Reblog to kill it faster
I LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE EMILY CARROLL COMICS
Halloween is the perfect time to read the incredible works of Emily Carroll, my absolute favorite horror cartoonist and storyteller. You can read many of her works free on her website!
I especially love His Face All Red, The Groom, The Hole the Fox Did Make, and Out of Skin.
I cannot over-recommend Carrollās short story collection Through the Woods, which is one of the best works of fiction (horror or otherwise) Iāve ever read. If you can, get a copy from your local library or bookstore!
Got to go, itās Halloween and Iām spending my evening sitting in the dark, drinking hot chocolate, re-reading these spooky comics while the wind rattles at the windows.
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Greetings and salutations! Most people writing in say that itās their first time doing so. I admit, that isnāt quite the case for me. I sent in a letter back in 1942, asking about whether or not I should medically transitionāthough of course the terminology was a bit different then.
I admit, I donāt remember the specifics of your response, but whatever it was, within twelve months I was taking testosterone pills. And Iāve been on HRT since then! Itāll be eighty years come January. I suppose Iām what you might call an elder in the community, though I certainly donāt look it.
Thatās sort of why that Iām writing to you again. As you know, most genuses age getting older, but some age getting younger. My genus, whatever it is, does a combination of the two. I aged normally from when I was born til when I was 73. At that point, I died, spent about a day and a half decomposing, a day and a half un-decomposing, and then popped up out of my casket! My relatives were⦠surprised, to say the least. I think we all were. Regardless, I grew younger at the same rate until I was seven years and four months old, and then boomeranged and started growing older again. Iām currently in my third repeat of this cycle, putting me at about 375.
I donāt mind it, honestly. I know that a lot of folks who grow younger tend to dislike it, for very understandable reasonsābeing patronized by someone a fifteenth of your age is quite an experience. But aside from the condescension and not always being able to reach the top shelf, I think itās pretty fun! Nothing beats hide-and-seek as a nine year old, and when Iām in the de-aging half of life, itās always a relief to get my 30-year-old knees back.
There is another aspect to it, though. However my body ages, it de-ages in the exact same way, no more and no less. For example, letās say I get a tattoo when Iām 27 years and two days old, while aging up. Iāll have that tattoo through when I die, and all the way back down to when Iām 27 years and 3 days old. Itāll disappear sometime during the following day, and by the time Iām 27 years and one day old, itāll be like I never got it done. Itāll pop up again the next time Iām that age, but for those 40-ish years, I just wonāt have it.
And attempts to change by body while Iām growing younger all vanish after the dayāIāve become very well-versed in wigs for this reason. I can change my body while aging up again (I donāt choose the tattoo example lightly; someday Iāll figure out a system that prevents me from getting overlapping ones), but it's a rather long wait.
Still, itās primarily just a nuisance. Iāve had plenty of time to figure out workarounds and roundabouts. However. Iām almost 34 right now, and have about 14 months until I hit the date I first took testosterone. My boy-thday, if you will. Ahem. Anyway. For the past few years, Iāve been slowly but surely getting a body closer to the one I had when I started medically transitioning.
Iāve tried continuing to take T, consulting with other people who grow younger, even contracting time travelers to see what they could do, all to no avail. When these 14 months are up, Iāll have a form indistinguishable from the one I was so desperate to escape. From then, itāll be about 20 years until Iāll have even a little-kid sort of androgyny again.
I have lived through this period in my life before. Iāve lived through it on five separate occasions. I will be alright. But every time, it hurts. Quite a lot. And I fear that these upcoming two decades will hurt even more, since Iāll know what itās like to live without that underlying sense of constant pain.
Iām not exactly sure what Iām asking here, maybe you can tell me what my question is, but, um. Do you have any advice?
Thank you so much for writing in, reader. It's always lovely to hear from people who have found my advice helpful in the past, and I hope I can offer you the same comfort and support you felt in 1942.
An important thing to remember here is that, no matter what stage of life your body is at, it is still your body. To be clear: a trans body. Your physical appearance may seem to be resetting, but your life experience is not wiped out by each new cycle. You carry with you all your past experiences, and all your current perspectives.
You may or may not consider yourself to have been male during your first adolescence. The way we frame our own histories naturally varies from person to person, and not everyone retroactively identifies their younger self in the same way they identify in the present.
But regardless of how you perceive that earlier self, your current self is undoubtedly transgender. That doesn't change just because your body does. When your dysphoria starts to rear its head, hold onto that. Your body does not define your gender, and your identity is valid no matter what you look like.
