-
Shoutout to brutalmoose’s pretentious-but-still-cool & tattoo.
Shoutout to a really mean thing to say!
Dude, I adore brutalmoose. He’s super cool. I wasn’t trying to be mean at all, I just think his tattoo is a little unusual in a way that makes me chuckle. Sorry if I came across wrong.
(via brutalmoose)
-









-
The anatomy of the Beast
I definitely thought that last arrow was headed somewhere else.

cock of a HORSE
i FUCKING HIT MY HEA DON THE DESK BECAUSE OF LAUGHING SO HARD AT THAT LAST BIT
Best. Omfg.(via lochency)
-
Shoutout to brutalmoose’s pretentious-but-still-cool & tattoo.
-
-
Songes withe a Puppes
-
without internet i’m nothing
(via planegirlie)
-
forsaken-spirits requested raven in #8
-
so much happening here:
- Feels a lot like you’re saying all of those things are supposed to be synonyms for “crazy” and “insane,” which is honestly more hurtful to me as a mentally ill person than being called “crazy” or “insane.”
- Thanks for starring out the letter A there. If I see those words entirely intact, I’ll probably spin into a manic rage and poop on the floor like a wild animal! Thanks for removing literally one letter so I only have to see 85% of the word, now I don’t have to start foaming at the mouth!
- The words “crazy” and “insane” are actually really important words for a lot of mentally ill people, who use it as a necessary shorthand to express concern that our illnesses might be skewing our perceptions of reality. For example, “is it crazy that I’m so worried about this?” is a much more effective thing to say than “is this a legitimate concern, or am I just projecting my own anxieties and paranoia onto the world around me?” Treating “crazy” as an inherently hurtful slur in all contexts (even “just saying it with no context so people know which word you’re talking about” as above) takes away a “real or not real” shorthand from us.
- Seriously this kind of post is so patronizing people stop doing them
(via snacco)


