Itsallvenus - ⋆⋆Mari Venus⋆⋆

itsallvenus - ⋆⋆Mari Venus⋆⋆

More Posts from Itsallvenus and Others

2 years ago

Finally I've WRITTEN


Tags
2 years ago

Word. Maybe you can base their design off a Red Giant? It's the next phase of a star's life

hey uh- Im asking for advice for outfit designs with my oc, solar

Hey Uh- Im Asking For Advice For Outfit Designs With My Oc, Solar

I'm trying to do full body but I realise that I have no idea for the outfit design- and the color scheme also-

Its my first animatronic of that I liked when I drew them- so thats one thing-

Do you have any ideas?

Oh!! Well, do you have any kind of theme in mind? I know a lot of people are going for clown and jester adjacent designs, but I don't want to assume that's where you wanna go.

But, I like to derive colors from the thing I'm taking the theme from. So, if you've seen my fnaf oc Rummy Jack, they're black, white, and red because those tend to be the default colors for card decks. Might add blue later since I know that's pretty common. But space is nuts! You can kinda go anywhere with it.

2 years ago
The Anarchic Spider-Man! By Jhony Caballero

The Anarchic Spider-Man! By Jhony Caballero


Tags
2 years ago

reblog to tell the person you reblogged this from that they are deserving of love and affection


Tags
2 years ago

Ghost au, First encounter with the moon man-

Ghost Au, First Encounter With The Moon Man-
Ghost Au, First Encounter With The Moon Man-
Ghost Au, First Encounter With The Moon Man-
Ghost Au, First Encounter With The Moon Man-
Ghost Au, First Encounter With The Moon Man-

Ghost au y/n has the personality of a Disney tv show protagonist and that’s amazing


Tags
2 years ago

on trust and manipulation

Back in early high school, I knew a girl - we were kinda friends by virtue of having multiple friends in common, but in hindsight, she never much liked me - who had this purebred dog. I’d met him at her place, and he wasn’t desexed, which was pretty unusual in my experience, so it stuck in the memory. And one day, as we were walking across the playground, this girl - I’ll call her Felice - said to me, “Hey, so we’re going to start using my dog as a stud.” And I’m like, Oh? And she’s like, “Yeah, we’ve been talking to breeders, we’re going to get to see his puppies and everything,” and I made interested noises because that actually sounded pretty interesting, and she went on a little bit more about how it would all work -

And then, out of nowhere, she swapped this sly look with another girl, burst out laughing and exclaimed, “God, you’re so gullible. I literally just made that up. You’ll believe anything!”

And I was just. Dumbfounded. Because I was standing there, staring at them, and they were laughing like I was an idiot, like they’d pulled this massive trick on me, and all I could think, apart from why the fuck they felt moved to do this in the first place, was that neither of them knew what gullible means. Like, literally nothing in that story was implausible! I knew she had an undesexed, male, purebred dog! It made total sense that he be used for a stud! And it wasn’t like I was getting this information from a second party - the person who actually owned the dog was telling me herself! And I felt so immensely frustrated, because they both walked off before I could figure out how to articulate that gullible means taking something unlikely or impossible at face value, whereas Felice had told me a very plausible lie, and while the end result in both cases is that the believer is tricked, the difference was that I wasn’t actually being stupid. Rather, Felice had manipulated the fact that she occupied a position of relative social trust - meaning, I didn’t have any reason to expect her to lie to me - to try and make me feel stupid.

Which, thinking back, was kind of par for the course with Felice. On another occasion, as our group was walking from Point A to Point B, I felt a tugging jostle on my school bag. I didn’t turn around, because I knew my friends were behind me, and my bag was often half-zipped - I figured someone was just shoving something back in that had fallen out, or had grabbed it in passing as they horsed around. Instead, Felice steps up beside me, grinning, and hands me my wallet, which she’d just pulled out, and tells me how oblivious I was for not noticing that she’d been rifling my bag, and how I ought to pay more attention. This was not done playfully: the clear intent, again, was to make me feel stupid for trusting that my friends - which, in that context, included her - weren’t going to fuck with me. As before, I couldn’t explain this to her, and she walked on, pleased with herself, before I could try.

The worst time, though, was when I came back from the canteen at lunch one day, and Felice, again backed up by another girl, told me that my dad had showed up on campus looking for me. By this time, you’d think I’d have cottoned on to her particular way of fucking with me, but I hadn’t, and my dad worked close enough to the school that he really could’ve stopped in. So I believed her, a strange little lurch in my stomach that I couldn’t quite place, and asked where he was. She said he’d gone looking for me elsewhere, at another building where we sometimes sat, and so I hurried off to look for him, feeling more and more anxious as I wondered why he might be there.

I was halfway across campus before I let myself remember that my mother was in hospital.

I felt physically sick. My pulse went through the roof; I couldn’t think of a reason why my dad would be at school looking for me that didn’t mean something terrible had happened to my mother, that her surgery had gone wrong, that she was sick or hurt or dying. And when my dad wasn’t where she’d said he would be, I hurried back to Felice - who was now sitting with half our mutual group of friends - only to be met with laughter. She called me gullible again, and that time, I snapped. I chased her down and punched her, and the friends who’d only just arrived, who didn’t know what had happened or why I was reacting like that, instantly took her side. Noises were made about telling the rest of our friends what I’d done, and I didn’t want them to hear Felice’s version first, so I ran off to the library, where I knew they were, to tell them first.

