captainlordauditor:

venerabledreadnought:

captainlordauditor:

prairiedawn:

captainlordauditor:

i just think the world would be a better place if we would all take a bit of time to examine how we personally interact with stories

I, for one, am a complex network of interconnected stories stored on a meat based drive.

that is quite possibly the most terrifying way of describing a human but honestly same

That’s not scary. What’s scary is that you’re a ghost and a skeleton working together to Pilot fleshy power armor made by your mother

You know, I expected to regret making this post for entirely different reasons than I actually regret making this post.

tor0nado:

Erasermight Quirkless AU [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
*Please read from left to right!

This comic is based on the idea that all BNHA heroes are quirkless and they’re normal people. I tweaked a lot of canons, so it could be very different with the comic.

Aizawa is a high school literature teacher and also a novelist, Hizashi is a musician (They’re roommates) Toshinori was a police officer and he worked with Tsukauchi as partners but Toshi is retired.

*Please excuse any errors/typos, my first language is not english!

Villain Izuku 2

chess-blackfyre:

(for context, Izuku is in UA’s gen ed course)

Shinsou: So, did something happen? Because you’ve had this little grin on your face all day.

Izuku: It’s funny you should ask that because last night I learned an important lesson in determination and the power of believing in yourself.


(In the Teacher’s Lounge)

Aizawa: So let me get this straight, someone broke into your hero office in the dead of night, completely bypassing your half a billion dollar security system, WHILE you were sleeping there…just to draw dicks on everything you own.

All Might: They also changed my ringtone to NWA’s “Fuck da Police” and I have no idea how to change it back.

sartorialadventure:

landofrabbitsandteapots:

sartorialadventure:

wordswithkittywitch:

Maybe I’m biased because I make my own clothes, but skirts are better than trousers because you can put bigger pockets in skirts. With trousers, you’re limited to the size of your leg but with skirts you can just fill it up and people will just assume you’re wearing a petticoat until they hear the crunch of the Dorito bags.

Just once I’d like the see an historical heroine be asked if it bothers her that she has to wear skirts and have say, “Not really. I couldn’t fit this in a waistcoat.” and just pull out a loaf of bread or something and start eating it right in front of the baffled male lead.

It would work great in the 1700s with those removable pockets, you could fit a couple of Italian loaves in there.

image
image
image
image

POCKETS ALL

Why were these taken from us

Short answer: sexist politics. 

Long answer:

One way to look at the transfiguration of women’s tied-on, capacious pockets of the mid-eighteenth century into the early nineteenth century’s tiny, hand-held reticule is to consider that this transformation occurred as the French Revolution, a time that violently challenged established notions of property, privacy, and propriety. Women’s pockets were private spaces they carried into the public with increasing freedom, and during a revolutionary time, this freedom was very, very frightening. The less women could carry, the less freedom they had. Take away pockets happily hidden under garments, and you limit women’s ability to navigate public spaces, to carry seditious (or merely amorous) writing, or to travel unaccompanied.

The whole article is FASCINATING–and it points out that pockets have been an aspect of feminism from the beginning.