Of course, you still need to find ways to manage that dysphoria when it happens. I'm sure you're well aware of your options for temporary, daily management of your appearance through wigs, gender affirming clothing, and so on. You might also consider applying a glamour to yourself to help your outward appearance more closely match your inner self.
If you're not a practitioner yourself, you can either use ready-made glamours or hire a practitioner to craft one to your own specifications. Even off-the-rack glamours can be expensive, however, so you may want to save this option for special occasions rather than daily use.
Beyond that, your best defences against the anguish of gender dysphoria are good mental and emotional health, and a supportive community. Be sure to practise regular self-care (real self-care, not the type invented to sell face masks and scented candles) and lean on your loved ones as much as you need to during this difficult period.
Finally, remember: your body is not the enemy here. You deserve to be treated with gentleness, love and kindness, and this extends to your physical self, too. Try to develop a practice of mindfulness and active gratitude, checking in with your body regularly and taking note of all the joys you can experience as a physical being, from enjoying the cold wind on your cheeks or the smell of clean bedding, to the delights of good sex, delicious food, or a hot shower after a long day.
This is a difficult time of your life, and you have my sympathy. But I don't believe it has to be a source of āconstant painā. Treat yourself kindly, let others support you, and know that no matter what the world perceives, you know who you are, and nobody can take that away from you.
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Hello.
I amāwasāa very powerful deity. About 200 years ago, I was sealed away by a group of very rude Sapio men. I have, obviously, escaped those confines by now.
However, I am far from my original form. In an attempt to drag me down to their level, those heathens made me one of them. A Sapio.
With all due ārespectā to the Sapios in the community, I HATE IT. Not to mention: I have lost all ability to make in-person contact with ANYONE in the creature community! I would be impressed with this level of sorcery if it wasnāt used against me, of all beings!
So, what am I supposed to do with my next thousand years while I sort this out? How am I meant to enjoy the thrill of the hunt when Iāve only got two short legs? What good is howling at the moon with a voice that can barely echo off the cliffs?
Iāve tried finding some new hobbies, but honestly. A potluck with Nextdoor Sasha and her Oh So Lovely Kids isnāt exactly a ravenous feast in my honor. Nothing seems to compare anymore. So what do I do? I know itās only temporary, but if I get invited to one more night out drinking with the boys that doesnāt include the killing of a sacrificial boar, Iām going to lose it. Please, help an ex-god out!
Oh, reader ā this sounds absolutely dreadful, I'm so sorry you're having to go through this. Not only are you having to suffer the indignity of being confined to a form that is not your own, but the magical prohibition on meeting with liminal folk must be particularly wearing.
On a practical level, I wonder how far that prohibition extends. Given that the spell that binds you to this form was constructed over 200 years ago, it seems unlikely it can account for the joys of the modern Internet.
Online friendships are not quite the same as in-person ones, but they can be extremely fulfilling, and may offer you more support for your particular circumstances than Nextdoor Sasha is able to provide.
At the risk of getting your hopes up, the Internet might also be helpful in finding a more long-term solution for the matter. This sounds like an extremely complicated, high-level binding, and likely not something the average professional magic-user would be able to undo.
It's rare that I suggest seeking out a wizard to solve one's magical problems, since wizards are, by and large, overpriced, overeducated and overly endowed with ego. But in your case, a highly specialised, highly qualified practitioner might be just what you need.
In the meantime, I think you need to reconsider the types of activities you're taking up to fill the hole left by your erstwhile godhood. I quite agree that neighbourhood potlucks and nights out with 'the boys' are hardly going to scratch the itch. Have you considered BDSM? Or alternatively, it's less sexual cousin, LARPing?
If you want to feel like a god again, the world is full of people willing to help. You just need to find them, and agree the exact terms of your worship ā whether that be within the confines of a kink scene, or a roleplaying game.
You will need to communicate your needs and wishes clearly, and respect other people's boundaries, but provided you can manage that, I see no reason you couldn't find any number of willing peons to worship at your feet and kiss the ground you walk on.
Iāve been with my fiancĆ© for over 8 years now. Weāve been friends for even longer and just last summer we had been planning our wedding ceremony. Now, his family hadnāt been the best supportively, not when he came out as gay, and especially not when he, a Sapio, started dating me, a giant. They then effectively disowned him after we announced our engagement. I think they might have had some weird hope heād āchange his mindā or that it was a āphaseā. This was about 3 years ago now, and I canāt speak for my partner, but he admitted though it hurt, he was relieved to be away from them after all the abuse.
Anyway, the reason for this letter is about 7 months ago we had gotten word that his family had been in a serious accident and that his parents, sister and her husband had passed away and he was listed as next-of-kin and subsequently guardian for his 4 year old nephew.
