because of that last post, a lot of you wanted Skoodge to be hugged, so there you go
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what gets to me is that himeru’s idealized vision of kaname isn’t in the past. because i believe he did realize that kaname lied to him. but maybe didn’t completely understand what that meant. kaname wanted to be a great idol and so the himeru persona was created. and meru does understand that this persona was aspirational. so that idealized version is not in the past, because kaname didn’t get the chance to fully become himeru. it exists in the present. i think himeru isn’t telling himself “this is what kaname was” he is telling himself “this is what kaname could have become. this is what he can be, he should be, he will be.”
anyways, pour one out for everyone who has ever felt crushed by the weight of expectations placed on them
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dumbass deltarune oc/idea
Since there might be a trend of speech quirks throughout the bosses
Anjle's might be for a word at the end of it's sentence to be spelled backwards
Or
It's might be to refer to people in pronoun form as it and instead of saying gendered names like girl or boy.. It'll just use thing instead leading into it not believing in gender
Anyways, that's all for now.
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We only meet the students for such a brief time, just a blip in their lives. Like the other characters in DE, there’s no way of really telling what they’re like when we don’t see them and when they’re not interacting with a cop. With them, since they seem to mirror Harry and Kim to some degree, it’s especially fascinating to wonder what Harry-and-Kim-like traits they might have that we’re not shown. Like this,
*just gives depression to Steban* sorry my boy
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I don't think there's anything that discourages a child's interest in learning to sew more than these 'learn to sew' kits. Because, like, you tell a kid that you got them something that's going to teach them how to make a stuffed cat, and they're imagining a stuffed cat like one that they probably already own, like so:
And they're not stupid, they know that their first project is not going to be that good, but then they actually open up the kit and start assembling it and it's not even trying to teach them to be good at it, it's clearly skipping things and cutting corners, and what they actually end up with is a fugly doll-lookin' thing with the seams on the outside and no shape to it. What are they supposed to take away from that? That if they pursue this hobby they can make dumb ugly stupid stuff whenever they want? Not to mention the fact that these kits almost always use felt, so the finished product just isn't going to last, like, at all.
Just. Just teach them to turn the seam and make a basic triangular head. It's not that hard. And by refusing to teach it right off the bat you're teaching kids that it's too hard and they actually can't succeed at it, thus driving them away from the art forever.
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