12,293 notesReblogged at 02:50am, 04/09/22
Via: everyteenager4free1

got a phone interview for a funeral/mortuary job tomorrow… there’s no guarantee i’ll get to the face to face interview stage, let alone get the job, but it’s always so exciting to be worth consideration

384 notesPosted at 12:31pm, 07/24/23

hexxxa-deactivated20221201:

image

Iron Cage Mediaeval Corset by Entity Custom Works

9,036 notesReblogged at 11:31am, 07/24/23
Via: srvphm

punalippulaiva:

linesca:

lily-learns-finnish:

So bachelor in Finnish is just “boyman” (poikamies)? That’s hilarious. So you can say “Sä oot niin poikamies”. (“You’re such a boyman.”)

The apartment in which a single man lives is a poikamiesboksi, a boy man box.

Ah, but let’s not forget bachelorette: rather than being the logical tyttönainen (girl woman), it is poikamiestyttö (boy man girl).

4,867 notesReblogged at 11:17am, 07/24/23
Via: annabelle--cane

antonio0gamer:

image

Iron Lung
something a bit spookier

1,729 notesReblogged at 11:09am, 07/24/23
Via: radioves

elodieunderglass:

beemovieerotica:

I know people on tumblr looove stories of underwater cave diving, but I haven’t seen anyone talk about nitrogen narcosis aka “raptures of the deep

basically when you want to get your advanced scuba certification (allowing you to go more than 60 feet deep) you have to undergo a very specific test: your instructor takes you down past the 60+ foot threshold, and she brings a little underwater white board with her.

she writes a very basic math problem on that board. 6 + 15. she shows it to you, and you have to solve it.

if you can solve it, you’re good. that is the hardest part of the test.

because here’s what happens: there is a subset of people, and we have no real idea why this happens only to them, who lose their minds at depth. they’re not dying, they’re not running out of oxygen, they just completely lose their sense of identity when deep in the sea.

a woman on a dive my instructor led once vanished during the course of the excursion. they were diving near this dropoff point, beyond which the depth exceeded 60 feet and he’d told them not to go down that way. the instructor made his way over to look for her and found a guy sitting at the edge of the dropoff (an underwater cliff situation) just staring down into the dark. the guy is okay, but he’s at the threshold, spacing out, and mentally difficult to reach. they try to communicate, and finally the guy just points down into the dark, knowing he can’t go down there, but he saw the woman go.

instructor is deep water certified and he goes down. he shines his light into the dark, down onto the seafloor which is at 90 feet below the surface. he sees the woman, her arms locked to her sides, moving like a fish, swimming furiously in circles in the pitch black.

she is hard to catch but he stops her and checks her remaining oxygen: she is almost out, on account of swimming a marathon for absolutely no reason. he is able to drag her back up, get her to a stable depth to decompress, and bring her to the surface safely.

when their masks are off and he finally asks her what happened, and why was she swimming like that, she says she fully, 100% believed she was a mermaid, had always been a mermaid, and something was hunting her in the dark 👍

👍

11,736 notesReblogged at 11:08am, 07/24/23
Via: habeascorpseus

radley-writes:

thedreadvampy:

male gaze is not ‘when person look sexy’ or 'when misogynist make film’

death of the author is not 'miku wrote this’

I don’t think you have to read either essay to grasp the basic concepts

death of the author means that once a work is complete, what the author believes it to mean is irrelevant to critical analysis of what’s in the text. it means when analysing the meaning of a text you prioritise reader interpretation above author intention, and that an interpretation can hold valid meaning even if it’s utterly unintentional on the part of the person who created the thing. it doesn’t mean 'i can ignore that the person who made this is a bigot’ - it may in fact often mean 'this piece of art holds a lot of bigoted meanings that the author probably wasn’t intentionally trying to convey but did anyway, and it’s worth addressing that on its own terms regardless of whether the author recognises it’s there.’ it’s important to understand because most artists are not consciously and vocally aware of all the possible meanings of their art, and because art is communal and interpretive. and because what somebody thinks they mean, what you think somebody means, and what a text is saying to you are three entirely different things and it’s important to be able to tell the difference.

male gaze is a cinematographic theory on how films construct subjectivity (ie who you identify with and who you look at). it argues that film language assumes that the watcher is a (cis straight white hegemonically normative) man, and treats men as relatable subjects and women as unknowable objects - men as people with interior lives and women as things to be looked at or interacted with but not related to. this includes sexual objectification and voyeurism, but it doesn’t mean 'finding a lady sexy’ or 'looking with a sexual lens’, it means the ways in which visual languages strip women of interiority and encourage us to understand only men as relatable people. it’s important to understand this because not all related gaze theories are sexual in nature and if you can’t get a grip on male gaze beyond 'sexual imagery’, you’re really going to struggle with concepts of white or abled or cis subjectivities.

:whispers: also Death of the Author means you have to exercise self-criticism and recognise the bias YOU as the audience bring to interpreting a piece of work. Yes, your reading is valid. But to what extent are you extrapolating from your own experiences, privileges & lacks of privilege, past traumas, etc.? How might this affect your interpretation of the text?

More people need to understand that part, too.

78,388 notesReblogged at 11:05am, 07/24/23
Via: fernvictor

eyecager:

Red Moon.

2,395 notesReblogged at 02:06am, 07/24/23
Via: rockboci
Tags: ▪aes

yourhometowncryptid:

image

this is so fucking funny. im going to say β€œhere come the locusts” everytime something goes wrong now

75,585 notesReblogged at 01:59am, 07/24/23
Via: lesbianshepard
11,824 notesReblogged at 01:56am, 07/24/23
Via: qapleulia

noknowshame:

If you need anything to convince you to watch The Terror, just know that throughout this entire ominous dark gothic horror, it turns out that - on god - the antagonist’s unironic evil plan is to go on a beach vacation to Hawaii

2,138 notesReblogged at 12:40am, 07/24/23
Via: sappsorrow