From The Tide Pools To The Stars

@sinosauropteryxjuice

I like animals
21
He/Him
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Last week I accidentally took an edible at 10x my usual dose. I say “accidentally” but it was really more of a “my friend held it out to my face and I impulsively swallowed it like a python”, which was technically on purpose but still an accident in that my squamate instincts acted faster than my ability to assess the situation and ask myself if I really wanted to get Atreides high or not.

Anyway. I was painting the wall when it hit. My friend heard me make a noise and asked what was wrong—I explained that I had just fallen through several portals. I realized that painting the wall fulfilled my entire hierarchy of needs, and was absolutely sure that I was on track to escaping the cycle of samsara if I just kept at it a little longer. I was thwarted on my journey towards nirvana only by the fact that I ran out of paint.

Seeking a surrogate act of humble service through which I might be redeemed and made human, I turned to unwashed dishes in the sink and took up the holy weapon of the sponge. I was partway through cleaning the blender when it REALLY hit.

You ever clean a blender? It’s a shockingly intimate act. They are complex tools. One of the most complicated denizens of the kitchen. Glass and steel and rubber and plastic. Fuck! They’ve got gaskets. You can’t just scrub ‘em and rinse them down like any other piece of shit dish. You’ve got to dissemble them piece by piece, groove by sensitive groove, taking care to lavish the spinning blades with cautious attention. There’s something sensual about it. Something strangely vulnerable.

As I stood there, turning the pieces over in my hands, I thought about all the things we ask of blenders. They don’t have an easy job. They are hard laborers taking on a thankless task. I have used them so roughly in my haste for high-density smoothies, pushing them to their limits and occasionally breaking them. I remembered the smell of acrid smoke and decaying rubber that filled the kitchen in the break room the last time I tried to make a smoothie at work—the motor overtaxed and melted, the gasket cracked and brittle. Strawberry slurry leaked out of it like the blood of a slain animal.

Was this blender built to last? Or was it doomed to an early grave in some distant landfill by the genetic disorder of planned obsolescence? I didn’t know, and was far too high to make an educated guess. But I knew that whatever care and tenderness and empathy I put into it, the more respect for the partnership of man and machine, the better it would perform for me.

This thought filled me with a surge of affection. However long its lifespan, I wanted it to be filled with dignity and love and understanding. I thought: I bet no one has hugged this blender before. And so I lifted it from its base.

A blender is roughly the size and shape of a human baby. Cradling one in your arms satisfies a primal need. A month ago I was permitted to hold an infant for the first time in my life, an experience which was physically and psychologically healing. I felt an echo of that satisfaction holding my friend the blender, and the thought of parting with it felt even more ridiculous than bringing it with me to hang out on my friend’s bed.

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Closest match: Magallana gigas genome assembly, chromosome: 2 Common name: Pacific Oyster

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glolb

Few people remember the origin of the #MammothCube, but we clipped it!

It was a night like this when Trey the Explainer joined a #Paleostream and and introduced us to this specimen.

And no, there isn't much more in there

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Cambrian critters are actually spaceships, their battles where epic.

Here an Anomalocaris cruiser is attacked by the hit and run tactics of an Opabinia.

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catchymemes
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revretch

Uh, I think you mean nothing is more *magical*

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bogleech

If you've never seen it before then it's almost definitely harmless because the world just never shuts the duck up about the five whole kinds that can ever seriously hurt you.

There are people in the notes I think I kinda want to beat in the face with a mallet

Seeing a bug I’d never seen before would make my day as a kid

Idk why I’m restricting it either. Still would

Are the words "insect apocalypse" new to this person?

You know what's REALLY terrifying? Not seeing any bugs at all

But seriously, almost all bugs are entirely harmless, and even among ones that CAN sting or bite you, most of them won't unless they feel they absolutely have to in order to avoid certain death.

Y'all have seen those pictures of oblivious people holding some type of bug that can give you a painful sting asking "what is this bug?" right? That bug just got grabbed by a giant Godzilla monster 10,000 times its size and it has an instant, sure-fire way of making the Godzilla monster leave it alone, but it's like "Ehh, better not, maybe it will put me down."

There are so many people in the notes describing common everyday bugs as though channeling the spirit of Pliny the Elder himself. Y'all have no business dunking on H.P. Lovecraft's air-conditioning horror if you are this terrified of regular crane flies

The chasm between the people going about their lives terrified to ever see a bug, and the people who Know, is so vast it kind of boggles my mind.

Like personally I am filled with a deep, gut-wrenching horror at reading these replies! The fact that there are places on Earth where it's possible to be unfamiliar with the most basic types of insect, is so scary.

Bugs are the foundation of the food chain and necessary to turn organic matter back into soil. No bugs means the plants are slowly starving to death in their own waste and the skies are empty of birds except for a few that can survive off of bird feeders. No bugs means the whole ecosystem is dying.

...except...ticks, German cockroaches, bedbugs, mosquitoes, and other bugs that are parasitic on humans; this kind of sterile, lifeless wasteland would be a dream come true for them! Unlimited food and ZERO natural predators!

And who the heck hates "beetles?" Does this person even know how broad an umbrella that is? Do they even know what they're referring to or do they think every roughly oval-shaped arthropod is a beetle? I've seen people who think cockroaches and stinkbugs are beetles so I really never know.

An inordinate dislike for beetles :(

This is amazing. Going to post a couple of figures from it, they speak for themselves.

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Post-apocalyptic prehistoric art by MICHAEL KERBOW

I find it weird yet fascinating how whenever fine artists that are not trained paleoartists depict extinct animals they often go on to copy the grand masters of paleoart from their childhood, like Burian and Knight. On the one hand yes, some of these are specifically meant as references because these depictions are now icons of pop-culture, not just scientific illustrations.

And yet for me these also always have a bitter aftertaste because they show animals that we no longer envision like this and the artist obviously skipped out on the joys of doing research into the subject.

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skinwretch

the leftism leaving people's bodies when you tell them making fun of someone's appearance is always objectively scummy even if the person they're making fun of is bad

"lol are we really surprised that the dude who said eating puppies is good and morally correct looks like THIS" and then it's just a picture of a completely normal looking person who is fat or has acne or just in general doesn't meet the societally imposed standard of conventional "hotness," which is bizarrely being posited as an indicator of morality

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Compilation of pinnipeds in places they shouldn’t be

None of these are staged; each pinniped is here of their own volition and the authorities were made aware (and moved them away if necessary)

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Whenever I see an Ivan Aivazovski painting the sea monster in me goes absolutely feral

I see this and I've never wanted to sink a ship so much in my life I'm biting through wood as we speak

God if I saw this in person I'd straight up start slithering. Start writhing

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ataehone

The way he just *clenches fist* makes water light up from the inside. Ugh, I once zoned out in front of one of his larger paintings in a gallery and came to, like, twenty minutes later, smelling saltwater and tasting driftwood.

This is his largest painting ever. It is 2,8×4,2 meters large. That is about 9'3"×14'1". It took him ten days to paint. This is a guy who painted normal-sized paintings in an hour, two, tops, according to contemporaries.

He was utterly unique.