More you might like
- Kitchen Nightmares UK version: "Mushrooms on toast is a simple dish. Just mushrooms on toast. Yours was actually pretty good, there was just a lot going on you probably didn't need."
- Kitchen Nightmares US version: COMING UP NEXT ON KITCHEN NIGHTMARES *Ride of the Valkyries plays* *50 tracks of explosion sounds* CHEF RAMSAY DOESN'T liKE THE F00D??????!!!!!! *strobe like montage of Gordon Ramsay eating intercut with atomic bomb stock footage* "WHAT THE F%%% IS THIS F%&%ING GARBAGE????" *Chef throws plate* *shot is repeated 4 times* "UNF%%%ING BELIEVABLE" *SURROUND SOUND MACHINE GUN SOUNDS* *graphic of Gordon Ramsay literally throwing a knife at your face* *sound of shattering windows*
Gifs Show How Mushrooms Grow
Mushrooms are fast-growing organisms that quickly pop up after the rain. These mesmerizing time-lapse gifs record the mushroom buds bursting through the soil and elegantly expanding their caps.
✨🌿🍄🌿✨


???????????????
this is how bad it is
i told yall the review process is *also* automated lmfao
T-Those are mushrooms
sexy, sexy mushrooms
- japan: alfred-san, isnt your presidential elections coming soon?
- america: yeah they are
- japan: may i recommend a candidate?
- america: uh yeah sure if you want to
- japan: do not worry alfred-san, i have put a lot of thought into this. your future leader will be loyal, strong, an excellent dancer, and intelligent.
- america: uh what
- japan: hatsune miku for president 2k16
why i am boycotting natalie dormer’s film, “the forest”
- besides the fact that it’s in japan and they whitewashed the film
- it romanticizes death, suicide, and the forest
- it is a real forest in japan, aokigahara, where people go to commit suicide
- suicide in japan is a national crisis. the usa ranks 50th in yearly suicides while japan ranks 17th—an estimated 70 suicides per day.
- japan’s rigorous culture of conformity heavily stigmatizes those with mental health issues. many japanese people have grown content with suicide and see it as a reasonable solution. in reality, suicide is an epidemic and is the second leading cause of death in the country.
- suicides in the forest are still happening today so it is extremely disrespectful. this isn’t something that happened 400 years ago. it’s been happening for the last 30 years—over 100 bodies are found in aokigahara every year.
- ableist erasure of poc with mental health issues—does not mention depression and whitewashes japanese people with depression, making yet another example where poc with mental illnesses are completely invisible.
- as someone else said, the model minority myth doesn’t just assume that we (asians) are universally intelligent or rich, it also assumes that we’re able-bodied and don’t suffer from mental illness.
NO ONE talks about mental health among asians. NO ONE talks about disabled asians. why? because everyone believes that we’re rich and smart enough to access healthcare. we aren’t.
-
instead of reaching out and confronting a problem that exists and is on-going, natalie dormer and her hollywood ilk turned it into a horror movie and whitewashed its cast, thus dehumanizing not only asians around the globe affected by mental health, but those who have already committed suicide.
- please just don’t watch this fucking film
Instead of watching this film, please watch this documentary for starters, to really learn about Aokigahara and the issue of suicide in Japan. I feel ill just thinking about The Forest, because it exploits and dehumanizes those who have died into insidious monsters and spirits for the purpose of cheap entertainment. These are real people and real, ongoing cultural issues. To say that this film is insensitive is a gross understatement.
why i am boycotting natalie dormer’s film, “the forest”
- besides the fact that it’s in japan and they whitewashed the film
- it romanticizes death, suicide, and the forest
- it is a real forest in japan, aokigahara, where people go to commit suicide
- suicide in japan is a national crisis. the usa ranks 50th in yearly suicides while japan ranks 17th—an estimated 70 suicides per day.
- japan’s rigorous culture of conformity heavily stigmatizes those with mental health issues. many japanese people have grown content with suicide and see it as a reasonable solution. in reality, suicide is an epidemic and is the second leading cause of death in the country.
- suicides in the forest are still happening today so it is extremely disrespectful. this isn’t something that happened 400 years ago. it’s been happening for the last 30 years—over 100 bodies are found in aokigahara every year.
- ableist erasure of poc with mental health issues—does not mention depression and whitewashes japanese people with depression, making yet another example where poc with mental illnesses are completely invisible.
- as someone else said, the model minority myth doesn’t just assume that we (asians) are universally intelligent or rich, it also assumes that we’re able-bodied and don’t suffer from mental illness.
NO ONE talks about mental health among asians. NO ONE talks about disabled asians. why? because everyone believes that we’re rich and smart enough to access healthcare. we aren’t.
-
instead of reaching out and confronting a problem that exists and is on-going, natalie dormer and her hollywood ilk turned it into a horror movie and whitewashed its cast, thus dehumanizing not only asians around the globe affected by mental health, but those who have already committed suicide.
- please just don’t watch this fucking film
Instead of watching this film, please watch this documentary for starters, to really learn about Aokigahara and the issue of suicide in Japan. I feel ill just thinking about The Forest, because it exploits and dehumanizes those who have died into insidious monsters and spirits for the purpose of cheap entertainment. These are real people and real, ongoing cultural issues. To say that this film is insensitive is a gross understatement.
What is this chapter of your life called?
Mental illness and drugs
positivity, growth, and self awareness
Sex and money
Realizing Things
Waking Up, Changes and Other Nice Things
The Chapter in Which Bee Learns to Not Let Assholes be Assholes
Finding a balance between codependancy and loneliness
learning how to be an adult without dying inside
alternatively: learning that its ok to have feelings and how expressing them
I dun fucked up
error 404 – fucks to give not found







