The Secret to Superhuman Strength (2021). Alison Bechdel. 7/10
Salomé (1891). Oscar Wilde. 10/10
The Vampire Lestat (1985). Anne Rice. 8/10
Time is a Mother (2022). Ocean Vuong. 3/10 (I feel like an asshole, but I didn't like it)
The Queen of the Damned (1988). Anne Rice. 9/10
Infinity (2017). Hannah Moscovitch. 8/10
Bomarzo (1962). Manuel Mujica Lainez. 10/10
Stone Fruit (2021). Lee Lai. 9/10
The Vampire Armand (1998). Anne Rice. 7/10 (I hate Marius)
Mémoires d'Hadrien (1951). Marguerite Yourcenar. 2/10 (How do you make a bisexual emperor sound like a boring old man, Marguerite, how?)
The Tale Of The Body Thief (1992). Anne Rice. 5/10
Poems (1931). Wilfred Owen. 7/10
La Sed (2020). Marina Yuszczuk. 8/10
Spinning (2017). Tillie Walden. 9/10
Movies
Emma (2020). Autumn de Wilde. 8/10
Minari (2020). Lee Isaac Chung. 10/10
Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari (1920). Robert Wiene. 7/10
Bones and All (2022). Luca Guadagnino. 7/10
Maurice (1987). James Ivory. 7/10 (the book's better)
Fucking Åmål (1998). Lukas Moodysson. 6/10
Die bitteren Tränen der Petra von Kant (1972). Rainer Werner Fassbinder. 6/10
Le Fil (2009). Mehdi Ben Attia. 10/10 (I would marry this movie if I could)
37°2 le Matin (Betty Blue) (1986). Jean-Jacques Beineix. 7/10
Salomé (1922). Charles Bryant, Alla Nazimova. 4/10
Interview with the Vampire (1994). Neil Jordan. 8/10
The Addams Family (1991). Barry Sonnenfeld. 9/10
Addams Family Values (1993). Barry Sonnenfeld. 7/10
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio (2022). Guillermo del Toro. 8/10
渺渺 (Miao Miao) (2008). Hsiao-tse Cheng. 5/40
La ley del deseo (1987). Pedro Almodóvar. 7/10
და ჩვენ ვიცეკვეთ (And Then We Danced) (2019). Levan Akin. 10/10 (so, so, so sweet)
Morte a Venezia (Death in Venice) (1971). Luchino Visconti. 7/10
Disobedience (2017). Sebastián Lelio. 8/10
Shiva Baby (2020). Emma Seligman. 7/10
X (2022). Ti West. 5/10 (maybe I just don't like slashers; the music was 10/10 tho)
Back to the Future Part II (1989). Robert Zemeckis. 5/10
Ammonite (2020). Francis Lee. 7/10
Colette (2018). Wash Westmoreland. 6/10
The Duke of Burgundy (2014). Peter Strickland. 8/10 (unnerving and visually stunning)
Summerland (2020). Jessica Swale. 7/10 (Studio Ghibli vibes in a live action movie; a bit saccharine-y at times)
The Handmaiden (2016). Park Chan-wook. 9/10
The Favourite (2018). Yorgos Lanthimos. 10/10
Nope (2022). Jordan Peele. 8/10
Renfield (2023). Chris McKay. 6/10 (I liked the Nicholas Cage scenes, everything else was kinda meh).
Professor Marston & The Wonder Women (2017). Angela Robinson. 7/10 (sweet, romantic, entertaining, but at times it felt fake and manufactured, the way "based on a true story" movies usually are).
The Terminator (1984). James Cameron. 4/10 (it could have been 45mins instead of 1h45mins...)
Terminator 2: Judgement Day (1991). James Cameron. 6/10 ("If you didn't like the first why did you watch the second?" Because I love my sibling)
Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade (1989). Steven Spielberg. 6/10
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992). Francis Ford Coppola. 9/10
The Silence of the Lambs (1991). Jonathan Demme. 10/10
Sycorax (2021). Matías Piñeiro. 8/10
Black Narcissus (Passion of the Swamp) (2022). Peter Strickland. 8/10
Carta a Mi Madre Para Mi Hijo (Letter To My Mother For My Son) (2022). Carla Simón. 7/10
Is It Too Much To Ask (2019). Leena Manimekalai. 6/10
The Actress (2021). Andrew Ondrejcak. 9/10
Shakti (2019). Martín Rejtman. 6/10
El Silencio es un Cuerpo Que Cae (Silence Is A Falling Body) (2017). Agustina Comedi. 10/10 (so sad, so tender, so loving)
Meeting The Man: James Baldwin in Paris (1970). Terrence Dixon. 9/10 (Something tells me this is an excellent documentary; but there's a lot about "talk about certain things in a certain way" and "you know what I mean?" and no, I don't know what he meant or what things and ways were those).
