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This post is a continuation of my last post Here
There will be mentions in this post of killing in self defense, if you can't handle that keep scrolling.
Self-Defense When Youâre Physically Disabled:
By someone who is disabled, and who has actually used severe maiming and attempted lethal force in self defense.
I will not be covering firearms in this. I can use a firearm, I am comfortable with a firearm. I think leftists should get more comfortable with firearms. I also believe in gun control. I'm also not comfortable teaching you to use a firearm. Go take classes, I'm serious.
English is my fourth language. Be mindful of weird wording or phrasing herein.
Staff this post is not meant to incite violence, it is written for those who are in a position where they may lose their lives if they do not fight back. Don't out yourselves as bigger cucks than you are by fucking with me.
I will go over some basics first, then I have written up advice for specific disabilities and people with specific mobility aids.
The first thing I want to say is this: if you are disabled, you are not defenseless. I donât care what anyone else has told you. I donât care what the world has tried to grind into your head.
You may not fight like an able-bodied person, but you are not defenseless.
Now, the world does stack the deck against you. People will see your chair, your cane, your limp, your brace, your slower gait, and they will think âeasy target.â They will think you are prey.
Some of them will even convince themselves theyâre doing you a favor by targeting you because you. These people are cowards. And cowards fold when they realize their target has teeth.
So, letâs talk teeth.
⊠Weapons are your best friends. If you can legally carry something; pepper spray, bear spray, a taser, a collapsible baton, do it. If you canât carry those, improvise. A heavy flashlight. Keys threaded between your fingers. A cane with weight behind it. Donât underestimate what a steel chair armrest or the hard edge of a crutch can do if swung with intent. Your mobility aid is not just support; it can be a weapon if you need it to be.
My warning is thus, never carry a weapon you cannot deal with if it is turned against you.
My advice however is also twofold: If your attacker has a weapon, and you can turn it against them, you should.
Now we continue.
Leverage over speed. You might not be able to run or grapple. Thatâs fine. You donât need speed, you need angles and pain.
Aim for soft spots: eyes, genitals, knees, throat. Strike fast and mean. Your goal is not to âwinâ, the only "win" state in this situation is living, your main goals should be to break their focus long enough to get away or for someone else to intervene. Barring that, to disable them long enough to leave.
Learn positioning. If you use a wheelchair, practice locking it down and using your arms to defend yourself (More detail further down)
If you use crutches or a cane (which I do sometimes), practice swinging them with both accuracy and balance.
If you have chronic pain (which I do always), practice two to three you know you can pull off in a rush of adrenaline, and train them until theyâre automatic.
One solid move you can do, is better than a hundred theoretical ones in your head that you can't. And you need to practice, being in your own head isn't practice. Make the movements, it's also good exercise, so you win even if you never have to use it for real.
Train your voice. People underestimate yelling. A sharp, loud âBACK THE FUCK OFFâ can disrupt an attackerâs confidence. More importantly, it can draw attention. Think of your voice as another weapon, one that makes witnesses look your way.
Try to avoid starting with yelling threats, as it can make people more violent, but if they keep coming, do threaten, partially because it may make people balk, and partially because in many states (mine for example) you may not be allowed to physically defend yourself if you do not make your intention to defend yourself known.
Where I live, I am allowed to injure, maim, or kill another person if the following criteria are met:
I genuinely believe my health and safety may be at risk from an attacker
I warn my attacker of my intent to injure, maim, or kill.
My personal go to is a firm, but not shouted "If you continue to approach me, I will defend myself with lethal force"
Or rather, my personal go to is "If you take another step towards me I'll fucking kill you", and this has actually made people back off most of the time, but if you can be more reasonable than me, you should try to be.
Get comfortable with being ruthless.
You donât need to fight fair.
You donât need to fight âclean.â
If theyâve decided to prey on someone disabled, theyâve already forfeited the right to mercy. Bite if you have to. Spit in their eyes, or better yet, pop their eyes with fingers, keys, a pen, whatever you have.