I walked into the library. I found our other friends. I was shaky and red-faced, and they asked me what had happened. I told them what Felice had done, that I’d hit her for it, that my mother was in hospital for an operation - something I’d mentioned in passing over the previous week; multiple people nodded in recognition - and how I’d thought Felice’s lie meant that something bad had happened. And then I burst into tears, something I almost never did, because it wasn’t until I said it out loud that I realised how genuinely frightened I’d been. I sat down at the table and cried, and a girl - I’ll call her Laurel - who I’d never really been close to - who was, in fact, much better friends with Felice than with me - put her arm around my shoulders and hugged me, volubly furious on my behalf.

And then the other girls showed up, and Laurel said, with that particular vicious sincerity that only twelve-year-olds can really muster, “Prepare to die, Felice,” and I almost wanted to laugh, but didn’t. A girl who was a close friend, who’d come in with Felice, took her side, outraged that I’d punched someone, until Laurel spoke up about my mother being in hospital, and everyone went really quiet. Which was when I remembered, also belatedly, that Laurel’s own mother was dead; had died of cancer several years previously, which explained why she of all people was so angry. I have a vivid memory of the look on Felice’s face, how she tried to play it off - she said she hadn’t known about my mother, I pointed out that I’d mentioned it multiple times at lunch that week, and she lost all high ground with everyone.    

Felice never played a trick on me again.

Eighteen years later, I still think about these incidents, not because I’m bearing some outdated grudge, but because they’re a good example of three important principles: one, that even with seemingly benign pranks, there’s a difference between acting with friendly or malicious intent; two, that ignorance of context can have a profound effect on the outcome regardless of what you meant; and three, that getting hurt by people who abuse your trust doesn’t make you gullible - it means you’re being betrayed. 

And I feel like this is information worth sharing.  


Tags
2 years ago

lord almighty i need positivity on the dash please tell the person you reblog this from something kind


Tags
3 years ago
Just Eclipse Things :)
Just Eclipse Things :)
Just Eclipse Things :)

just Eclipse things :)


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • scorpionlgbtq
    scorpionlgbtq liked this · 1 month ago
  • professor-nobody
    professor-nobody liked this · 1 month ago
  • punkybunk
    punkybunk liked this · 2 months ago
  • mochi-loading
    mochi-loading liked this · 3 months ago
  • giverofjustictofriendsoncewer
    giverofjustictofriendsoncewer liked this · 4 months ago
  • niyatirose-blog
    niyatirose-blog liked this · 5 months ago
  • sadman576
    sadman576 liked this · 5 months ago
  • blupeeblep
    blupeeblep liked this · 5 months ago
  • fallen-sky-warrior
    fallen-sky-warrior liked this · 5 months ago
  • atlaswashere
    atlaswashere liked this · 5 months ago
  • shinyhideoutcowboy
    shinyhideoutcowboy liked this · 5 months ago
  • jaytoplay0
    jaytoplay0 liked this · 5 months ago
  • aspestrella
    aspestrella liked this · 5 months ago
  • geraldtheoceanman
    geraldtheoceanman liked this · 6 months ago
  • sillylittlecreaturee
    sillylittlecreaturee liked this · 7 months ago
  • spookyscaryaxolotl
    spookyscaryaxolotl liked this · 8 months ago
  • maidofchub
    maidofchub liked this · 8 months ago
  • rose-above-dark
    rose-above-dark liked this · 9 months ago
  • dragon-s356
    dragon-s356 liked this · 9 months ago
  • shugrr3
    shugrr3 liked this · 9 months ago
  • mimocrocodilelol
    mimocrocodilelol liked this · 10 months ago
  • i-heart-tiana
    i-heart-tiana liked this · 10 months ago
  • cobra-branca
    cobra-branca liked this · 11 months ago
  • riddlegirlworld
    riddlegirlworld liked this · 11 months ago
  • eldritchsp00ks
    eldritchsp00ks liked this · 11 months ago
  • gosutosuta
    gosutosuta liked this · 1 year ago
  • screw-fandom-urls-anyway
    screw-fandom-urls-anyway liked this · 1 year ago
  • arxsss8
    arxsss8 liked this · 1 year ago
  • projectmoonlightproductions
    projectmoonlightproductions liked this · 1 year ago
  • knotsoangelic
    knotsoangelic liked this · 1 year ago
  • nuh-uh-multi
    nuh-uh-multi liked this · 1 year ago
  • purgatoryfallenangel
    purgatoryfallenangel liked this · 1 year ago
  • rococobean
    rococobean liked this · 1 year ago
  • tequliasunsets
    tequliasunsets liked this · 1 year ago
  • mizza89
    mizza89 liked this · 1 year ago
  • well-dressed-cow
    well-dressed-cow liked this · 1 year ago
  • feline17ff
    feline17ff liked this · 1 year ago
  • danuio
    danuio liked this · 1 year ago
  • kitten1060
    kitten1060 liked this · 1 year ago
  • south-downs-cottage
    south-downs-cottage liked this · 1 year ago
  • evergreen-lyricist
    evergreen-lyricist liked this · 1 year ago
  • shenny100
    shenny100 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • tales-of-tai-shan
    tales-of-tai-shan liked this · 1 year ago
  • autumntay
    autumntay liked this · 1 year ago
  • you-are-too-blind-to-see
    you-are-too-blind-to-see liked this · 1 year ago
  • manifested-phant0m
    manifested-phant0m liked this · 1 year ago
  • coolerthemanplz
    coolerthemanplz liked this · 1 year ago
  • my-catsface
    my-catsface liked this · 1 year ago
itsallvenus - ⋆⋆Mari Venus⋆⋆
⋆⋆Mari Venus⋆⋆

𝕯𝖎𝖆𝖒𝖔𝖓𝖉 𝕽𝖔𝖈𝖐 𝕲𝖔𝖙𝖍

269 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags