gallusrostromegalus:

gallusdrawseverything:

Dark Meat Hunter: Picking Up The Trail

So a while back I had this idea about how, in Star Wars, Coruscant has regularly been expieiencing massive food shortages since at least the Clone Wars, and how there’s probably a lot of money to be made hunting the various Mutants, invasive species, escaped zoo specimens and other meat wandering around the bowels of the city.

So, finally, here’s an Illustration of a Dark Meat Hunter at work.

She’s a specialist in the rare ungluates that can be found in small herds in the quieter parts of the city.  Cliff-dwelling mineral lickers were probably brought over for some bourgie table, then promptly escaped and learned to frolick on the less-observed ledges of buildings.  Shy nocturnal creatures, with massive black eyes and eerily quiet hooves come up from the depths on lower-light nights to forage in the undercity dumpsters.

They’re some of the tastiest things running wild through the city, but also a real pain in the ass to find.  If she finds them, however, she can charge top dollar for the meat and hide and bones and entrails and-  well, nothing gets wasted down here.

She’s wearing her clan identification paint- Putting food on people’s tables is hardly a solo operation- she’ll have to take it to a butcher, sell it through a clan stall, and will probably bank her earnings with the clan- who’d trust a government bank down here? They take a cut, but it’s better than getting robbed by rival hunters and being left with nothing at all.  Mess with a hunter, mess with the entire clan.

She is dressed for a variety of weather conditions- it gets cold fast without direct sunlight- and wears reflective Neon stripes that deliniate her silhouette as humanoid to anyone down here.  It’s not really risking her camoflage- here, bright lights help you blend in with the neons- and it prevents other hunters from shooting her on accident because they thought she was a Mutant Sewer Rat in the darkness.

Media: Firealpaca
Stock Pose by PhelanDavion of DeviantArt

Reblogging from my art blog to my main!

sophrosynic:

lovelysuggestions:

do not put up with passive agression. the people in your life should respect you enough to be straight forward with you. If someone does not come to you directly with an issue, it is not yours too fix. you can’t spend all your time picking apart your relationship with someone, searching for what you did, and blaming yourself when you don’t even know what for. it’s not fair for people to put you through that.

equally as important–learn to dismantle the impulse to be passive aggressive on your end. cultivate the skills required to be honest and accountable about your feelings, not just to the people around you, but also for your own sake. it’s when you learn to be honest to yourself about what you’re feeling that you really start to flourish.

naamahdarling:

wetwareproblem:

geekandmisandry:

An autistic friend of mine just said this to me “The harder I work at communication the more people expect from me and the less they are willing to compromise.” and it is the most fucking heartbreaking thing I’ve heard.

This is very much a thing, though – and I’m sure people across the board with other disabilities can verify that it happens to them, too.

People will turn any progress you make toward being “normal” – no matter how straining or difficult it is for you, no matter how little it actually helps you – as either inspiration porn, or proof that you don’t really need accommodations, you just need to “apply yourself! :)))))”

YUP

calime33:

celciusdiscourse:

augustdementhe:

funereal-disease:

Thesis: the rise of fanwank and anti culture correlates directly with diminished understanding of what “romantic”, in a literary sense, actually means.

It doesn’t mean “this is ideal or healthy or even realistic”. It means “this is beautiful, this is tragic, this is grotesque, this stirs emotion”, even if it’s not, as @starryroom puts it, something you would be comfortable seeing play out in front of you at Taco Bell. It’s about grandiosity and mythology and heroism writ large. It’s about playing with the id, as beautiful and terrible as it can be. 

LET LOVE AND LUST BE MONSTROUS.

i feel like Guillermo del Toro ghostwrote that

THIS.

carlynroth:

ariella884:

gracelockheart:

imaginationdrift:

admiralkatcornwellfan:

uncle-knobheads:

Fic authors deserve more credit.

Story time: I started reading a book about 23 hours ago and just finished it. Also in that time, I slept for 10 hours, spent time with family, was at work, etc. Anyway, I enjoyed the book (Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda,) but it felt like it flew by. So after I finished I looked up the word count because what are pages? Pages are meaningless. I only function in word counts anymore.

