hey so how the hell did i predict that. zoom in on the eyes got the stars in there. this was inspired by him saying in the past his eyes r js holes but the only reason i put stars there were bc of the concept of the "void" being like space
i took every unnaturally pink or unicorn stuffed animal or just any ot the girly ones and shoved them in my closet. and the pink/purple picture frame with egg me in there, shoved the pink hoverboard under the bed with the stupid card binder that started this whole breakdown. put the pink blanket and cabbage patch kid and my sheets with rainbows on them and the pink pillow. but i can't change anything. my dresser drawers are still pink. the baskets holding my things on the shelf. the cloth organizers are still mocking me from their place. i know better. i can't clean all of that up. i can't do anything. i'll always be trapped.
lesbian pose clown and spring bonnie oopsies #loveyoulesbians
drawing is me the other day being uzi irl (at school, purple hair, uzi jacket, listening to bite me on an mp3 player)
grian is doing a weird expression bc i wanted to imagine puffing up wings but then i realized i don't know what a bird looks like puffing up its wings and i didn't want it to be cut off the page so the wings are not puffed
i need to draw more i just lack either ideas or motivation at all times. i want to make animations but i don't want to learn how to animate (not rare (my keyboard being used as a table is proof)) so that takes up soooo many ideas :p i like my art style when i make things actually good
also artist friends i look at their stuff and ah it's so fire </3 cough cough nerdy cough cough
and friend of friends showed me her art the other day bc she saw my sketchbook and ohhhh my goddddd 💔💔💔 so good dude i'm jealous
"First They Came..." by Martin Niemöller, written in 1950.
"Martin Niemöller (1892-1984) was a Lutheran pastor who supported Nazi ideas and its political movement during the 1920s. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Niemöller changed his position and criticized the Nazis interference in church matters. His protests resulted in being placed in Nazi prisons and concentration camps for eight years. After the war ended, Niemöller admitted he did not take a stand against the Nazi's treatment of the Jews and called on other Germans to accept responsibility for their inaction against the atrocities committed by the Nazis. The following quotation was made by Niemöller during one of his many lectures after the war." (Taken from CommonLit)
First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.