they are coming!!!! the salad bowl pokémons are coming!!!!!!!
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Hiiiiiiii :) I'm back to cause issues in here <33333
Yippee!!!
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ever since i decided i wanna try my hand at a lil narrative podcast i've been trying to come up with some sort of Plot & it finally hit me in the shower last night & i immediately hurried up & finished before throwing on a bathrobe & sprinting into the living room to go shout at mara about it before i forgot
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omg i’m so motivated to lose weight rn i never weigh myself for obvious reasons but i’m staying with family and i realized i’m only seventeen pounds from my goal so i just did 15 pushups and 20 lunges and if anyone has any exercise recommendations send that my way! i’ve been meaning to get into running, i really need to. i also need to work on adjusting my diet
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something. about. the horror of being sent on an impossible (death) quest and obligations and hospitality politics. the trauma of not having a home, and then the trauma of being in a house that becomes actively hostile to you, one that would swallow you whole and spit out your bones if you step out of line. all of this is conditional, your existence continues to be something men want gone.
it's about going back as far as I can with the perseus narrative because there's always a version of a myth that exists behind the one that survives. the missing pieces are clearly defined, but the oldest recorded version of it isn't there! and there's probably something older before that!! but it's doomed to forever be an unfilled space, clearly defined by an outline of something that was there and continues to be there in it's absence.
and love. it's also about love. even when you had nothing, you had love.
on the opposite side of the spectrum, this is Not About Ovid Or Roman-Renaissance Reception, Depictions And Discourses On The Perseus Narrative.
edit: to add to the above, while it's not about Ovid, because I'm specifically trying to peel things back to the oldest version of this story, Ovid is fine. alterations on the Perseus myth that give more attention Medusa predate Ovid by several centuries. this comic is also not about those, either! there are many versions of this story from the ancient world. there is not one singular True or Better version, they're all saying something.
Perseus, Daniel Ogden
Anthology of Classical Myth: Primary Sources in Translation, edited & translated by Stephen M Trzaskoma, R. Scott Smith, Stephen Brunet
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hairdresser did magic on me today jfc
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