The Weaver Family
150.7K posts

The Weaver Family
@sivtree
Tabatha (Rose and Dawn) Purah and Us for ever. make soup from the bones *40* she / fae / her plural twins TS artists Star Cleric🌟



@samah_fadil I call you American (Canada included) because of your pure blooded yankee behavior that only an American engages in. Wielding your ancestors’ nationality like some kind of magic wand that makes you correct and good is uniquely American. Gringo Gringo Gringo Gringo Gringo Gringo

being a passing trans person who’s not out to ppl i know is so awkward my manager will point to me telling a customer “go to her she’ll help you!” and the customer looks around me like who the fuck are you talking about



@maiaonacross Nope, and you are not on HRT. Hormone Replacement Therapy is for females with depleted Estrogen levels. You are not replacing anything. You are taking synthetic chemicals that are not intended for the male body. That comes with a price. You will never be a woman 😬

A San Diego infectious disease doctor says it’s probably best to stay away from fresh produce for the next week or so, even if you wash it. A fecal parasite illness, known as cyclosporiasis, has now reached California. NBC 7’s Shandel Menezes has details. on.nbc7.com/fJ8api2

Homer didn’t write the Odyssey, he didn’t write the Iliad. In fact, there was no person ever called “Homer”. This is not a conspiracy theory but the considered conclusion of Harvard’s Gregory Nagy after a lifetime of research. Professor Nagy is the most respected Homerist alive and his defining contribution is to uncover the 3000 year old mystery of who (or what) actually produced the epics. This interview will examine two of Professor Nagy’s radical claims: 1. The Homeric epics were not written, carefully edited, and memorized for performance. They were created on the fly while being sung! That is to say the Greeks somehow developed a method to create amazingly intricate, 12-15 thousand line poems in the middle of a performance. 2. The Homeric Epics were not composed by an individual but cumulatively by countless poets over a millenia. There was never a person called “Homer”.















