Aw, I’m glad he’s okay. I just recently lost my 94-year-old grandpa and I miss him so much. I just want the nonagenarian grandpas of the world to be okay, royal or not.
Aw, I’m glad he’s okay. I just recently lost my 94-year-old grandpa and I miss him so much. I just want the nonagenarian grandpas of the world to be okay, royal or not.
Can’t wait to be so old and famous that there’s a headline to announce that I’m not dead.
Did you tell the escape room owners that this is ummm... not the right way to math?
I did an escape room with a group of friends last summer - four PhD students, one medical resident, and one psychologist. All of the clues led to a math problem (a + b x c - d) that would reveal the combination to the final lock. We tried and tried, and it wouldn’t work. We absolutely had the math right, but the lock…
Drunk. ✔️
You can have your cake and eat your children too. No, wait ...
Here’s looking at you, Cake.
Used to go out as a påskkärring with my sister (and some of her friends) when I was little. With scarves and freckles like in the video but done a bit better (if reality agrees with my memory). And we did also give them a small handdrawn picture that we in exchange for got either candy or some money. In most cases…
Witches aren’t just for Easter, you know.
I’ve always wondered why this isn’t more of a thing. On Easter-Saturday is when Jesus ‘ harrowed-hell’ to free all the good pagans and is absent from the earth and all the demons can roam free. It would be a great time for a Halloween sort of party. Either because you’re a good pagan or a demon.
As a seasonal Pagan I’m a bit disappointed that the only mention of Wicca is how backwards Catholics would portray them or making a joke out of it. Wiccans don’t prolestetize and keep to themselves but there are modern celebrations around Spring Equinox. Many of us “secular” pagans so our own thing each sabbat. I…
*pets cat, sips coffee*
as a witch, i approve the hell out of this take on easter
I guess the conical hat is more aerodynamic if you look downwards while flying forwards.
Beautiful!
We had neighbors from Latvia growing up. They used onion skins to make Easter eggs and they were brown, but gorgeous. I think they put the eggs in old socks and tied them up with twine so it was kinda tie-dyed looking —which went over well in the late ‘60s.