Jam a cane into their throat and then again into their mouth, aim to break teeth, if you live where you are allowed to defend yourself with lethal force, like I am, just drive down all the way through the back of the throat with the entirety of your weight and force.
There are no style points in survival.
society already tells you that your life is worth less or altogether worthless. That you should sit down, shut up, and take whatever comes. Refusing to die quietly is rebellion. Refusing to be a compliant victim is justice.
Every second you keep yourself alive is a rejection of the lie that you are easy prey.
You donât need to be fast. You donât need to be strong. You just need to be willing.
Self-Defense for Wheelchair Users
Hereâs something nobody wants to admit: a lot of predators see a wheelchair and think âeasy target.â They see you as immobile, fragile, unable to fight back. That assumption is their weakness. Because the truth is, you are sitting in a likely 200+ lb battering ram with steel and aluminum edges, and if you learn to use it, you are a lot scarier than they expect.
So letâs talk tactics.
Weapons:
Pepper spray, bear spray, mace, there are many sprayables, whichever is legal where you live is your best friend. Especially when deployed at seated height. Most able-bodied attackers expect spray aimed at face level; from a chair, you should aim upwards directly into the eyes from below, or the nasal passages depending on how close they are.
Mind the wind, you don't want it to spray back towards you.
Keep something weighted or pointed but casual in an easy-to-grab spot: a heavy flashlight, a tactical pen, or even a heavy padlock on a short strap ( <- This last one was one my dad used)
Your chair itself is a weapon. The footrests and armrests are hard edges. The frame is likely solid steel or aluminum. A quick shove into someoneâs shin or knee can cripple their momentum.
Your Tactics:
Lock your wheels if youâre absolutely cornered. This turns your chair into an anchored platform. Your arms are free, and now the chair wonât roll away from your own hits.
Ram forward. 200+ pounds of momentum into someoneâs knee, genitals, or shin is no joke.
Side strikes. Swinging the chair sideways into someoneâs legs can knock them off balance.
Grab and pull. If someone leans close, grab their clothing and yank down hard while ramming forward, youâll destabilize them instantly, from here you have the advantage and may, if legal, use maiming force with ease. Be mindful not to bring their mouth near you, humans can and will bite when pressed.
Upper Body Strikes:
Eyes. Throat. genitals. Knees. Do not waste time punching shoulders or ribs, you won't do a thing. Go for disabling targets.
A closed fist is fine, but a sharp jab with keys, a pen, or your nails is better. You want pain and shock, not boxing form. I sometimes talk about the time I blinded a man, and when I did so I did so with keys.
Take the keys, close them in your fist so they jut between your fingers/knuckles (whatever works with your hand abilities) and aim for soft issue such as the eyes. I always say go for the eyes first with whatever you have, a blind attacker is no longer an attacker.
Society wants you to believe that being disabled means being defenseless. But you are not defenseless, you just fight differently. You must fight from a seated angle, but you have weapons already built into your mobility.
You donât need to run. You donât need to stand. You need to be willing.
And once youâre willing, you are no longer prey.
Every time you fight back, every time you remind someone that your body is worth defending, you reject the story this world has tried to write for you, the false narrative where you are weak, passive, disposable.
Refusing to die quietly is rebellion. Making an attacker bleed because they thought your chair made you easy is praxis.
Self-Defense for Crutch and Cane Users
People look at crutches or canes and see fragility. What they donât realize is you are literally walking around with a stick, and a stick is one of the oldest, most reliable weapons in human history.
Predators see a limp and think âslow.â What they should be thinking is âthat person has a metal baton in their hand.â
Weapons:
A cane isnât just a mobility aid, itâs a baton, a crowbar, a spear, and a club all in one.
Crutches are even scarier: youâve got leverage, length, and a blunt end that can hit like a hammer.
Anything with a rubber stopper has more grip than they expect. The thud of rubber against bone is devastating.
Tactics For Canes:
Jab forward. Straight to the solar plexus, gut, genitals, mouth, eyes, or skull. Fast, sharp, and as hard as you can. Now is not the time to worry about hurting or killing someone. You must make peace with hurting someone now.
