Your personal Tumblr library awaits
Original designs (drawn in 2019)
Redesigns (drawn in 2025)
Ah yes I love play fighting with my bestie while half naked in the dark mhm
me and my bestie when we play fight or something like that
ok i thinj im going to do my first all nighter ever yuh
(Angst Warning)
(Again)
Could it be that the only reason wwx invented the summoning ritual was to bring JYL back to life ? We all know how much of a self-sacrificing idiot he is. Where else would he get the idea of this particular ritual ?
So actually, wwx may have invented the summoning ritual while delirious and grieving, right after the Nightless City massacre and his shijie’s death. His own soul wasn’t worth much anyway. (Yet the sects got to him before he could go through with it .)
I swear mine is coming!! 😭
No one on ao3 understands my Simon/Xavier vision 😔
I have Bill's parents as earrings now!
YOU’RE DOING GREAT, TUMBLR USER MIYORIIA! Your posts bring joy to my dashboard on a daily basis and I wish you a great day :D
are you real
My thoughts of Zane's "sacrifice"
So, he wasn't destroyed, he was banished to realm that called "Never-realm".
But I don't think that he is "sacrificed". I am 99.9% sure that he wanted to get there, If it was Zane in that moment... I'm sure it wasn't him.
He(or something in him) didn't want to give Wu the scroll of forbidden spinjitzu (Why forbidden🤔?). He hesitated for a moment, but after Wu yelled at him he "woke up".
And that moment of "sacrificing" - look at his pose! This pose directly radiates confidence in that action.
And look at his eyes! They narrowed! Narrowed in a bad meaning! In a bad, tricky meaning!
He definitely knew what he(or not he) doing!
And before this, when Aspheera(right?) tried to shoot in Wu, everyone was shocked and scared, but Zane has his eyebrow up, like if he(definitely not Zane) has a great idea(how to get to his real body... Ahem..Ice Emperor.. Ahem... ):
And after realising this I went like this:
jkr having the gayest fucking fandom ever might be the best thing to have ever occurred and i dont even fw harry potter
sorry for not posting too much recently, only reblogging a thing or two :/ i just don't really know what to post. again, still hyperfixated on my JJBA selfships though. but i'm bad at wording my sentences... and i'm a bit shy to randomly post about them oughhh 😭😭
also, i have not been feeling too confident on posting, as i don't think people care too much... i don't know, i'm sorry. eek 💔 also also, university began, so even if i wanted, i don't know if i would have time to post even. i think i do though. i'm just too shy i think.
i think i just need to talk and distract myself. but again i think i'm too shy to strike up a conversation.
My laptop was broken for awhile so here’s a sketch of Shi Wudu and Pei Ming >:D
hes- hes a little funky, a tiny bit (very) silly
WHY IS HE SO SUSPICIOUS???? When I watched the new episode and this sprite dropped I legit screamed. Four people died and he's fine, but when the elevator is closed he's scared or angry or what even is that expression??
Admittedly there is a minor risk when falling asleep in your preds’ tummy. You might end up being a wrinkly biscuit.
This likely to happen, to cozy to not fall asleep.
Thanks to the absolute joy that is Dracula Daily, I thought now might be a good time to talk about the origins of the vampire in British literature. I am a 19th century scholar who focuses on the Gothic, so while by no means an expert on vampires, I do have some understanding of how the genre came to be and boy, is it as wild and petty and as you'd hope it to be.
In order to understand how vampires came to be the aristocratic, blood sucking sex symbols they are today, let's first lay some ground work on how the tradition made it's way to Britain:
The vampire is a folkloric figure from Central and Eastern Europe, the Balkans, Turkey, and Greece. In 1701, French botanist Joseph Pitton de Tournefort was touring the island of Mykonos and recounted in his A Voyage to the Levant (1702) his experience witnessing the locals dig up the grave of a suspected Vrykolakas and cut the heart from its chest.
A century later, the Romantic poet Robert Southey cites de Tournefort's Voyage in his epic poem Thalaba the Destroyer (1801). The poem does not outright use the word "vampire" and the turning of the main character's love interest into a vampire is a minor plot point, but Southey's work draws a direct line of how the vampire tradition jumped from Greece to England.
Now here's where it gets interesting.
It involves (of course it does) everybody's favorite 19th century bad boy, Lord Byron.
Byron's poem The Giaour (rhymes with shower) is the first mention of a vampire in the English literary canon. His vampire falls more in line with the folkloric vampire as a blood drinking corpse than a debonair aristocrat. How Byron learned about vampires is not clear. He could have learned about them from Southey or de Tournefort, or encountered the legend during his own travels in Greece. Either way, Byron didn't really care for vampires. He thought they were dumb.
ENTER THE FAMOUS GHOST STORY NIGHT AT LAKE GENEVA
Scene: Mary and Percy Shelley. Mary's step sister Claire, Lord Byron, his doctor John Polidori, probably a ton of opium, and definitely a lot of sexual tension.
While most people know that Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein during this time, it's also worth noting that Byron started writing what was called A Fragment, or a Fragment of a Novel which featured an aristocratic traveler/vampire. However, Byron got bored with it and decided to drop the whole thing.
Not so much for Dr. John Polidori. Polidori worshipped Byron. He wanted to be Byron. He most likely wanted to bed Byron and Byron had the gall to laugh and call him "Polly Dolly" and refuse to give him the time of day.
So Polidori got his revenge by taking over Byron' s fragment and turning it into The Vampyre (1819). The entire novel is a thinly veiled jab at Byron and his hedonistic living. To make matters worse, the public thought Byron wrote it which infuriated Polidori who just wanted to shame Byron who laughed the entire thing off and said he would never write anything so trashy.
Once again, you can blame Lord Byron for something. The aristocratic, seductive vampire is (indirectly) because of him.
my furrst sketch of lapidot ;w;
i know it’s messy but i tryyy