The estimate I found was 58,580. My immediate reaction was “oh, that’s why. That’s nothing!” But what a shitty response. Because no. That’s not nothing. That’s a whole. Damn. Book. An entire novel! And fic authors regularly bust out 30k, 50k, 100k, 150k words. AND THEY DO IT FOR FREE. WHILE WORKING AND LIVING THEIR LIVES.

So anyway, thank your favorite fic author today because they deserve it. Because they’re amazing. They’re the MVPs.

@devoverest @mia-cooper @killermanatee this is for you guys. and just because without your wonderful J/C fanfics, I might be lost in this world. Thank you ❤️

Hear, hear! And also tagging @lodessa @kate-coleman-writes @bizships @gracelockheart thanks ❤️

Thank you @imaginationdrift 💖 I agree fic has kept me sane when I have been struggling. I want to tag @coffee-in-that-nebula @mia-cooper @angrywarrior69 for their amazing work.

a few of my favorites…

@jhelenoftrek @killermanatee @mia-cooper @theshortywrites @angrywarrior69 @cheyfwriting @missyhissy3 @missmil @emmikamikatze @devoverest @ussjellyfish @captacorn @arcadia1995 @littleobsessions90 @lodessa @caladeniablue @carlynroth @cheile @muldyfi @rawkfemme @talsi74656

and oh my gosh there are so many others that i’m forgetting. please forgive me. And thank you all for writing such amazing stories! Seriously…my insomnia thanks you!

Thank you, dear! I’ve been feeling pretty unwell lately, so the mention is very appreciated. ❤️

@bedlamsbard @deadcatwithaflamethrower @poplitealqueen @norcumi @dogmatix @judayre and so many others that I do not have enough brain to tag right now.

Christianormativity

amemait:

starlightomatic:

So, I’ve seen a lot of fanfics about Tina and Queenie Goldstein celebrating Christmas.  I’ve also heard that people are using Christian theology in their tributes to Carrie Fisher.  When called out, people do a few things; claim that they just wanted to write a nice fic or tribute and didn’t mean to erase the person’s Jewishness, state that the character or person wasn’t really Jewish because they weren’t that religious, or state that religion shouldn’t be considered important.

So let’s talk about this.  What’s going on here is Christianormativity.  This refers to the fact that those of us in the US live in a society based on Christianity.  This doesn’t mean that everyone believes in Jesus; it means that mores and customs are based in Christianity, and that people’s idea of what “religion” is is based in Christianity.  It manifests in people having Jewish characters celebrate Christmas because to them, Christmas isn’t a Christian holiday, it’s just a holiday.  Everyone celebrates it, right?  And using Christian theology to publicly mourn isn’t Christian mourning, it’s just mourning, right?

To understand why Jews see it differently, we need to understand the difference between Christianity and Judaism.

According to Christianity, a person is Christian if they accept Jesus Christ as their lord and savior.  As far as I understand it, if someone ceases to believe this, then they are no longer Christian, no matter how they were raised or what holidays they celebrate.  They now are just a regular, non-religious person.  Since you can stop being Christian and still celebrate Christmas, that makes Christmas not a Christian holiday, right?  

If we define religion based on Christianity, the definition of a religion is “a set of metaphysical beliefs about the world” and an adherent of a religion is “someone who believes those beliefs.”  Christians look at the world and see many other religions:  Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism… and say “okay, I understand this, those are different sets of beliefs that people have.”

But the thing is, that definition of religion is one of the beliefs of Christianity.  People from different religions don’t define their religion that way.

Judaism/Jewishness is an ethnoreligion.  Being Jewish involves heritage more than anything, and culture second to that.  Religion is inextricably tied in, as I’ll discuss, notably in that conversion to Judaism is a religious process that confers virtual Jewish heritage on the convert.  Judaism is a religion in the sense that it is a set of beliefs and practices, but Jewishness is about heritage and culture.