Aftersun (2022). Charlotte Wells. 10/10 (who will lift this elephant off my chest now?)
Vers La Tendresse (Towards Tenderness) (2016). Alice Diop. 6/10
Silvia Prieto (1999). Martín Rehtman. 9/10
Camarera de Piso (Maid) (2022). Lucrecia Martel. 1/10 (the audio was unintelligible)
El Vuelco del Cangrejo (Crab Trap) (2009). Oscar Ruíz Navia. 6/10
Ema (2019). Pablo Larraín. 9/10
Los Fuertes (The Strong Ones) (2019). Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo. 7/10
Phörpa (The Cup) (1999). Khyentse Norbu. 7/10
Նռան գույնը | Nran Guyne | Sayat Nova (The Color of Pomegranates). Sergei Parajanov. 10/10 (The weirdest movie I've ever seen, and one of the most visually stunning ones)
Voyage of Time: An IMAX Documentary (2016). Terrence Malick. 10/10
إن شئت كما في السماء (It Must Be Heaven) (2019). Elia Suleiman. 9/10
Potemkiniştii (The Potemkinists) (2022). Radu Jude. 2/10 (yes, I know the Russian government is evil, but please tell me something else)
Nr. 1 - Aus Berichten der Wach- und Patrouillendienste (From The Reports Of Security Guards and Patrol Services) (1985). Helke Sander. 8/10
Liborio (2021). Nino Martínez Sosa. 6/10
Sendiri Diana Sendiri (Following Diana) (2015). Kamila Andini. 6/10
Valkoinen Peura (The White Reindeer) (1952). Erik Blomberg. 4/10
Wadja (2012). Haifaa Al-Mansour. 10/10
La Femme Au Couteau (The Woman With A Knife) (1969). Timité Basori. 4/10
Tornar-se um Homem na Idade Média (Becoming Male In The Middle Ages) (2022). Pedro Neves Marques. 6/10
Un Garibaldino al Convento (A Garibaldian In The Convent) (1942). Vittorio de Sica. 6/10
Théo et Hugo dans le même bateau (Paris 05:59 Théo & Hugo) (2016). 7/10 (20 mins of porn followed by an hour and 10 mins about post-exposure prophylaxis and the importance of public health and transport systems)
Suplement (The Supplement) (2002). Krzysztof Zanussi. 7/10
天下乌鸦 (All The Crows In The World) (2021). Tang Yi. 6/10
Love is the affective desire for PRESENCE over any elevating👽 mind constructs, impulsive triggers or subjective emotions' symbolic in mind converted fake "attachment".
Love is the biological force that transcend the innate psychosis of all of peoples and societies' self-justifying mind constructs. Remember the last time you where fighting or arguing with someone you love, and all you actually wanted to do is hold each other to find the objectively overlapping aspects? Hegelian dialectics is driven by presence.
If we would not feel the intrinsic motivational pull of love, would we ever be able to let go of and look behind your subjective habits, by social constructs defined reward incentives and to ones FAMILIAR "conscious" identity-constructs tied "logic" self-justifying psychosis like C-19 $cience or any type of reductionistic argumentations?
🎥"Scientists should be humbe! Vandana Shiva"
Essentially, this function of love is what seperates artificial intelligence, computer programs and robots from humans. Are you a psychotic computer program? 🎥"Are machines smarter than humans? Vandana Shiva".
Love is what allows us to evolve from reductionistic perspectives (all we subjectively with our limited mind capacity believe objective reality or "causality" to be: 🎥"Real Science is Spiritual - Vandana Shiva - THRIVE Movement")
to "systems thinking Benjamin Egerland" (youtube video) which requires (Vandana Shiva explains why science is fundamentally spiritual) to constantly shed and restructure all for causal wellbeing unsuitable emotional cathexis in fictional mind constructs
(everything in mind is mythos more or less)
which only works if one is vulnerable with oneself which is encapsuled by question of WHO ARE YOU? Your or anyone elses' identity, story, "logic" constructs of reductionistic "causality", status, reputations, desires, drives, self-justifying ideologies, impulses, subjective emotions (all subjective dreams) or a causal being with your PRESENCE (🎥Authenticity vs. attachement Dr. Gabor Mate) in causal reality (shared objective reality: KANT) grounded joys and needs like PRESENCE of everyone else's simple "PRESENCE"?
