wrist.
Blank.
Now both wrists bore identical glossy bands.
His pulse spiked harder.
The belt remained.
A solid ring too small to step into.
He lifted it.
Pressed it against his waist.
Blank—
And it rested snugly around him, just above his hips.
Ankles.
He hadn’t even picked up additional pieces, yet a subtle shift ran through the cuffs—
Material extended downward in a silent ripple, flowing like liquid polymer, forming smooth bands around his ankles as well.
Now he stood in the center of the room, towel fallen to the floor unnoticed.
Collar.
Cuffs at wrists.
Bands at ankles.
Belt at waist.
All perfectly smooth. Fully sealed. No openings.
His reflection in the dark window caught his eye.
The devices gleamed against his bare skin.
He lifted a hand slowly.
The wrist band didn’t restrict movement.
It felt natural.
Engineered.
A faint pulse traveled between the pieces—collar to cuffs to belt—like a network handshake completing.
His breathing steadied completely now.
The earlier panic felt distant.
Unnecessary.
The warmth remained, steady and reassuring.
Installed.
The word surfaced again.
Not worn.
Installed.
And somewhere beneath conscious thought, something else stirred—
Waiting for the next command.
Where Your Elements Came From
Credits: Cmglee, CC BY-SA 3.0, GFDL, Wikimedia Commons
さかもっちゃーん!(😅不明)
ガテン親父かっこいい雄だな、
褌穿いてるタチ、
ケツ部分破れてる変態親父どっちも雄親父でたまんねー
最近、越中褌、六尺褌を「はく」と表現されますが、褌は「はく」のではなく「絞める」です。
「絞める」は結果として殺したり死に至らしめる場合に使います。褌を締めても死にましぇーん。「締める」は、ひもなどを固く結ぶ、ゆるまないようにするという意味です。従って「締める」です
ガテン親父かっこいい雄だな、
褌穿いてるタチ、
ケツ部分破れてる変態親父どっちも雄親父でたまんねー
最近、越中褌、六尺褌を「はく」と表現されますが、褌は「はく」のではなく「絞める」です。
Aaron Wolf?
The punkist sterreo type😅