the first rule of shipping is get aromantic with it. the second rule is that gender and sexuality are what i want them to be. the third rule is have fun and be yourself
woah this character is so cool i wish they were covered in blood their whole body trembling with a look of absolute horror on their face as theyre struggling to breathe in panic
izuku's hero costume is soo funny to me. like i genuinely wonder what the support companies were thinking when reworking the thing like. ah yes this child clearly wants to be an absolutely terrifying bunny. no worries we got you.
Himiko Toga would’ve been such a good hero if her parents weren’t wimps
like facilitate her needs and you got a potential hero who can identify dead bodies, and if a criminals blood was found she could identify them that way too
no dna data base needed if she can transform into them
These are my kids
First ape to go to the watering hole with a container and put some of the water in it so that they could drink more later without returning to the watering hole must have been lauded as a fucking genius.
A family can be two exhausted single men and their twenty teenagers
"He's a hopper for sure!" -Tsuyu
i think when people talk about dsm diagnoses being 'destigmatised' it's usually the case that what they mean is the public perception of the diagnosis name (depression, anxiety, etc) has become associated with minor, temporary, or resolvable forms of distress. the experience of being so depressed you cannot get out of bed, or brush your teeth, or work -- that experience and those behaviours have never been 'destigmatised,' only associated with other diagnostic labels in certain discourses seeking to present 'depression' as treatable or minor. it's basically a semantic nosological shift, rather than any actual 'destigmatisation' of the behaviours psychiatry exists to pathologise -- widening (minimising) the diagnosis, then just moving any leftover 'scary' symptoms to a different diagnostic bucket. it's a rhetorical shell game that does not challenge, but exists symbiotically with, the ableism that causes behaviours like "not being able to get out of bed" to be stigmatised in the first place.
We see EVERYBODY else as cute little babies and no Spinner,,,,