Sweep low. Take out ankles. Once they're on the floor do not stop: If you are allowed to use lethal force to defend yourself, bring the end of your cane down through their mouth into the back of their throat or one of their eyes with as much sharp force and weight as you can manage.
Hook strike. If your cane has a curved handle, hook it around an, ankle, or neck and yank with as much force as you can, pull your whole weight back.
Overhead angles. If theyâre close, bring it down on collarbones, noses, or the tops of hands. People underestimate how much damage a 'stick' can do until their bones fracture.
Tactics for Crutches:
Two-handed ram. Plant both crutches, lean forward with your full weight, and drive them like lances into knees, genitals, or faces.
One-handed swing. Hold one like a baseball bat and strike from the side. Aim for faces, throat/neck, or head.
Stomp assist. If they go down, youâve got the rubber tips, stomp down hard with the end onto ankles, genitals or hands. Painful, disabling, fast. If you are allowed to use lethal force, do the same thing driving down through the mouth and the back of the throat.
Leverage push. Crutches give you long reach. Use them to shove someone back, create space, and buy time.
A lot of people hesitate because they donât want to âbreakâ their mobility aid. But ask yourself: would you rather replace a cane, or replace an eye, a tooth, lose your life?
These tools are extensions of your body, they are there to keep you safe.
A cracked cane is nothing compared to a broken rib.
Society frames canes and crutches as shameful, as signs of weakness, as proof youâre âless than.â But in reality, they are connection to every human who ever fought with a staff or club. You carry a weapon openly, and the world pretends not to see it. That invisibility is to your advantage.
You do not need to apologize for fighting dirty. You do not need to be polite when your life is threatened. If someone sees your cane and thinks âeasy target,â then the most revolutionary thing you can do is swing that cane so hard they never think it again.
Youâre not fragile. Youâre armed.
Self-Defense for Walker and Rollator Users
Walkers and rollators are usually thought of as cages, barriers, or slow, clunky tools. But in a fight, theyâre cover, armor, and battering rams. They give you reach, stability, and more steel tubing than most people expect. Used right, they are terrifyingly effective.
Weapons:
A walker is a steel frame. That means itâs blunt force trauma waiting to be used.
Rollators (with wheels) often move faster, and the brakes and frame give you control points to shove, pin, or trap someone.
Anything with a seat doubles as a shield.
Tactics for Walkers:
Ram. Grab the sides, put your weight behind it, and drive it into shins or knees. The square frame makes impact hard to dodge. Your goal is to get someone on the ground.
Lift and drop. If you can lift even a little, bring the front legs up and drop them down onto a foot. Metal legs + gravity = broken toes. If you can get them on the ground first, you can access more places: Ganitals, Throat, Face.
Pushback. A walker is a wall. Shove forward into their midsection to knock them off balance or pin them against a surface, do it hard, as hard as you can, use your full weight. Your goal is to at least wind, better yet to damage organs.
Use the Edge. The corners of a walker frame can be targeted like a spearpoint. Drive the edge into genitals, the side below the ribs, throat, or gut.
Tactics for Rollators:
Brake, bash, repeat. Roll it fast into someone, then slam the brakes so it hits with sudden force.
Wheel trap. Catch their foot under a wheel, then twist the frame sideways to torque their ankle as hard as you can, your goal is to at least twist it, but your bigger aim is preferably to break it.
Use the seat as a shield. Flip it sideways and youâve got a barrier between you and them. Buy yourself seconds to yell, escape, or counterattack.
Swing. If you have the strength, rollators can be tipped on their side and swung. Even a partial swing will hurt.
People often freeze because they think walkers are âdelicate.â Theyâre not. Theyâre built to hold your full body weight and then some. They can handle ramming into walls, they can handle ramming into an attacker.
If it bends or warps, that means it did its job and kept you safe. Better a busted frame than a busted skull.
Walkers and rollators symbolize dependence in the public imagination, and people love to project weakness onto them. But thatâs their blindness, not yours.