Now, we never really talked about kids beyond some vague idea. But my partner wasnāt going to turn away the kid, nor did I expect him to. So, after the funeral service and sorting with social services, we brought his nephew home.
It has been an adjustment for all of us, getting used to having a kid around and him being in a new environment thatās more geared for my size honestly. and weāve been trying to find a good child psychologist for him. but the main problem is⦠well, heās afraid of me.
I canāt really blame him for that, after everything he went through, but it still hurts sometimes when he flinches when I enter a room or speak to him. Or how he looks ready to cry when I open my mouth. Even trying to hide when he sees me just reading a book. Iāve grown up in a mixed community, but the way the kid looks at me, for the first time in a very long time, I feel like a monster.
My partner has told me once when we were in bed that his āfamilyā had been filling the kidās head with anti-nightfolk ideologies and even some rather⦠well, blood-libel comments. I think he was trying to comfort me as he noticed the way the kid had been a lot more skittish with me than with him. He has been trying to explain that a lot of the stuff his folks talked about was lies and really bad stuff, but itās hard unlearning these sort of things. I had suggested we postpone the wedding, at least till things settle.
I have been trying to seem less āintimidatingā, not smiling with my fangs and trying to look smaller than I really am. But Iām worried he might never not be afraid of me. And I never told my partner, but Iām afraid that he will be forced to pick between me and the kid, and I donāt want him to do that as I know either option will hurt him.
So Iām asking. Is there anything I can do to try and help seem less⦠monstrous to my nephew?
I'm afraid there are no quick fixes here, reader. Your nephew has been exposed to some seriously toxic ideologies from a very early age. That isn't the sort of thing you can fix over night.
I would caution against trying too hard to diminish yourself or your creaturely traits as part of this process. You want your nephew to be comfortable with you, not with a nervous caricature of yourself.
Instead, I encourage you to behave at home as normally as you can, being as friendly as he'll allow you to be and respecting his boundaries when he expresses them.
If you haven't already, talk to your partner about what your strategies are going to be to improve the situation. This is a long-term project that needs complete buy-in from both of you to succeed.
As much as possible, your partner should be exposing your nephew to the idea of difference, teaching him that it's OK to notice that other people are different than him, but that he still needs to treat them with kindness and respect.
There are so many more resources available today to help children learn about these matters, from books and films to websites dedicated to help you discuss these issues in an age-appropriate way.
Books like Paws, Claws and More, What's for Lunch? and My Daddy's A Mummy are a great way to start these conversations and to help introduce your nephew to these ideas in a way that is accessible for him. Talk to your local librarian for more recommendations.
The best way for him to learn to trust you is through spending time with you, drowning out the hateful ideas he's been taught through real, lived experience of being safe and happy in the company of people in the community. Make sure to set time aside for all three of you to spend time together, doing activities your nephew will enjoy.
Of course, his exposure to the creature community shouldn't start and end with you. If you can, consider getting him involved in mixed genus groups where he can meet liminal children his own age. It might be a bit of an adjustment for him, but it will a huge boon to him in the long run.
Finally, please consider seeking out some additional support for yourself during this process. This is a difficult, highly emotional situation, and you need to find people who you can talk to about it beyond your partner, whether that's to talk through possible solutions or just to vent occasionally.
Fortunately, reader, if there's one thing children are built for, it's learning. It will take time and emotional commitment, but with a little effort, I think you and your partner will be able to teach your nephew a kinder way of looking at the world.
Putting your vampire fuckbuddy into the sauna to reach normal body temp before sex so their ice cold hole doesn't kill your boner
No, because people keep acting like Grace Chastity being consumed with a lust for the power that Lords in Black provided her doesn't count as a world ending Cataclysm - but it very much does. Not only has she shown little to no empathy for others throughout the entire show and only ever felt bad for lying to authority figures and being horny - but the final song of the Musical is essentially a reprise of Max's Murder Song/Manifesto which places her as a parallel to Max. Max sings about how he's going to kill ALL the Nerdy Prudes and not once but twice tells the audience that it doesn't matter if someone is actually a Nerdy Prude because he makes the rules and gets to decide who is or isn't a nerd etc etc. Grace's take is that she is going to kill all the Dirty Dudes but she's literally singing it to a guy who has, throughout the entire musical, done nothing to indicate he's a pervy/dirty dude and only kissed her after she asked him too. Like Max, Grace Chastity doesn't actually care if someone genuinely fits the framework of her stated victimology, because she has the power so she gets to make the rules.
Honestly it's like some people didn't think about the implications.