🎥"The problem with endless growth and globalization. Vandana Shiva"
Purpose & direction (MOTIVATION) of all our th-oughts, actions and inevitably dualistic expressions
is fundamentally driven
("holy grail" of nerves in our neck connecting conscious and unconscious centers of intelligence)
by the (way we consciously repress thereby consciously unaware)
spectrum of contrasting emotions of our unconscious minds charging as natural ironic process our conscious linguistics and definitions and explanatory constructs and out of this emerging value-exchange (🎥"What's wrong with the myth of progress? Vandana Shiva")
that turn us into ALIENS (adaptable alien veeFriends)
if we value these constructs
[[group-identities (in-group rewards' in-group "positivity" psychosis like 🎶"We are veeFriends" = 🔍Hitler only had one ball = 🔍why were the Nazis looking so happy?), value-exchange, social customs, storytelled legacies, group self-justifications, brand love, ... metaphorical UFOs (mythos, shared psychosis) as they are Unidentified Flying Objects if their purpose cannot be related (logos, Occam Razor) to all our globally most basic shared life needs causal TOUCH🤝 of dialectic PLAY (Hegel) between psychological ID🍌 whistle (life needs) and superego🤥😷😇 (kant) sense-makings' symbolic🎅 projections🍌💦🎅❤️🛐🤯 # GAGA]]
of our "fallen" and via symbolic convergence theory entraining consciousness (the reflection (mirror) of greek story of narcissus)
more than the thereby ALIEN-ATE-D most basic causal life needs (like "holy grail" of daily causal food joys) of us all around the world
that many (especially the most "successful" ones) pathologically run away from if their parents have not provided them a stable via shared meritocratic interpersonal boundary setting in causal reality (not any stories, subjective intends or glorifications) grounded
🎶AFFECTION - CIGARETTES AFTER SEX
they thereby chase (bank) via obsessions with symbolic converted reference points' psychosis like by such socially rewarded repressions arising self-justifying peer-pressures of all sorts of "shots"
(🎵I KNOW THAT YOU SAY I GET MEAN WHEN I'M DRINKING)
that similar like pleasure derived out of music naturally link into neurochemistry & for that evolved biological reward systems
(🎵BUT THEN AGAIN SOMETIMES I GET REALLY SWEET)
for which we need to evolve meritocratic superego🤥😷😇 dialectics🧠 as shared boundaries👑🥜 to not just protect our by (various childhood acceptance issues induced)
lack of self-love
[[which is grounded in our out of "boring" causal reality not social fantasies springing selves: 🎥"How to Become Authentic through compassion, Dr. Gabor Mate." boredom🔑 = self-acceptance = ability to redirect subjective motivations and restructure conscious psychosis. Some mistakenly try to do it with compulsive "meditation" to obsessively "master-mind" themselves ("clarity") which does the opposite of what is intended. Simply reserve time for yourself to be bored, listen (authenticity) to yourself, your unconscious mind (📚intuition Gary Klein), make fun about your own motivations and thought structures: 📚creativity: unleashing the forces within, Osho Insights for a new way of living = 📚"to have (mind constructs) or to be (authentic with yourself) Erich Fromm". If you do it together with others that is intimacy]]
and resulting alien-like indirect communication (🔍brand love) exploited (🔍big food and big pharma killing for profits)
global most basic causal life needs' presence
(🎵SO WHAT DOES IT MEAN IF I TELL YOU TO GO FUCK YOURSELF)
but nourish it via upon that (by the above mentioned mirrored mind dynamics' chase of social constructs) calibrated🧭❤️🧭 internal values, behaviours and motivations: 🎵OR IF I SAY YOU'RE BEAUTIFUL TO ME
These are some of the meanings, correspondences, deities, etc. associated with each day of the week. These can also be used for planetary hours. For example, if performing a working during the planetary hour for Jupiter, one could use the information listed under Thursday, the day that corresponds to Jupiter.
This is not a complete list. Consider this as a list of possibilities to add more layers, structure, effectiveness, and symbolism to your rituals, and magick. Not as necessities, or anything like that. Enjoy. 🖖
Narcissus Fairy and Mountain Ash Fairy - Shiva ss ヽ(o^▽^o)ノ
Narcissus Faerie: Favorite feature about yourself?