You are armored in plain sight, carrying a wall of steel tubing every time you step outside. You have reach, stability, and force multiplication.
If someone thinks your walker makes you easy prey, then itâs time to turn that frame into a weaponized reminder: you are not fragile, and you are not unprotected. You are the tank in this fight.
Self-Defense for Amputees and Prosthetic Users
First, the truth: fighting without a limb or with a prosthetic is not a handicap in self-defense, itâs just a different fighting style. The world assumes disability equals weakness, but the second you lean into your body as it is, you will find new, unexpected forms of strength.
Prosthetics as Weapons:
Leg prosthetics: A solid prosthetic leg is blunt force incarnate. Kicks with a prosthetic can break ribs or knock someone down with far less effort than a meat limb. Even stomps hit harder, no pain nerves means no self-injury holding you back. Or at least that's the case for me as someone with a condition that lowers pain feedback in certain parts of my body.
Arm prosthetics: Depending on design, they can be used to block blows, trap wrists, or outright strike. A prosthetic hook, clamp, or even a simple padded grip can crush fingers or tear skin if you clamp and twist.
Detachable intimidation: Some prosthetics can be quickly removed. Nothing unsettles an attacker faster than someone yanking off their arm or leg mid-fight and swinging it like a club.
Amputee Fighting Without Prosthetics:
Leverage matters more than symmetry. If youâre missing a limb, your balance points are different, which means attackers canât easily predict how youâll move. Their assumptions become your camouflage.
Ground game power. If you get knocked down, use your full body mass like a battering ram. Throw yourself into knees, ankles, or genitals, itâs harder to stop someone who isnât fighting by the âexpectedâ rules.
Teeth, headbutts, elbows. If youâve got fewer limbs to work with, make every strike count. Close range brutality wins fights faster than shiny fancy moves.
Attackers often do not expect resistance from amputees or prosthetic users. That hesitation must become your edge. If you hit back hard, fast, and unexpected, youâve already broken their mental advantage.
Shock factor counts. Survival means using every tool, even intimidation.
Disability doesnât erase your right to fight back. People with visible disabilities are often targeted more, because predators assume youâre vulnerable. That assumption is a weapon you can flip. A prosthetic isnât just medical tech itâs a weapon, and itâs proof that your body adapts. You already survived once.
whether you swing a prosthetic like a hammer, kick with precision, or fight with whatâs left of you with all the brutality you can muster, you are not less dangerous. You are unpredictable, resourceful, and harder to put down than anyone who has only ever lived in a body they've never had to adapt to.
Self-Defense for People with Chronic Pain and Joint Issues
Step One: Ditch the Fantasy
You are not training for a cage fight. You are not proving toughness. You are surviving. The bar is not âbe able to wrestle for 5 minutes straight.â The bar is âmake them hurt enough that they let go and you can escape.â Short, sharp, and dirty wins over long, athletic combat.
Pain is Information, Not Failure
Your body already knows its limits. You donât have to pretend those limits donât exist to defend yourself.
What you can do is practice micro-movements that hurt less but still hit hard: short-range elbows, low kicks, heel stomps, headbutts. These donât need big, joint-risking swings.
Remember: nerves screaming in your knee or shoulder donât mean youâre weak. They mean you need different tactics.
Joint-Friendly Techniques:
Palms, not fists. Punching risks your wrists and fingers if there's already something wrong with them. strike with the heel of your palm, or hammer fist instead. Less joint strain, more surface impact.
Low-line attacks. Kick shins, stomp feet, knee genitals or stomach, your legs donât have to swing high to cause pain. Small movement is less risk to hips/knees.
Leverage traps. If someone grabs you, twisting their fingers or bending their thumb back takes almost no force, but itâs agonizing, keep going until you feel and/or hear a snapping sensation, it will take more force than you think, keep going.
Close-range weapons. Pepper spray, a flashlight, a cane, even keys, these save your joints from overextension by turning little effort into big damage.
Managing Pain While Fighting
You donât have to move like a sprinter. Use timing instead of speed. A single stomp, well-aimed, is worth more than a flurry of shitty-anyway punches that blow out your shoulder.
