mistersaturn123:

cpt-glasses:

angel-macabre:

“jealousy is so disgusting” “anger is so toxic” did u know? these are emotions every human has

I’ve always been a fan of an analogy I heard once. Your emotions are like one of the lights on your car’s dash. When one of them turns on, it means you need to check under the hood and fix them. It’s not bad that the light turned on, per se, and it doesn’t always mean something is broken. But what IS toxic, dangerous, and likely to break something, is when you let that light stay on, pretending it’s normal, until that braking fluid finally fails and you crash into someone, or your engine fails completely.

Feel jealous. Feel anger. 

Just don’t let it fester. You need to look inside of yourself, find out why you’re feeling the way you are, and bring yourself to a satisfied, stable state of mind. You can look at philosophy, meditation/introspection, religion, or actual therapy, or at least talking to someone about it. You’ll find you’re much more content and happy when you do something about those feelings, and come to some sort of conclusion or resolution.

That is a  wonderful way of looking at it, thankyou. Makes me feel better about myself when I DO feel that way.

cool-critters:

Jackson´s chameleon (Trioceros jacksonii)

Jackson’s chameleon is a species of chameleon native to East Africa, but also introduced to Hawaii, Florida, and California. Jackson’s chameleons are native to woodlands and forests at altitudes of 1,600 to 2,440 m in south-central Kenya and northern Tanzania. Jackson’s chameleons live primarily on a diet of small insects. They also prey on centipedes, isopods, millipedes, spiders, lizards, small birds, and snails in their native habitat.Most chameleons are oviparous,
but Jackson’s chameleon gives birth to live offspring; eight to thirty
live young are born after a five- to six-month gestation.

photo credits:
Movingsaletoday, Benjamint444, Patrick Gijsbers

Look at that neat tail coil in the first pic!

tinysaurus-rex:

tinysaurus-rex:

Hi please meet my queer chickens.

Flint frequently squats for other cockerels and cocks- it’s really funny when it’s one of our larger roosters and he gets squashed, but he’s the one that initiates the interaction so I don’t worry about it. Chia is in love with Acorn and tries to get her to mount her but Acorn doesn’t seem to notice. Chicken sexuality is fascinating (pretty sure all chickens are bisexual).

nonbinarypastels:

“this fictional content makes me uncomfortable” & “i don’t like this fictional content” are both legitimate reasons for why you want to avoid that content and why you want people to properly tag it so you can avoid it

neither of them are legitimate arguments for why other people cannot like that content themselves