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dashingicecream:

MONOCHROME COMIC COLLAB complete

lineart - bonpyro ♥

color - me

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pitchpipestarkid:

nobodysusername:

im-in-hiding:

j-spencer15:

Dash, Violet, and Jack- Jack from The Incredibles! All grown up :3

I’m reblogging this again because god damnit I’m getting headcannons. How awesome would it be if like, 10 or 15 years after Incredible’s, these three become like the ultimate crime fighting team. Violet would be the leader, with the brains and many of the black widow style skills her mother passed down to her.Dash would be like the action man with his insane reflexes and he would totally learn to fly a jet from his mom. And then Jack-Jack is the passive quiet one but he’s seriously the most powerful in the group, but he’s happy just to follow and is super modest about being one of the most hyperpowered superhero’s ever. And Helen and Bob are there too, being as awesome as they always were. They do less field work now, getting ready to actually retire. But they’re always there to lend their kids a helping hand when they need it. I legit want a sequel with these three as the protagonists? Mixing the ordinary of young adult life with the fantastic of super heroism? Violet is going steady with that one guy from the end of the movie, Dash is totally revolving his life around superheroism and has a hard time keeping his identity secret, and Jack-Jack is dealing with being rejected in highschool for being a wimp or something and is suffering whiplash from his polar opposite double lives.

PIXAR MAKE IT HAPPEN PLEASE

NO BUT I’VE LITERALLY HAD THAT IN MY HEAD FOR YEARS AND ERE ITS VOICED THANK YOU OMFG

I didn’t know I wanted this until now.

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hinaxnaru:

They were meant to be.” - Masashi Kishimoto

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gutsherr:

moon-daisie:

jurassicsaphole:

Just to recap:

  • Dory’s disability isn’t treated like a character flaw by the writers
  • People who (even subconsciously) view it as a character flaw are the ones who end up learning and changing
  • She sees herself as a burden because of her disability and the ultimate response is “We were wrong to make you feel that way and we love you the way you are”
  • Her disability isn’t magically cured and doesn’t preclude her or her loved ones from being happy even though it makes certain things more challenging
  • Her parents aren’t overly sheltering and teach her to be self-sufficient in ways that work with her brain
  • The people around her realize that her mind is never going to work the same way theirs do, and that’s okay
  • She’s treated as deserving of patience and respect
  • She stays disabled throughout the entire movie

Finding Dory is so important. 

I saw this movie as someone with sensory processing problems, anxiety, and OCD and it made me so happy to see a movie that didn’t look like it was funded by Autism Speaks, and instead was a movie that taught young children that a disability doesn’t magically disappear, and to love people nonetheless for it.

Every parent of young children should show them this movie.

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dailycamilacabello:

Fifth Harmony Sang A Bunch Of Destiny’s Child Hits And It’s Everything

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zuge:

i cant wait to be a piece of shit w/ a bachelors degree

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sistahmamaqueen:

awesome-picz:

Dog Adopts A Baby Fox After His Mom Died In A Car Accident

IT’S LIKE THE FOX AND THE HOUND BUT EVERYONE LIVES HAPPILY EVER AFTER AND IT’S A COLLIE. 

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