HAPPY PRIDE MONTH YALLLL

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from China

seen from Australia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Poland
seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from United States
HAPPY PRIDE MONTH YALLLL
My Au Mexicantale sans
Mexican sans lore
Art of my drunk Mexican child and other of my friends:3
@missingmoonflower - mush sans
mrloonyshrooms from TikTok - DraftSans
Mexican sans/ max + whale shark
Can someone help my poor child please
Eight Omens
“Eight Omens,” a tale of Montezuma from the Nahua (Mexico), Latin American Folktales (Pantheon Folktale Series), edited by John Bierhorst.
This is a list of omens seen in the years before the Spanish arrived, foretelling the fall of Montezuma--comets, fires, lightening strikes, mysterious sounds of weeping, and other strange events. It’s really quite chilling.
The Talking Stone
“The Talking Stone” a tale of Montezuma from the Nahua (Mexico), Latin American Folktales (Pantheon Folktale Series), edited by John Bierhorst.
In this tale, Montezuma discovers that there are mysteries beyond the power of even the greatest king. He wants a new stone for sacrificing prisoners. He wants the biggest and most beautiful stone to be found. He sends people out to find the perfect stone that will be a monument to his own greatness. They find just the right bolder. Stone cutters come in to chisel it into shape. It’s painted and decorated and blessed. They start trying to move it. That’s when things get weird. The stone starts talking and claiming it will not go on the journey. No matter how many ropes and levers and men they use to move the stone, they can’t budge it until it agrees to move. It does this in stages. They move it part way and stop several times until they read a lake. Halfway across the causeway, the stone announces that it will not go any farther. It sinks into the lake. Divers are sent to search for it, but they can find nothing. Later, when Montezuma sends people out to check the original spot the stone was taken from, it is back in it’s place, with its new shape and decorations and all.
The story comes with omens and warnings that Montezuma will not always be king, the even the time of kings comes to an end.
It’s a wonderful reminder of life’s mysteries. It’s a reminder that the spirit world and the natural world follow their own laws and are not subject to the governments of men.