Here is my cosplay lineup and panels for @otafest 2022!
💳 SATURDAY:
Casual Mammon (Obey Me!) all day with a surprise for my 18+ panel! 😉
• 1st Panel - Obey Me! Brothers’ Game Event in Telus 102 from 10 AM-11:30 AM
• 2nd Panel - Obey Me! House Of Lamentation 18+ Game Event in Glen 201/202 from 10:30 PM-12 AM
❇️ SUNDAY: Shopkeeper Kisuke (Bleach)
Hope to see you at Otafest and at least one of my panels! There will be prizes for both winners and losers at my panels, so don’t miss out!
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It's been a while... my new job has been a lot to get used to, so I haven't really been able to finish any pieces recently, but here is this. I've been meaning to catalogue my gratitude for my low-dose T. Before I went on hormones, I had been fighting my body in the background for so long without noticing, and T made me realize it only after it stopped really being a problem.
And while I am not transmasc, of course people who are transmasc can (and likely will) relate to this! I added that second panel because I want people to stop calling me or my experiences transmasc in my notes when it is incorrect and makes me uncomfortable. Thank you.
ID below thanks to @/rjalker!
[ID: A comic done in mostly black and white, titled, "A Love Letter To What Testosterone Has Given Me" with four hears in the colors of the nonbinary flag, yellow, white, purple, and black, lined up vertically next to it.
The panel next to the title reads, "A note: I am nonbinary, genderqueer, & maverique. I do not identify as transmasc or relate to transmasc experinces. Please don't refer to me as such!"
The five remaining panels are the comic itself:
The first panel shows a drawing of a person mostly offscreen, black shirt, dark hair, sideburns, and glasses just visible, and reads, "To the sideburns I knew I wanted since I was 14."
The second panel continues, "To the arm hair I never knew I needed", showing a light arm with dark hairs on it.
The third panel continues, "To the broader shoulders", showing a bare-chested person from behind with arms partly lifted.
The fourth panel continues, "& thin mustache", showing a smiling person's lower jaw and neck, covered with sparse hairs.
The fifth panel concludes, "& to the realization that people don't have to spend their lives fighting their body for peace.", and shows a person wearing boxers and a bra, with hair legs, arms, and belly, one hand on hip and looking with a small smile towards the camera. At the bottom are two small trans and nonbinary flags.
End ID.]
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watched a person in real-time find out about Jason Todd's death, start to mourn him, and then proceeded to learn about his coming back to life. it was like watching them step on a roller coaster and then get thrown on right away.
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Goes without saying that disrespecting people’s existence is bad but like. you can tell someone is so mortally attached to their internet superiority complex when they pretend that “offensiveness” that comes from real historical accounts of a lesbian learning not to think so poorly of trans women in the 80’s or whatever else that was in dtwof that’s clearly ignorance common from the time is worse than someone sitting down to write their own fictional little universe in the 2010’s to pump out all the shit that homestuck was getting up to (weird race discourse with jane, poc steryotypes, other not race related shit including fumbling their headlining sapphic ship in the post-story so badly that it ruined everything about it) AND that it’s more foundational to the queer community.
You are so media brainrotted that you think that Alison Bechdel’s work needs to be omitted because it’s not fandomable and it isn’t all just the best most flowery parts of being alive during the gay liberation that you can keep posting to your aesthetic/relatable/whatever blogs. She’s not a character you pathologize over she’s a real ass person that accurately depicted and did not censor her past flaws and bigotries that were unfortunately common at the time.
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