I’ve, uh, never been particularly fond of the way I look. If I had to pick something that I liked, though, it would probably be the long scar I have on my right arm; I got it after someone in my house accidentally threw a shoe at a framed picture, and glass shattered everywhere. As I was picking up the pieces, I didn’t realize one was sticking outwards and I ended up sliding a good chunk of my arm right along the edge. I kind of like the way it looks. Not that anyone else will really see it, because (unless it’s family) I conceal my arms in mixed company. Which is pretty much all the company I keep.
Mountain Ash Faerie: Favorite way to banish something from your life?
Banish stuff from my life? I’m not quite sure what that means, but if it is what I think it means, I don’t really do that often. Ever, really, if I’m being honest. Most of the time, it’s a progressive fading away/turning away than a radical break.
Due to India's large size and different climates and seasons, it can produce over 15,000 flowering Indian plants species. Although you can find beautiful flowers in India year round, the spring and summer produce some of the most popular flowers. Indian flowers not only look pretty but their religious and cultural significance give the people of India an immense sense of pride. In conjunction with their religious and cultural importance, many Indian flowers also have strong medicinal properties. Lotus is considered to be the national flower of India, but there are a ton of other flowers throughout the country.
Summer Flowers in India
India is known for its beautiful gardens that are packed with many lovely and unique flowers. Thousands of flowers are cultivated every year and are used for special occasions and are even shipped out through foreign trade. There's a lot to learn and see in India, but many tourists love to look at the flowers that grow in this beautiful land.
The flowers can be split up into both summer and winter categories. Throughout the summer, one can find a variety of flowers such as marigolds, lotus, roses, hibiscus, sunflowers, lilies, zinnias, petunias, pansy flowers, tulips, dahlias, pineapple lily, gloriosa lily, peonies, daffodils and bougainvillea.
Popular Summer Flowers
Marigolds are considered to be one of the most popular and recognizable summer flowers in India. Also known as Caltha, Genda, garden marigold, gold-bloom, holligold, marybud and pot marigold, the marigold grows from July to September. Bright yellow and orange marigold flowers are used throughout India for many cultural and religious reasons. Garlands can be made to offer to the Hindu gods and goddesses.
Marigolds are also used to treat ulcers, menstrual cramps, eye infections, inflammations and wounds. They're known to keep mosquitos, bugs and rodents away because marigolds are a natural bug repellent. Many farmers plant marigolds near their crops to keep these pesky bugs off their land.
Indian lotus is also known as Ambal, Thamarai, Suriya kamal, Padma, Ambuja, Pankaja, Blue lotus, Sacred Water lily, bean of India, Kamala, Kanwal and Kamal. The lotus is a water plant. It has broad floating leaves and long stems and is a bright and fragrant flower with overlapping petals. The flowers are a rosy pink shade with some white shades.
What's so beautiful about the lotus flower, besides the fact that they come in a variety of shapes, is that the flower opens in the morning and the petals fall in the afternoon. Lotus seeds, which are edible, are believed to help the kidney, spleen and heart and aid in restfulness, palpitations, insomnia and liver disorders.
Other Summer Flowers
Rose is also known as Dublin Bay, Impatient, Gul, Gulbahar, Hravart, Roosevelt, Vartan, Arrosa, Aygul, Oklahoma Hulthemia, Hesperrhodos, Platyrhodon, Banksianae, Carolinae, Pimpinellifoliae, Rosa, Laevigatae and Gymnocarpae. These flowers come in white, pink, maroon, red, yellow and orange. Roses are known to be beautiful flowers, but hips, the fruit of roses, are a good source of vitamin C, the rose petals can be used to help dry and patchy skin and rose herbal tea is said to treat cold and coughs.
Hibiscus is the signature flower of subtropical regions. This flower needs a lot of sunlight and room to grow.
Sunflowers are bright yellow and can survive extreme phases of heat. They prefer not to be overwatered.
Different Types of Lilies
There are a variety of lilies in India, including the pineapple lily and the gloriosa lily. Lilies can withstand very extreme weather conditions. In the winter, lily plants and leaves will wither, but don't get rid of this plant. The bulb remains dormant throughout the winter but will bloom again the following season. They're very low maintenance flowers that look great in a garden or one's home.
The pineapple lily isn't really a flower you'd see growing in a garden. This lily is actually a member of the asparagus family, not the pineapple family. You can use this flower as a centerpiece or in a flower bed.
