Undertale AU Stories || RP & Ask Blog About || Rules || Find the Light behind the Clouds || Wings of Life story || These Violent Delights story Avatar by thegrinningkitten
To me Kermit the Frog is like one of those characters who’s every letter of the LGBTQ+ acronym at once based on who’s looking at him. Kermit is transmasc? Sure. Kermit is a lesbian? Okay. Kermit is a gay man? Why not. Kermit is transfem? I should’ve known.
When designing a new plan or routine, it's very common to want to do A LOT.
People ask me to evaluate their workout plan sometimes and I'm just amazed by how many exercises they add.
And that's fine. It's understandable that they want to do a lot and want to train everything.
Two things to consider:
1.) They likely designed/chose the routine when they were super motivated and energized. While it seems cool to plan 2 hours a day every day, it's likely not sustainable over a long period of time.
You need a foundation that you can do even when you're tired and don't feel like exercising - because those days WILL come! Might as well plan for them.
2.) Anywhere from 3-5 key movements can work your entire body. While variations of these movements will emphasize different muscle groups, don't worry about doing ALL of them at once.
You'll likely get bored with your routine in a few months and want to change things up. Allow this change to happen and work on some different variations that interest you! Your progress won't disappear overnight.
book howl was so real for abandoning his professional career and academic life at the moment a fantasy witchy world was available you go king wear fancy clothes! do magic! fight capitalism! don’t communicate your basic feelings! annoy the woman you would die for!
your time is worthwhile if your disability means you have to rest most of the time. if you can only do a few events a month, or a year, that's alright. if you need to sleep a lot, lie down a lot, that time isn't wasted. it doesn't make your experiences any less meaningful. feeling like you're missing out on different activities doesn't make the ones you do any less worthwhile. being disabled and restricted in activities doesn't make you boring or diminish your worth. there's no threshold for things you have to do to "really experience life" - you experience it by being alive. and every disabled life is a life that's worthwhile
whenever someone in a story tells a character they're training to fight to treat their weapon like an extension of themselves i always feel like more weight should be put on that statement. on the implication that in learning to wield a weapon you must become it. you must make it a part of you. you must walk down a path from which you will never be able to come back from.
Here's to all the shockingly single bachelor uncles or the two very close friends who just happened to be girls and are only living together until one of them finds a man (they lived together for forty two years).