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end mii

@wiinterking / wiinterking.tumblr.com

Hey, I'm Bionic. Feel free to send me an ask about whatever. I post all sorts of junk here. "they"
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dinkybirb

It's @birdantlers howdy I got so carried away with this but your little sketch of the Angy Baby reminded me of my headcanon that namekian hatchlings are skittish and always in Fight Mode like unsocialized kittens

Piccolo is torn between being proud of his feral gremlin and frustrated on everyone else's behalf lmao. Leaning towards the latter at this point

I hope the pictures don't all get scrambled lol

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ahhh they're HISS BABIES.....this is incredible, I can't stop looking at this!! THE WAY THEY ALL STARE AT DENDE.... (also I'm in love with how you draw namekians, you make them so expressive with their ears and their little clawed hands are so cute 🥺 you have such a great style ahhh)

P: DON'T BE RUDE Baby: 😾

Gohan just wants to meet him so bad and he only gets kitten growls 😭😭😭

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reblogged

Happy Piccolo Day! 

I **needed** to do something to commemorate the day, but I had little to no time to do it in. I hope this is enough. 

I shall raise a glass of water in Piccolo's honour! 

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When programmers invented rubber duck debugging they were right but what they don’t tell you is that this also works for like 90% of other complex intellectual tasks. Nothing solves a problem faster than just trying to explain it to somebody.

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I literally hate when people try to moralize thinking. our brains are just information generating machines, and we can try to condition ourselves to have different mindsets. but at the end of the day, we cannot have complete control on the thoughts we have. and it is stupid to expect that people repress "immoral" or "sinful" thoughts. ultimately the only thing we can do is chose how to actively respond to these thoughts; we have the choice whether or not we manifest these thoughts into the world.

as someone who has "evil" thoughts everyday... I think it is important to critically engage with your thinking. like asking yourself "hey where is this thought coming from?" or more importantly "could this thought have the potential to hurt someone if I acted on this thought, consciously or subconsciously?" but you aren't a "bad" person for thinking these thoughts. nor are your thoughts "bad."

it is also okay if “bad” thoughts linger for a while. it is okay if your “bad” thoughts aren’t just intrusive but arise consciously. you don’t have to constantly try to repress your thoughts, even if they are “bad.” critical engagement is not about stopping you from having those thoughts, it is about having a conversation with those thoughts. it is about engaging with those thoughts without shame. its about letting thoughts run their course so that they can be released. trust me repression does nothing.

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