The gloriosa lily is a climber plant, so it looks beautiful draped over poles in a yard. Be careful with this lily though. It's very poisonous and shouldn't be consumed.
Variety of Colored Plants
Zinnia comes in a variety of colors. They love to grow in the late summer, and because they're very fragrant, they attract butterflies.
Just like Zinnia, petunias also come in a variety of colors including pink, red, yellow, orange and white. Petunias are considered a favorite amongst amateur gardeners because they're very easy to grow.
Bougainvillea Indian Flower
Bougainvillea, also known as the paper flower, is a favorite woody scandent shrub. The shrub can grow up to 10 to 15 feet high, and the flowers come in a variety of colors such as red, purple, orange, white, pink and cream. The leaves have an oval outline, are a vibrant green and have smaller leaves with tubular flowers. The trunk is twisted and the stem has sharp thorns and green leaves. The fruit on a bougainvillea is narrow five-lobed achene. Achene is a dry, small, one-seeded fruit that doesn't open to release the seed.
Jasmine Indian Flower
Jasmine is also known as Mogra, Kundu Malligai, Arabian Jasmine, Mallika and Moonshine. It's grown in all parts of India but is primarily found in the country's Nagarhole National Park. This plant is an evergreen semi-vining shrub. It can grow to 8 to 10 feet tall, but the Jasmine flower is only one inch.
Jasmine flowers have oval green leaves that have five to nine leaflets. Each leaflet is almost two to three inches long. They're usually white and the stems are skinny, trailing, green and free from hair. Jasmine is propagated (reproduced) through softwood cuttings, semi-hardwood cuttings and simple layering.
The plant is propagated in the summer and needs to be planted in six inches of soil. The soil should be well drained, free of weeds and contain cow manure. Jasmine loves to grow in full sun or partial shade and thrives in warm temperatures.
Medicinal Properties of Jasmine
The people of India use Jasmine to remove intestinal worms and treat jaundice and venereal diseases. They also use the flower buds to treat ulcers, blisters, boils, skin diseases and eye disorders. A lot of Western cultures drink Jasmine tea for its calming and relaxing effect.
Cosmetic Properties of Jasmine
Jasmine oil is also used cosmetically. You can make perfumes, incense, creams, shampoos and soaps. Culturally, Jasmine is used in covering the face of the bridegroom. Also, the Jasmine plant is believed to be related to Lord Shiva (one of the principal deities of Hinduism) and Lord Vishnu (Supreme Being).
Orchid Indian Flowers
Also known as dancing ladies, dancing doll or Butterfly orchids, orchids are found in all parts of India. They're mostly grown in the Namdapha National Park, Simlipal National Park and Singalila National Park though. Orchids have two growth types: monopodial and sympodial.
Monopodial orchids' central system grows from the tip of the orchid. They don't have pseudobulbs, but they do have new growth from the crown of the plant. Flowers are grown from the stem between the leaves and alternate from side to side.
On the other hand, sympodial orchids send out from the shoot. They can produce more flowers since they develop stems and leaves. New shoots develop through a continuous cycle, and a sheath sometimes protects buds. To grow orchids, they're propagated through the seeds.
Orchids need a lot of attention, rely on 60 percent humidity to thrive, need watering occasionally and like fertilizers every week. They flower regularly, so they require hot temperatures to grow properly. Orchids are eaten by the indigenous people of Nilgiris. They eat the dried tubular (tube-shaped plant) of the terrestrial orchids because it energizes them. You can also cook and eat the roots of orchids.
Popular Winter Flowers In India
Winter Indian flowers include amaryllis, anemone, bells of Ireland, camellia, carnation, daffodil, poinsettia, poppies, ranunculus, star-of-Bethlehem, sweet pea, tulips and waxflowers.
Bells of Ireland are native to Turkey and have been cultivated in India since the 1500s. The more you cut these flowers, the longer they grow.
Popular Bridal Bouquet Flowers
Amaryllis winter flowers are normally used as the focal point in a bouquet or centerpiece. These flowers come in a variety of colors including red, white, pink and salmon. Each stem of amaryllis can have three to six blossoms, so although a single stem can be expensive, you don't need that many.
The camellia flower has dark green waxy leaves and is often used in bridal bouquets or table centerpieces.
Multi-Colored Winter Plants
Anemone requires a lot of water to stay in bloom throughout the winter. They come in a variety of colors such as white, red, purple, pink and blue. This flower also has a black center.
