Icon from a picrew by grgikau. Call me Tir or Julian. 37. He/They. Queer. Twitter: @tirlaeyn. ao3: tirlaeyn. 18+ Only. Star Trek. Sandman. IwtV. OMFD. Definitionless in this Strict Atmosphere.

xenobotanist:

xenobotanist:

Thinking about this emblem and Garak’s watermelon outfit. Is this him being super patriotic? Is it like an American wearing the stars and stripes?

Garak, are you breaking the Cardassian Union flag code by wearing that?

image
image

More to consider: Mila also wears red and green (and spots).

So either they’re both super patriotic, or Garak just dresses like his mother.

image
image

sfreedram:

gatheringbones:

I don’t have the book anymore because I slipped it into the locker of my depressed mormon lesbian coworker on the last day of my retail job but it was that kate bornstein book about 101 reasons not to kill yourself and she had a whole section on how every gay and lesbian in history was betraying their assigned gender so utterly that they automatically became trans people and it’s one of those brilliant batshit things trans women say so often that drives the right people bugfuck nuts and I wish I had the full quote

“The next chapter of gender activism was written by the early gay rights activists. They tackled the law of gender that says loud and clear, ‘Real men love women, real women love men.’ 'No we don’t!’ cried the homosexuals.

And these pioneers transgressed a deeply rooted rule of gender. Lesbians and gays transgressed gender. Lesbians and gays are transgender. And they needed to band themselves together under some flag.

But it’s a terrifying thing to say, 'Hey, I’m a man who loves men, so maybe I’m not a real man!’

And it’s a terrifying thing to say, "I’m a woman who loves women, and so what if I’m not a real woman?”

People were even meaner about that kind of talk back in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries than they are today. It was difficult enough to say the lesbian and gay stuff, and in most areas of the world, it still is. No one was ready to hear not-man, not-woman, So they called themselves lesbian women and gay men, and they said things like, 'We’re just like you.“

They named themselves after the system that had oppressed them for such a long time. By the simple act of naming themselves women and men, it seems, in Minnie Bruce Pratt’s words, that their imaginations were in thrall to the institutions that oppressed them.”

Kate Bornstein, Hello Cruel World.

hotchvcolate:

adhdsoup:

you: i don’t really have sensory issues

also you:

  • hates your least favorite food because of the texture
  • wears the same 5 year old bra every day
  • wearing lots of jewelry irritates you
  • hates touching wet/soggy things
  • wore your socks inside out as a kid/always wear the same kind of socks
  • why won’t that ticking noise stop!!
  • despises shirts with rough tags

oh

Avatar
Anonymous:

Is there any snakes that have live births instead of laying eggs?

Avatar
is-the-snake-video-cute:

Absolutely, lots of them! Most members of the viper and boa families give live births.

There are three categories of animal births:

Oviparous: egg-layers. This is the most common method among snakes, with about 70% of all snakes laying eggs. All pythons, most elapids, most colubrids, and some vipers and boas are oviparous.

Viviparous: true live births. Hatchlings develop inside the parent’s placenta and are born live. This is the rarest form of snake births, with a few members of the colubrid family, such as the northern watersnake, being examples.

Oviviparous: this is when the hatchlings develop inside eggs and hatch inside the parent’s body, then are born live. This is very common in boas and vipers, and most snakes who give birth to live young are oviviparous, not truly viviparous. Examples include rattlesnakes, boa constrictors, and sea snakes.

image