Embroidered Witch Hats
Kiras Magick Needle on Etsy
@racketghost

shark vs the universe

JVL
h
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Love Begins

ellievsbear
almost home

pixel skylines
AnasAbdin
Show & Tell
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

roma★
Stranger Things

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Keni
noise dept.

Origami Around

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

seen from Germany
seen from Suriname

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
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seen from Algeria
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from United States
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@thetimemachinejellyfish
Embroidered Witch Hats
Kiras Magick Needle on Etsy
@racketghost
Elizabeth whenever Darcy is insulting her family:
My college library had the huge hardbound Sandman collections, the ones heavy enough to be called 'tomes'. I couldn't check them out (I was very scatterbrained and always had fines) so I used to sit up in the clocktower until the library closed, reading Sandman.
One day, I found a little note in red ink stuck in the book with my bookmark. It said "I noticed this book always reappears by this chair - I hope you're enjoying it as much as I did. Just wanted to say you have excellent taste and you should read American Gods if you haven't already." It was signed with a weird little sigil.
What could I do, Neil? I wrote back. We talked books for the rest of college, swapping recommendations and reviews through notes left in that big Sandman volume. I never met them in person. It was a very good friendship, all the better for being a precious and odd secret.
I'm so glad.
idea: scene with two characters eagerly stripping each other clearly about to bone, but they keep getting interrupted by finding carefully concealed weapons in each other’s clothing, so they keep just unholstering, revealing and unstrapping increasingly ludicrous amounts of hidden guns and knives as the clothes come off, and it’s lowkey killing the mood a little
Alternatively: it's not killing the mood at all but it's totally making both of them giggle like they're twelve and possibly get lowkey competitive in a subconscious way about who has the most to drop.
The more that I think of it the more I'm seeing the incredible intimacy of letting someone know where you keep your backup knife.
Like my god, the trust involved in letting someone undress you and learn your secrets instead of popping into the bathroom to change where they can't see and hiding all your weapons under the sink
...Oh
second alternative: you go to hide all your weapons under the sink but there’s already a bunch of weapons hidden underneath the sink.
awkward
It’s not that there’s already a bunch of weapons hidden underneath the sink that makes it awkward so much as that there’s so many weapons hidden underneath the sink that they fall out of the cabinet with the unmistakable sound of a knife-alanche, and then the other person comes in like “I can explain!” and you’re just dead-ass standing there with your own armload of weapons like “I can also explain.”
Fluffy stuff: Aziraphale reading to Crowley on a midnight picnic in a field
i mean it’s romantic but how can he see the pages if it’s midnight…
I’ll do you one better: Crowley’s glowing eyes
you’re a genius i’ll redraw this more seriously later
Dramatic noodle
so what if im in love with you mind ur own business
some silly thing i scribbled in 2 seconds after reading this artical
“It is a condition of monsters that they do not perceive themselves as such.”
—Anne Carson, Autobiography of Red
“Who hasn’t ever wondered: am I monster or is this what it means to be a person?”
—Clarice Lispector, The Hour of the Star
—Catherynne M. Valente, The Orphan’s Tales: In the Night Garden
“They say I’m a beast. And feast on it. When all along I thought that’s what a woman was.”
—Sandra Cisneros, Loose Woman
“The she-monster is hardly a new phenomenon. The idea of a female untamed nature which must be leashed or else will wreak havoc closely reflects mythological heroes’ struggles against monsters. Greek myth alone offers a host - of Ceres, Harpies, Sirens, Moirae. Associated with fate and death in various ways, they move swiftly, sometimes on wings; birds of prey are their closest kin - the Greeks didn’t know about dinosaurs - and they seize as in the word raptor. But seizure also describes the effect of the passions on the body; inner forces, looser, madness, arte, folly, personified in Homer and the tragedies as feminine, snatch and grab the interior of the human creature and take possession.”