Carnations are very inexpensive and are available year round. In the winter, they produce in various colors including yellow, red, pink, white, orange and purple.
Other Indian Winter Flowers
Daffodils, also known as jonquils and narcissus, is a winter bulb that comes in a variety of colors including yellow, white, orange, pink and tricolor.
Poinsettias are red flowers, but they also come in a marbled color. They're often sold as potted plants during Christmas.
Poppies are a popular wildflower in the United States that's initially from Asia. They come in a variety of colors including purple, red, white, orange, pink and yellow.
Popular Filler Flowers
Star of Bethlehem is considered to be a filler flower because they grow in clusters on long stems and are white.
Wax flowers have a citrus aroma, and they work great as a filler flower. The flowers come in lavender, white and pink.
Anita e il resto della banda sono in trasferta a Las Vegas per un importante meeting di affari sovrannaturali. I Cattivi si aggirano nell’ombra. Ma quando gli Dei guardano la loro soap-opera preferita può capitare di tutto. E non è tanto per dire...
Spoiler fino a Blue Moon, con citazioni fino a Danse Macabre, ma solo di avvenimenti accaduti temporalmente prima della data corrente, anche se descritti in libri successivi, niente spoiler di trame importanti.
Words: 824, Chapters: 1/20, Language: Italiano
Series: Part 1 of Fan fiction Collettiva
Fandoms: Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter - Laurell K. Hamilton
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death
Categories: F/F, F/M, M/M, Multi
Characters: Anita Blake, Jean-Claude (Anita Blake), Asher (Anita Blake), Jason Schuyler, Richard Zeeman, Damian (Anita Blake), Guido, Mephi, Bea, Marghe, Samsara - Character, Buddy, Kali, Shiva (Hindu Religions & Lore), Cibele, Gigi - Character, Odino, Frigg | Frigga (Norse Religion & Lore), Allah, Le Valkirie, Thor, Zeus, era - Character, Ondine, Ramon, Lord Maximilian detto Bugsy, Vampire Council, And staff, Jamil (Anita Blake), Shang-Da (Anita Blake), Narcissus (Anita Blake), Nathaniel Graison, Other(s), Less important others
Relationships: Canon Relationships - Relationship, Wannabe relationships, New relationships - Relationship, Past Relationships - Relationship, Too many to tag - Relationship
Additional Tags: Crack, Crack Treated Seriously, no really, very crack, Feelings, Porn With Plot, Porn with Feelings, Blood and Gore, Partner Swapping, Anita bashing, Spoiler until Blue Moon, Angst with a Happy Ending, Hamsters, Religion, Fluff, Tooth-Rotting Fluff
INNOCENCE LOST [MV]
Out Now.
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Due to the loss of some media we had prepared, I had to rely on other methods to create a MV for INNOCENCE LOST so you could enjoy it fully. Archiving has been one of my favorite hobbies since I was 13 and I wanted to share with you some of my favorite videos on the internet.
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Since I was a kid I knew I wanted to make music (or be part of it somehow). I didn’t have any knowledge or any access to institutional learning, but my passion and the need to express my feelings in ways that wouldn’t be damaging for me or the ones that I love made me learn and develop a taste for fine arts beyond the typical ones. The internet provided me with an amazing archive of beautiful visuals and writings that helped me understand the importance of an all-round project. Writing became my best weapon because I didn’t need anything but my computer to do it. Everything, I believe, starts with an idea that is first materialized in writing. Then comes everything else. There’s meaning in every word that I sing. And there’s meaning in every visual too. One single image can convey lots of feelings and deep desires, so keep it in mind when watching the music video. There are personal recordings of myself by myself and by other people I want but will never forget too.
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The screen ratio of 5:4 is a homage to the 1990s computer screen ratios, a decade I didn’t happen to live but for which I feel a sort of connection and attachment. Most of the clips used there are from that period of time (Notice the in-purpose 480p quality too!)
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Forever thank you 🤍
༺BORDANDO EL MANTO LUNAR༻
• Joyero de lágrimas Vol. 01
Mi nombre es Romeo y he bordado un manto lunar con mis lágrimas, para que su luz pueda llegar a las sombras de vuestros corazones rotos ❤️🩹. Porque además de veros, también os escucho y os leo. Y porque además de llorar, también escribo por y para vosotros.
I’m a young poet 🐉, not a popular one yet, but with beautiful dreams of echoes from past lovers that can be heard in the lost shades of art. Now I’m painting new forms of love in a city without a soul.