Everything hurts, oh god, fuck you, organs. Why didn’t I just not come to work today? I knew when I woke up some shit was going to hurt, and now I’m suffering here instead of under six blankets.
Overheard this Afternoon as A Bunch of Agents Joked With Each Other:
“Dude, how did they even hire any of us?”
“I don’t fucking know, man.”
(via theladyem)
So, this mug is adorable. From ladyyatexel’s shop on society6.
A super cute Quark mug in the wild~~
Thank you for getting one! And for sharing a photo! I love seeing how these things end up looking in person, since I can’t buy everything I offer.
yay~
(via ds9appreciation)
(via space-trash-club)
if i lay here
if i just lay here
do u think this fanfic will write itself
(via cicerothewriter)
The god Horus stands on a boat, and spears a tiny hippopotamus -a manifestation of the god Seth. Relief at the Egyptian temple of Horus at Edfu, early 1st century BC.
Why is Seth depicted so small in this artwork?
A sequence of inscriptions and reliefs are shown at the temple of Horus at Edfu, which tell of the struggle between the forces of chaos (represented by the god Seth), and the forces of order (represented by the god Horus).
Compared to the overpowering, commanding figure of Horus, this evil manifestation of Seth is shown on a minuscule scale. While this may seem strange from an artistic point of view, for the Egyptians, it was essential that evil was shown as bound to fail, and good, triumphant. Depicting evil powers was thought to be dangerous, and, as Pinch notes: ”reducing the power of the enemy by reducing his scale was a magical technique as well as an artistic convention.”
Recommended further reading: Geraldine Pinch’s Magic in Ancient Egypt (University of Texas Press, 1995). Photo taken by David Berkowitz.
(via tinsnip)