Confusing?  Okay, let’s break it down a bit more.  Jews, before anything else, were a tribe.  We were a tribe with a religion, and our tribal narrative is inextricably tied to that religion.  Anyone part of that tribe is Jewish.  And not everyone in that tribe chooses to practice religion.  Judaism – the religion – believes that everyone in the tribe should practice the religion, but even if someone doesn’t, they’re still Jewish.  It’s kind of like how your mom wants you to do your work, get exercise, and go to sleep early, but you’re still her kid even if you don’t do those things.

But it’s still not even that simple.  For one thing, the definitions of terms I’ve given aren’t clear-cut or universally accepted:  A practitioner of Judaism could accurately describe themself as Jewish.  Another is that whether someone is a practitioner of Judaism isn’t clear-cut either.  The first thing to know is that, as the word “practitioner” should imply, whether you are one depends on what you do rather than what you believe.  Which isn’t to say that Judaism doesn’t have a belief system, but again, you can still practice Judaism without that.  It’s sort of like how you can do your homework even if you don’t accept the views your professor is teaching.  And even with that, there is a pretty wide range of theological belief that can fit into the Jewish system if you’re clever (I once managed to pray the evening prayers, which talk pretty explicitly about an omniscient, personified God, while interpreting them to be about an abstract Force-like God, convincingly enough that I had a legit spiritual experience.)

But it’s… still more complicated!  Because Jewish practice isn’t a simple binary, 0 or 1 (unless you’re a Jewish robot, but I think that’s beyond the scope of this post).  You can participate in some practices, but not others.  You can participate constantly throughout the day, or once a week, or once a year.  You can do something by yourself in your house or publicly at a synagogue.  Also, Jewish culture is inextricably tied to religion.  So you can choose to participate only in the culture, but if you celebrate the holidays, you’ll be engaging in practices that, according to Judaism the religion, have religious meaning – even if the religious part is not what it’s about for you.

So, what does all this mean about Christianity and Christmas?  It means that according to Judaism, there is no such thing as a non-religious holiday, no matter how many non-religious people celebrate it.  Beyond that, Christianormativity means that Christians see their own holidays as universal, and everyone else’s holidays as Other.  But to someone who is Jewish, it’s the opposite!  Our own holidays are familiar to us.  Christmas comes from Christian culture, and to many of us it is fundamentally foreign and Other.  We have a taboo against celebrating it, because of what it represents – assimilation into the majority culture and giving up our own.  That perception is changing now, but it is still very present for many of us.

And it means that from our perspective, non-religious people with Christian heritage who celebrate Christian holidays are Christian.  We don’t mean they’re religious, we mean they’re secular Christians.  Wait, what?  But that makes no sense!  “Secular Christian” is an oxymoron!  Well, yes, intellectually I know that.  Which is why I’ve avoided the term and instead referred to “people with Christian heritage who celebrate Christian holidays.”  There’s no term for these people because to most Americans, they don’t need a name, because they’re Just Regular People.  And in that vain, secular Jews are Just Regular People too, right?  Well… many do see themselves that way, after decades of living in a Christianormative culture.  But many don’t.  Many see themselves as Jewish.

Basically, because of the info I mentioned before, a person can be a Jewish atheist or a Jewish agnostic.  And because of the different ways Christianity defines itself and Judaism defines itself, saying “she wasn’t Jewish, she was agnostic” is just as nonsensical – and just as culturally ignorant – as saying “secular Christian.”

So.  Tina and Queenie Goldstein do not have a Christmas tree and they do not host Christmas dinner.

And Carrie Fisher, may her memory be for a blessing, was an amazing agnostic Jewish mentally ill activist feminist strong beatiful Space Mom who drowned in moonlight, strangled by her own bra.

This is lovely to learn.

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

Last November Shinies of 2018!

Doesn’t matter if you’re in the fandom or not–there was only one name fitting for the first one.

Rowena

A-grade Kyanite, Pyrite, Pyrite-infused Lapis Lazuli, A-grade Lapis Lazuli, and gold-brushed stainless steel on 49-strand coated stainless steel wire with a stainless steel hook & eye clasp. Length: 22″

Pendant hangs on a stainless steel bail and is 2″ in length.

