This is the most trusting the process I've ever had in my life. And it isn't october yet
My cat, with a wig in Halloween š
When I bought the wig it was matted and fucked up I forgot to take a before and after picture but that was the furthest thing on my mind I was trying to get the wig Actually to look good I think I did pretty good for my first time styling a wig 
oh me? im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im just clowning around!im j
The bad taste gang might come for me over this post, but the fact is that BNHA and MP100 have some overlapping themes, and thatās one of many reasons why they get compared. BNHAās treatment of those themes is shallow and unwittingly cruel, but is supposed to be read as positive. Meanwhile, MP100 approaches those themes with hope and compassion
Both BNHA and MP100 explore themes of value as an individual and in societyāvalue judgments of who is average, who is extraordinary, and who is inferior. From the very beginning, BNHA asserts that people are not of equal value, but anyone can improve themselves to meet or exceed the average and become valuable and worthy. I donāt like that one bitāit assigns worth to each individual based on their level of mental and physical ability. It seems like a positive message at first glance, but upon further inspection itās just desolate.
BNHA asserts that if you physically canāt conform to norms, the only acceptable route to happiness is to do the impossible and exceed those norms. MP100 asserts that if you canāt conform, you are still no better or worse than anyone else, and the path to fulfillment is treating yourself and others with respect.
MP100 answers the question of who is worthy and who is not with the idea that nobody is specialānot in a positive way, or a negative way. (āIf everyone is not special, maybe you can be what you want to beā.) In the end, whether your ability level in one area or another is within the bell curve, or if itās at the extreme edge of the range of human experiences, you are good enough to value yourself and be valued by others, but you are not superior, either.
What makes Midoriya different from the established norms around him is something that he must change about his nature as a person. What makes Mob different is his powers and his neurodivergence, and while heās insecure about both of these things and afraid of the way they manifest in combination (reaching 100% and having a meltdown), the narrative shows that those are neutral qualities and he can do whatever he wants with the hand heās been dealt in life. (āMob, Mob, What do you want?ā āMob, Mob, whatever you want!ā)
Midoriyaās happiness relies on meeting and exceeding the social norms set for his body and futureāgaining a quirk and becoming a hero. He has to change to be treated with any respect. But Mobās happiness relies on learning that it is okay to be who he is.
Another theme is power: in BNHA, the pursuit of power is treated as something noble and admirable. In MP100, power is treated as something that only immature, self-aggrandizing, destructive people seek; or, in Ritsuās case, power is something that people seek when they feel helpless and unsafe. But thatās another essay unto itself.
Clow Cards. This is a shoot i did for school. She's my friend wearing a CC's wig. I'm studying Photography and i want to spread my work into the net. Hope you like it. c:
The Happiest Satellite
Hope u like it ā”ā”ā”Julia
Wig styling is kinda fun but god my back doesnāt like me hunched over for 8 hours straight while I hyperfocus on getting a spikey piece to lie cleanly š