Hi! Just wanted to drop by and say that while I love all of ur wolfwoods (u make him look so soft and squishy!), i could stare at ur chibi version of him for hours, i love him so much! Thank u for blessing us with him.
oh ty!! ;w;;; I happen to have a spare eepy ww doodle.,..here you go lol
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dropped weatherwax off for surgery this morning.
if you haven’t been following the WW saga, less than a month ago she started developing painfully engorged mammary tissue. the vet and i tried several different things with her in an attempt to avoid surgery, but after 4 days straight of not eating, and a whole afternoon spent hooked up to an IV receiving fluids, the vet decided the best course of action was to spay her. because her underside is completely solid with engorged tissue, they are doing a flank spay, going in from the side instead of from the belly. it’s a harder and riskier procedure, and is also significantly more expensive than the typical spay.
her vet bills are approximately $3.5k in total and i put it on my credit card so i’m not in any immediate financial danger, but i would really appreciate some help with it if anyone can spare anything, cuz i only make minimum wage. i set up a KOFI if anyone is willing to throw a couple bucks my way and i also have COMMISSIONS open as well. thanks in advance, and of course no one is obligated in any way.
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i wanna know if this is common knowledge among will wood fans- some songs definently come in pairs, right?
self- and -ish are obvious, but then there's also tomcat disposables and willard!, which i kind of consider the same story. both songs seem to be from the perspective of someone who feels outcast or different from everyone around them, to a degree where they relate to (or see themselves as) more animal than human. although, tomcat disposables seems to be about trying your best to fit in, but failing to, whereas willard! is more about giving up on trying to fit in, embracing what makes you different, maybe even thinking what makes you different makes you better. the end of willard! also references tomcat disposables directly through instruments, having the tomcat disposables melody at the very end.
then there's also hand me my shovel, i'm going in! and the song with five names, which are the same idea presented from two different points of view. both songs also use digging as a metaphor for introspection, hand me my shovel being explicitly pro-introspection, whereas 5 names seems to be against it. the choruses of both songs have such similar lyrics, yet seem to disagree: "this is not enough, this is not enough to prove it yet! no, i need to hit the bottom." "you could break a shovel when you break new ground; you dig dirt up when you dig deep down. you should know better than that by now, it's not profound to know that you could never know." these are two sides of essencially the same argument: should you try to find out who you are, or not?
dr. sunshine is dead and cotard's solution also seem connected, both by their theme and by the cotard's solution piano melody (and the accompanying lyrics) also being at the end of dr. sunshine. both songs have something to do with death, more specifically someone believing they're dead (this is cotard's delusion, which the first song gets its name from). cotard's solution is very clearly from the perspective of someone who believes that they are dead. it's also heavily implied this person is suicidal, with lyrics like "i wish that i were dead" and "i wanna make my murder look like a suicide", and the backing vocals singing "kill me" towards the end. i think this is related to the person's delusion; the suicidality almost presents itself as body dysphoria in their case, because they truly believe they are dead, so being inside a body that is still very much alive feels wrong (presented through lyrics like "you do the math, who's looking back? that's not me!" and "check in the mirror to see how i look; i look different in different ways.") the protagonist of dr. sunshine is dead seems to have very similar thoughts: "for your self-portraits, sign another name. who should i be then, if i'll never be the same?". dr. sunshine seems to be more about re-inventing yourself, thinking that the person you used to be is dead, and now you must resume a new identity. i'm not sure if this sort of thinking it directly related to cotard's delusion (i'm by no means an expert, i'm just some guy on the internet who really likes analyzing songs), but it does seem directly related to cotard's solution.
songs that might not be directly connected but i still think are worth mentioning include chemical overreaction and skeleton appreciation day. the last verse of chemical overreaction follows the same chord progression as skeleton appreciation day; you can hear the same melody in the background, played by an electric guitar. the themes of the two songs seem seperate, though.
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