I NEED TO KNOW!!!!
DOES BABY LEO CHIRP OR BABBLE?!?!?!?!
pls say yes
Protective lil guy lmao
Part 6
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1 universe, 9 planets, 7 seas, 7 continents, 809 islands, 204 countries, and I had the unfortunate luck of meeting u
a homura for the bestie :3
Just some Emma’s y’know…
reblog if youre the kind of person that checks other ppl’s tags when they reblog ur stuff
Ooh my sweet baby Blue
I was worried I’d never see you again
Do you guys ever do the thing where you flail your arms to ask for a hug
Because im suffering right now
Anxiety aint doing me no good i need a breather
WAIT HAPPY END OF THE YEAR!!!
Hating on m/f ships does not make you “progressive”.
Hating on people who ship boys and girls just because it’s not gay does not make you “better”.
If, let’s say, a boy character who showed interest in both boys and girls, ends up with a girl, it’s not called “hetero bullshit”.
If, let’s say, a trans woman character ends up with a guy, nobody has the right to say “this character does not belong in the community because she’s straight”.
Bi, pan, ace and trans people exist in the lgbt community.
The lgbt community is not a club for gay people only.
It’s possible to be gay and still be biphobic, panphobic, acephobic and transphobic.
This is appearently considered controversial by some people so please reblog if you agree!
I love how Mushi-shi (the anime) depicts chronic illness through the paranormal and abstract. Ginko is literally a medicine man, and his clientele are closer to suffering an affliction than experiencing a haunting. He doesn't "exorcise the demons through prayer;" he treats the condition the person is suffering from, which often involves removing the mushi, but sometimes they need to be lived with, and sometimes even a successful treatment can leave lasting damage from the time the mushi resided in the person's body. It's the best depiction of chronic illness I've seen portrayed through an abstract lense. I'm not even learning anything about myself or my life by watching it; I just understand and appreciate each case the show portrays. Part of what sets it apart is that Mushi-shi is very good at depicting the emotional toll of chronic illness without moralizing it. Sometimes chronically ill people die of depression from their conditions, sometimes after you're cured you miss or take joy in certain elements of the disease, having a friend play with you in quarantine is invaluable for your spirit but comes at the deadly risk of contagion. I'm only 4 episodes in but it's really resonating with me. Teenage chronically ill me definitely couldn't handle this show, but 25 year old me loves it.
Emma with no hair except antenna
Threw Ray and Dad in there too
Family outing
Hi! I'm Cassiopeia, she/her • I have no idea what I'm doing so please leave any and all expectations at the door • If anyone is wondering yes, it is a Momo or The Men in Gray reference
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