<3 STEVEN UNIVERSE <3
Welcome to Kingdom Hearts, where both the clothing and stories are needlessly complicated (no seriously, you’re going to need graphs to understand the story beyond the first game...).
also I feel I should tell you guys that a friend of me persuaded me to watch a playthrough of Kingdom Hearts because I never played it and what the effity
am I enjoying this? I think I am but I am so confused and oh my god why does everything have zips this is amazing
I had to do way too much digging to find this again.
And I get a little bit Genghis Kahnghis I don’t want you to get it onghis Nobody else but me (ooooh) With nobody else but MeeeeMe
I get a little bit Danghis Dahn Don’t want you to Genghis on with Nobody else but Mingus Nobody else but Mingus Kingus
everyone should go watch Big Top Burger by @worthikids because it is extremely baller and epic!!!!
Finally got Animal Crossing: New Leaf. Brewster is still my fav. :)
here it is, the funniest most absurd line spoken in all of kingdom hearts
fat bodies, fat anatomy, and how body fat tends to work should be taught as standardly as skinny anatomy and how muscles work in art courses. fat bodies are not an outlier. fat bodies are not a minority and theyre not abnormal or wrong. fat bodies are normal and they belong in art teaching spaces as commonly as other anatomy, because fat bodies ARE normal anatomy. people have diverse bodies and there will never be a single body type that encompasses the "normal body type"
tldr; fat anatomy should be taught as a staple in art courses just like any other anatomy. this is fact <3
In New Horizons, if the game can't load an NPC due to their referenced model name being invalid, or for other reasons, the game will instead load a naked, unnamed Bob in their place as a failsafe. This was likely a dummy NPC used for testing reasons.
I’ve seen some debates about whether having a pretty word for a symptom actually makes any difference, and I’m here to say that it did for at least one person.
I recently learned that sensory overload is something adhd people can experience too, and learning a word for why I always felt “sick” and had to go to the nurse in middle school brought me so much peace. When I learn terminology for my experiences, I feel validated.
It’s like proof that I’m not just being dramatic or weak. Kind of like when I realized that the reason I’ve never been any good at sports was because I’ve had asthma all along. I thought I just tired out quickly.
It’s like having a name for my struggle gives me power over it.
So, TLDR: Terminology can help us feel validated in our experiences, and that can be a great encouragement.