$75.00 USD + Shipping ($4.99 First Class US; $7.99 First Class International*)

Joy is going to give me SUCH a look for this one’s name:

Scottish Weather

Smokey Agate gemstone drops with Fire-polished Crystal on Stainless Steel with Hypoallergenic Stainless Steel Posts. Just under 2″ in length.

$25.00 USD + Shipping
($4.99 First Class US; $7.99 First Class International*) 

*Last time I shipped to Germany at this weight, it was drastically different than expected. If it costs more to ship to your country, we’ll discuss it, but I’m hopeful this is a worldwide rate. Granted Australia will probably decide it has to be special and expensive, as usual.

Email me at deadcatwithaflamethrower at gmail (dot) com if you’re interested!

Also Still Available:

Stellar, Take 2

Stainless Steel Round Pendant on Velvet braided with a Rhinestone Chain, 15″ Choker, $25.00 + Shipping

Weightless

Gold-plated Steel and Fire-polished Crystal on Gold-plated Brass Wire with Gold-plated Sterling Silver Hooks, 2.5″ in length, $25.00 + Shipping

star-anise:

When I was younger and more abled, I was so fucking on board with the fantasy genre’s subversion of traditional femininity. We weren’t just fainting maidens locked up in towers; we could do anything men could do, be as strong or as physical or as violent. I got into western martial arts and learned to fight with a rapier, fell in love with the longsword.

But since I’ve gotten too disabled to fight anymore, I… find myself coming back to that maiden in a tower. It’s that funny thing, where subverting femininity is powerful for the people who have always been forced into it… but for the people who have always been excluded, the powerful thing can be embracing it.

As I’m disabled, as I say to groups of friends, “I can’t walk that far,” as I’m in too much pain to keep partying, I find myself worrying: I’m boring, too quiet, too stationary, irrelevant. The message sent to the disabled is: You’re out of the narrative, you’re secondary, you’re a burden.

The remarkable thing about the maiden in her tower is not her immobility; it’s common for disabled people to be abandoned, set adrift, waiting at bus stops or watching out the windows, forgotten in institutions or stranded in our houses. The remarkable thing is that she’s like a beacon, turning her tower into a lighthouse; people want to come to her, she’s important, she inspires through her appearance and words and craftwork.  In medieval romances she gives gifts, write letters, sends messengers, and summons lovers; she plays chess, commissions ballads, composes music, commands knights. She is her household’s moral centre in a castle under siege. She is a castle unto herself, and the integrity of her body matters.

That can be so revolutionary to those of us stuck in our towers who fall prey to thinking: Nobody would want to visit; nobody would want to listen; nobody would want to stay.

hamelin-born:

enigmaticagentalice:

Y’know, one thing I really love about Babylon 5 is how it is vehemently and pointedly NOT Star Trek, but like…it doesn’t try to distinguish itself as Not Trek by being all ‘dark and gritty’ or whatever.

It’s still a show that ultimately has a lot of hope and positivity about the future, and shows humanity overcoming great struggles and taking their place in the galaxy among other species, but just…

There are some thing that are just a little more…difficult. There’s still racism and prejudice, there’s still poverty and homelessness. People still gamble and get drunk and can’t agree on religion. People still have jobs to earn money, we still have a money-based economy and we still have all the corruption that comes with that system. There are still wars and there are still petty arguments too. Food has to be grown and it is appropriately astronomically expensive to ship across space, ships have to be fixed and the Dockworkers Union are forever going on strike because their pay hasn’t been increased in too many years. There are translators but they’re not always available or effective so if you want to speak to another species you have to damn well learn their language. There’s still a ton of paperwork to be done even if not many people use actual paper any more. There are still janitors because someone has to clean the floors!

I don’t know, I love Trek, but the world of Babylon 5 always felt more real to me, and I really appreciate that they didn’t achieve that by having a bunch of gratuitous violence and grim pessimism, but just by including a thousand little off-hand details that ground the show in reality.

@distressedherbalist @theperidotshade @theotherguysride