Think bursts: one, two, three seconds of brutality, then disengage. Donât get dragged into long grapples for many reasons.
Accept that adrenaline will mask some pain in the moment, but backlash will come later.
Survival is worth a flare-up.
Living with chronic pain or fragile joints means you already carry a fight in your body every day. You already know strategy: conserving energy, making choices that minimize harm, enduring waves of sensation. Those same skills apply in self-defense.
An attacker expects you to fold. Instead, they get someone who has lived with pain long enough to weaponize patience and precision. You donât need to âovercomeâ pain to fight back. You can fight within it, letting your body dictate efficient, vicious answers.
Your fight style is not less-than. Itâs merely stripped down, efficient, brutal. Every move you make costs something, so you make sure every move counts.
Self-Defense for Blind or Low Vision Individuals
First: your eyes donât define your ability to fight. Society wants you to think that sight is survival, that a lack of vision equals helplessness.
You and I know; That is bullshit.
You survive every day without relying on vision alone. You already have the skills to fight back, you just need to weaponize them.
Confidence is your superpower. Predators assume blindness equals passivity. Use their assumptions against them.
Trust your instincts, your ears, and your touch.
Weapons:
Your voice: Shout, scream, bark like a fucking dog if you have to. A loud, commanding voice disorients attackers and draws attention.
Objects at hand: Cane, backpack, keys, umbrella, water bottle, anything you can reach quickly. A single well-placed strike to vulnerable areas works wonders.
Tactics:
Low-line attacks: Stomping, kneeing, elbowing, target areas that disable. You donât need precision; you need effect.
Reach with what you have: Cane or other object doubles your armâs length, giving you distance while striking. Don't let people get near you.
Close-range strikes: If someone does get near you, elbow to the ribs, headbutt, or a strike with the heel of your palm to the nose, or fingers in their eyes can break their grip, continue until you feel something soft give way and don't stop until they back off.
Keep your feet planted and balanced; small shifts of weight give leverage.
Use walls, furniture, or railings to anchor yourself and limit how easily they can push you around.
Adrenaline will mask fatigue, use it to strike decisively, then retreat to safety. Your goal is disruption.
Blindness doesnât make you passive. You must fight differently, yes, but unpredictability is a weapon. You can anticipate, react, and counter in ways sighted attackers will never expect. You donât need to see every movement, you just need to decide to react and carry through with reacting.
Your body, your awareness, your voice, and your environment are your allies.
Self-Defense for Neurodivergent and Self-Regulating Disabilities.
First: your brain is not a handicap in a fight, I assure you. Predators assume that someone neurodivergent is âless capableâ of fighting back, but this is a massive underestimation. Your nervous system might work differently, but it can be trained, and even weaponized.
Recognize your triggers and your patterns. If your anxiety spikes, your fight-or-flight is unpredictable, you can still channel that into decisive action.
Practice and repetition can make certain strikes or maneuvers instinctual.
Weapons:
Familiar, practiced tools: Items you always carry â pens, water bottles, fidget objects, can become weapons. Because you touch them constantly, your body knows where they are even under stress.
Sound and rhythm: Some neurodivergent bodies respond to rhythm or cadence very well. Turning striking motions into a âsequenceâ youâve practiced until it becomes physical memory can assist reaction time and increase precision.
Simplicity is key. Your nervous system may overload under high stress. Choose one or two strikes you know instinctively, a stomp, an elbow, a palm strike.
Train them until they are automatic.
Auditory and visual cues; If you process information differently, use what you can reliably detect: sound, vibration, peripheral movement. You can anticipate or react based on your strongest senses, don't bother trying to train up senses you know are shitty. I know my eyes suck, so I don't bother to try and make my eyes 'okay', I focus on what doesn't suck and I make it great.
Fatigue or meltdown risk exists. Use micro-movements and high-effect strikes: one stomp, one elbow, one jab can create the space you need.