—Marina Warner, Managing Monsters: Six Myths of Our Time; “Monstrous Mothers”
“I don’t want to be a person. I want to be unbearable.”
—Anne Carson, Decreation
—Louise Glück, “Blue Rotunda”
“How can I teach her / some way of being human / that won’t destroy her?”
—Margaret Atwood, Two-Headed Poems
“…and what I want to say / is that I am not what I was, I am / a changeling, half-creaturely,”
—Camille Norton, Corruption: Poems; “Wild Animals I Have Known”
“People feel that in her, the nonhuman. People are afraid of her. Something in her inspires a nonhuman attachment. Sur elle, the human feelings seem to slip, they glisser—”
—Anaïs Nin, Nearer the Moon
—Camille Norton, Corruption: Poems; “Index of Prohibited Images”
“She had a feral gaze like that of an untamed animal,”
—Margaret Atwood, Murder in the Dark: Stories; “Women’s Novels”
“…does she wander still, searching human faces / For one who might speak of her / In her own language, look into her eyes / And gentle the wildness once and for all?”
—May Sarton, Letters from Maine: New Poems
“How can she bear the pain of becoming human? The end of exile is the end of being.”
—Angela Carter, The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories; “The Lady of the House of Love”
—Hélène Cixous, The Laugh of the Medusa
“A woman in the shape of a monster / a monster in the shape of a woman / the skies are full of them”
—Adrienne Rich, “Planetarium”
“A monster is not such a terrible thing to be. From the Latin root monstrum, a divine messenger of catastrophe, then adapted by the Old French to mean an animal of myriad origins: centaur, griffin, satyr. To be a monster is to be a hybrid signal, a lighthouse: both shelter and warning at once.”
—Ocean Vuong, “A Letter To My Mother That She Will Never Read”
“Personally, I’m a mess of conflicting impulses—I’m independent and greedy and I also want to belong and share and be a part of the whole. I doubt that I’m the only one who feels this way. It’s the core of monster making, actually. Wanna make a monster? Take the parts of yourself that make you uncomfortable—your weaknesses, bad thoughts, vanities, and hungers—and pretend they’re across the room. It’s too ugly to be human. It’s too ugly to be you. Children are afraid of the dark because they have nothing real to work with. Adults are afraid of themselves. Oh we’re a mess, poor humans, poor flesh—hybrids of angels and animals, dolls with diamonds stuffed inside them. We’ve been to the moon and we’re still fighting over Jerusalem. Let me tell you what I do know: I am more than one thing and not all of those things are good. The truth is complicated. It’s two-toned, multi-vocal, bittersweet. I used to think that if I dug deep enough to discover something sad and ugly, I’d know it was something true. Now I’m trying to dig deeper.”
—Richard Siken, Spork’s Editor’s Pages: Black Telephone
“Is it better to out-monster the monster or to be quietly devoured?”
—Friedrich Nietzsche, Good and Evil
“I was driven because I wanted to be like others. / I was afraid of what was wild and indecent in me.”
—Czeslaw Miłosz, “Account”
“When I looked around, I saw and heard of none like me. Was I then a monster?”
—Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
“Draw a monster. Why is it a monster?”
—Janice Lee, Daughter
Current fascination: Pieni Merenneito//Finnish National Ballet
Composed by Tuomas Kantelinen, Choreographed by Kenneth Greve
Crowley by GranatGlow
i was chatting with some folks about this earlier but i think it’s worth sharing here too: commenting is similar to giving someone a gift, in a way. like of course everyone appreciates a present! especially a really thoughtful one. but part of what makes it meaningful is it’s something given freely, without request or obligation. specifically asking for one often discourages people from engaging because it negates the part that’s joyful to them — the knowledge that it was fully their choice to give, and it came from the heart. if it isn’t given fully of someone’s own volition, it stops being a gift and becomes a job, y’know?
CUZ I'M HAVIN' A GOOD TIME!!
this was my contribution to the @wiggleonzine! 🐍
SnaKE mE aWaYyyyy 🐍🍭
In this essay I will