Sempre perché non credo all'oroscopo... ma ogni tanto...
Stanotte la lavastoviglie ha perso ancora acqua, sistemata l'ultima volta a giugno. Vado in internet e per caso vedo che Mercurio è retrogrado da ieri.
Sappiatelo, se restare chiusi in ascensore, se vi cade il cellulare in acqua, se un elettrodomestico si rompe, se il treno si ferma ore in mezzo ai campi, se vi si smagnetizzata una carta, ma anche se avete problemi di comunicazione, a farvi capire o a capire gli altri, è colpa di Mercurio. Sapete a chi dare la colpa di tutte le sfighe da ieri.
E tutto ciò fino al 2 gennaio. Quindi che altro aggiungere... buone feste?
I saw a post where someone was talking about bg3 skyrim crossover and I am loosing my damn mind over it!
Like Astarion out sassing Nazeem, than being friends with Serena and bonding over family trauma.
My two wizards Gale and Mercurio becoming friends, then going on a magical road trip and somehow saving the world without the dragonborn.
Tell me that Halsin wouldn't try to befriend the saber cats and adopt all the children.
(Also my Tav an elven wizard married to Gale and my dragonborn a Breton mage married to Mercurio would be friends)
Bonus:
Astarion: If you're a dragonborn why aren't you a lizard?
Gale: Oh my gods Astarion you can't ask why someone isn't a lizard!
Bonus (again):
"Oh good your awake..."
The entire wagon is launched into chaos as Astarion and Shadowheart escape towards the trees, Gale sets the wagon on fire, Karlach jumps the guards, Wyll tries to talk to the guards, and Lae'zel attempts to talk to the dragon that is lurking in the distance.
That's no comet. Below the Pleiades star cluster is actually a planet: Mercury. Long exposures of our Solar System's innermost planet may reveal something unexpected: a tail. Mercury's thin atmosphere contains small amounts of sodium that glow when excited by light from the Sun. Sunlight also liberates these atoms from Mercury's surface and pushes them away. The yellow glow from sodium, in particular, is relatively bright. Pictured, Mercury and its sodium tail are visible in a deep image taken last week from La Palma, Spain through a filter that primarily transmits yellow light emitted by sodium. First predicted in the 1980s, Mercury's tail was first discovered in 2001. Many tail details were revealed in multiple observations by NASA's robotic MESSENGER spacecraft that orbited Mercury between 2011 and 2015. Tails, of course, are usually associated with comets.