Use walls, furniture, and familiar terrain to channel attackers into spaces where you have advantage. Your body remembers familiar spaces use that muscle memory.
Predictable patterns in your environment help compensate for sensory overload.
Anchor yourself to what you know.
Neurodivergence is often framed as weakness or disorganization, but in reality, itâs just different wiring.
In Closing:
Self-defense is not one-size-fits-all. Itâs about understanding your body, your abilities, and your environment, and then refusing to be an easy target.
Every disability, every limitation, every difference is a lens through which you can adapt, strategize, and survive. You do not need to fight like anyone else. You fight like you.
If I left your disability off this list, and you want me to append it, you do not need to pay or justify anything, simply let me know, and Iâll add it.
Every body deserves to defend itself.
No one gets left behind.
And remember.
Better to maim than be maimed.
Better to kill than be killed.
And don't let nu-leftists who have never been in a position where they've almost died at the hands of another tell you that it's morally wrong to defend yourself.
[Sponsored by @crazytrain48, based on the idea of an asura created from a divine beast rejected. Which got me thinking, and ended up with probably the most blasphemous monster in the Codex. I would like to think it's blasphemous from an informed place. The Book of Revelation is a mad, bitter work, fantasizing about all of the torments a sinful world has invited upon itself and rooted in the idea that the sacrifice of Jesus was a fundamental step in destroying the world and starting fresh in heaven for the elect. Modern Evangelical Christianity, and its obsession with Revelation in particular, is quite literally an existential threat to democracy, peace and the stability of the biosphere. So what better way to represent sacrifice curdled and corrupted than with a lamb? The imagery from Revelation is already nightmarish enough.
Interested in sponsoring your own monsters? Wanna support the Codex? Consider subscribing to my Patreon!]
Asura, Amnosahura
CR 9 LE Outsider (extraplanar)
This creature resembles a sheep with seven horns and seven eyes. Its white fleece is stained with blood, but still it smiles.
Once, a long time ago, a god made the perfect beast. It was intended to solve all of his worshipersâ problems, be their salvation, usher in a promised age. But the people for whom the beast was intended saw only its flaws and so slew the beast, not as a sacrifice but as a mockery. In some versions of the story, mortals made the beast instead as a tribute for their god, but the god smote it instead of accepting it, rejecting it for its imperfections. Either way the story starts, it ends the same way: the divine beast returned to life and, enraged by its ill treatment, turned its back on gods and mortals both, vowing to forever drive a wedge between them. This was the first amnosahura.
Unlike most other asuras, which seek to destroy divine works through direct violence, amnoshuras are more subtle. Through their words and deeds, they erode the meaning of sacrifice. An amnosahura may convince people to behave selfishly because sacrificing to either the gods or to fellow men is wasteful and foolish, or convince them to sacrifice everything, including morals and ethics, to the cause of an unworthy pretender. They are especially fond of needling divine beasts such as lammasu, shedu and kirin, showing them the venality of mortals and the indifference of gods, and sowing doubts about whether their service to either is worth the cost. Perhaps most dangerous are the amnosahura who act as facilitators for the cult of an asura rana. These amnosahura pose as intercessors between mortals and divinity, accepting a one-time sacrifice of blood and pain in exchange for giving their servitors carte blanche to indulge all their wicked impulses.
An amnosahura would rather talk than fight, but nevertheless is a dangerous combatant. Their many-eyed stare is deeply unnerving, and they can focus it into a single target to make them feel excruciating agony. Once they have debilitated the most dangerous looking enemy, they charge into the weaker ones, goring with their horns and leaving deep bleeding wounds. Amnosahuras work well in support roles, granting allied asuras support while sapping their foesâ combat abilities. Amnosahuras typically fight to the death, perhaps as a reminder of their origins as a sacrificial lamb.
Different amnosahuras bear different woundsâslit throats, pierced limbs, scourge marks on the back, and so forthâall of which drip with fresh blood. This blood serves them as a healing balm: if their regeneration is stopped through the application of good-aligned spells or weapons, the bleeding ceases.
