My None Langst Account

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
spacegayparty
otherwindow

Mermaid witnessing a werewolf transformation by the beach and believes all humans are like that.

Pirate: ahoy
Mermaid: awooo?
Pirate: a what

otherwindow

Pirate: [digging up treasure]
Mermaid: no… bad boy… bad… no diggy hole… [sprays water]
Pirate: what the fuck
Parrot: what the fuck

tallowandport

Mermaid notices pirates bird companions talk human words sometimes and assume they are of equal intelligence to said humans.

Source: otherwindow
mistydandy
wittlecritter

I’ve been thinking about Howl’s Moving Castle and how Sophie’s curse is a physical symbol of her self belief of being romantically unlovable (especially after growing up with beautiful, sought after women in her family.) How Howl tries to undo the curse the moment she steps into his castle but he *cant* because Sophie doesn’t want it to be broken. How, in the film, Sophie gets so close to breaking the curse in the field, but hearing Howl call her beautiful went against her self views, so she reinforces her sense of self by turning 90 again.

And the way that her love and kindness make her younger again and again. How film Sophie sacrifices her long hair, perhaps what past Sophie would have seen as her only beauty, for Howl but she’s grown so much that she still remains young, perhaps even confident about her grey hair, showing that Sophie no longer links her appearance to her lovability or worth and she learned to accept herself as she is. In this essay I-

wittlecritter

image

This essay is a group project now and y’all are pulling your weight

Source: wittlecritter