Asura, Amnosahura CR 9
XP 6,400
LE Medium outsider (asura, evil, extraplanar, lawful)
Init +4; Senses darkvision 60 ft., detect good, Perception +20, see invisibility
Aura nondetection (60 ft)
Defense
AC 23, touch 14, flat-footed 19 (+4 Dex, +9 natural)
hp 102 (12d10+36); regeneration 3 (good)
Fort +11, Ref +8, Will +12; +2 vs. enchantment
DR 10/good; Immune curses, disease, poison; Resist acid 10, electricity 10; SR 20
Defensive Abilities ferocity
Offense
Speed 40 ft.
Melee gore +16 (2d6+4 plus bleed), 2 hooves +11 (1d4+2)
Special Attacks agonize, bleed (1d6), gaze, powerful charge (gore, 4d6+8)
Spell-like Abilities CL 9th, concentration +12
Constantâdetect good, glibness, see invisibility
At willâaid, castigate (DC 15), inflict pain (DC 15)
3/dayâblood armor, blood of the martyr (DC 15), waves of blood (DC 16)
1/dayâharm (DC 19), heal (DC 19), mass inflict pain(DC 19)
Statistics
Str 18, Dex 19, Con 17, Int 15, Wis 14, Cha 17
Base Atk +12; CMB +16 (+18 bull rush); CMD 30 (32 vs. bull rush, 34 vs. trip)
Feats Bull Rush Strike, Improved Bull Rush, Improved Critical (gore), Iron Will, Nimble Moves, Power Attack
Skills Acrobatics +19 (+23 jumping), Bluff +18 (+38 to convince), Diplomacy +18, Escape Artist +14, Intimidate +18, Knowledge (religion) +17, Perception +20, Sense Motive +17, Stealth +19; Racial Modifiers +6 Escape Artist, +4 Perception
Languages Common, Infernal, telepathy 100 ft.
Ecology
Environment any land (Hell)
Organization solitary or ritual (2-5)
Treasure standard
Special Abilities
Agonize (Su) As a standard action, an amnosahura can fill a creature within 30 feet with excruciating pain. On a successful DC 19 Fortitude save, the creature is merely staggered for one round. On a failed save, it falls prone and is stunned for 12 rounds; it may attempt a Fortitude save every round to shake off the effect. A creature that succeeds its saving throw is immune to the agonize of that amnosahura for the next 24 hours. This is a pain effect and the save DC is Charisma based.
Gaze (Su) Range 30 ft; effect shaken 1d4 rounds; save Will DC 19. Additional failed saves against this gaze extend the duration, but do not increase the level of fear. The save DC is Charisma based.
Tumblr really needs to make the gap between ads and actual posts bigger, cause frequently I'll be left wondering why the mutuals are reblogging AI generated Judy Hopps pinups
Anyways if you see a Sponsored Post about "How to Take Passiflora" know that its bullshit and like 90% of ai-generated "Articles" about the herbal uses of Passiflora Incarnata, it uses a picture of the completely wrong species of Passiflora when its talking about Passiflora Incarnata which is just going to get someone extremely sick or killed.
[ID: a cropped and color-altered screenshot of a Sponsored Tumblr post, showing the word "origin" followed by a photo of a passionflower that is not a Passiflora Incarnata, and appears to be in the Passiflora Foetida complex, with very thick white filaments, a bright pink center, and branched bracts used to trap insects. The whole image has a slight green tint to separate it from the rest of the post. End ID]
Don't take fucking medical advise for herbal supplements from any website that can't even show the actual species they're talking about, and especially if they don't even name the particular species in the first place and then proceed to show flowers from four different, toxic species.
Passiflora Incarnata is the only Passiflora species that it is safe to consume the leaves and that's only if you know for a *fact* that you have Passiflora Incarnata on hand and aren't just assuming its that based on 20 different incorrect photos presented by these shitty articles which show flowers from Edulis, Caerulea (!) and foetida instead of actual Incarnata.
If you try eating or making tea out of passiflora leaves that are not Incarnata you are going to make yourself very, very sick with fucking cyanide.