Me: I need some time to recharge
Also me: *falls down a rabbit hole of gay softcore shows and doesn't come out of her room for 3 days*
Me: I'm recharged now
It always inspires me to study and just the aesthetic in general is so calm and lovely and fresh and I drool over the animation also
Just watched Love for Love's Sake in one sitting
Planning on going absolutely feral about this show during the upcoming week
Crying screaming throwing up
Ну и шо тут делать на Тумблере?
All those times I fucked up saying my fast-food order come to haunt me at night
Me entering the classroom having listened to War and Peace for 7 hours straight running on 4 hours of sleep, coffee and anxiety
I guess Justitia came to terms with the fact that she was in love sorta... too easily? Like one moment she could not believe her own tears and the next she's like oh yeah im in love he's in love we're both in mortal peril what else is new
I really want to see another season of this
There's still a lot to be explored in terms of human vs demon morality + I want to see more of Bitna and Daon's romance
I think the final episode perfectly set up the second season, it just has to be greenlit by the network and we're good to go
Definitely down for a season 2 of Judge From Hell! Felt that the romance wasn’t very strong in the last half of the episodes, but I had so much fun with the rest of the show that I can forgive it.
Also Park Shinhye is now an ultimate villain for me. Loved seeing how she transformed for this role, excited to see what her next casting will be
I feel like this is writers straight up talking to us shippers
Is it okay that 1 season Monica and Joey look a lot more like siblings than Monica and Ross
when you're a time traveler but you had to travel back to the present because the doctors were shit back then
You know you've fucked up when you go to a doctor and the thing you have wrong with you has been named after an occupation that isn't a thing anymore. Like imagine a doctor looking at you and going "yeah you've got ox-drawn ploughman's disease. We don't even test for that anymore. Yeah the reason you've never heard of it is because the last known case was in 1927 and happened to some guy who was like 98 years old and didn't believe in modern medicine of the time. What the fuck have you been up to."
I'm doing a project on Salem Witch Trials and this is very helpful! Thank you for citing sources
ALRIGHT SO ONE OF MY SPEECHES FOR PUBLIC SPEAKING ACTUALLY COVERED THE POSSIBLE CAUSES OF THE SALEM WITCH TRIAL. We’ll start with those facts! It was written in the form of the speech where I had to verbally site everything. I rewrote most of it so there are missing page numbers.
-Laura
POSSIBLE CAUSES OF THE SALEM WITCH TRIALS
Cause I:The possibility of the Salem Witch Trials being caused by ergot poisoning.
During the Salem Witch Trials, the girls who started the event claimed to see apparitions, experience pricking sensations and seizures, and paralysis.
Josh Clark in his article, “Were the American colonists drugged during the Salem witchcraft trial?”, discusses a type of ergot poisoning, “Convulsive ergotism attacks the central nervous system, causing mania, psychosis, hallucinations, paralysis and prickling sensations. It was these symptoms that [are reminiscent] of those exhibited by Elizabeth Parris – especially the mania.”
As you can see in the diagram below, ergot is the black part of the piece of wheat. Josh Clark goes on to say that “the [ergot] contains isoergine – the main ingredient in the drug LSD.”
Cause II: The possibility of the Salem Witch Trials being caused by boredom.
Life in Salem 1692 was very different. The Puritan life was a strict one and children were expected to behave as adults. Boys also had more freedom outside of the home than girls did.
Rosalyn Schanzer in her book, Witches! The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem, describes how the girls would have been spending their harsh winter. The girls might have spent the unusually harsh winter knitting socks, boiling laundry, sweeping ashes off the floor, ladling porridge, making pies or puddings, making yarn, mending clothing and upholstery, and of course, there would always be time for reading the bible and saying prayers.
The strict lifestyle did not allow the girls to express themselves. Perhaps, it is not unreasonable to think they might have enjoyed the attention they gained from being inflicted.
Discovery Education’s Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind The Hysteria discusses the possibility of the accusations being an outlet for attention, “It is no wonder that the young girls were… captivated by Tituba’s magical stories and fortune-telling games… activities [that] were strictly forbidden…fear and guilt… may have been one reason for their hysterical behavior. And at a time when young girls were forbidden to act out or express themselves, it is easy to see why they were so enraptured by the attention they received when they became ‘bewitched.’”
Cause III: The Possibility of the Salem Witch Trials being caused by Religious Hysteria.
The town of Salem was a struggling one. A good portion of the town were farmers and there was much of the dark wilderness or the great unknown to fear. It would be as if your hometown or a portion of it was suddenly cut off from contact to the outside world. Sermons of brimstone and fire certainly did not help either.
In her New Yorker article, “The Witches of Salem”, Stacy Schiff describes the danger Massachusetts had experienced around the time of the Witch trials, “[In 1676] King Philip’s War… [had] obliterated a third of New England’s towns, pulverized its economy, and claimed ten per cent of the adult male population. Every Bay Colony resident lost a friend or a relative; all knew of a dismemberment or an abduction. By 1692, another Indian war had begun to take shape… The frontier had recently moved to within fifty miles of Salem.”
With a harsh winter and the threat of danger near, it is easy to see why the town might have been paralyzed with fear and sought religious explanation to their problems.
Works Cited
Blumberg, Jess. “A Brief History of the Salem Witch Trials.” Smithsonian Magazine. Smithsonian, 23 Oct. 2007. Web. 12 Oct. 2016.
Clark, Josh. “Were the American Colonists Drugged during the Salem Witchcraft Trial?” HowStuffWorks. InfoSpace Holdings LLC, 18 Jan. 2008. Web. 12 Oct. 2016.
“Salem Witch Trials: The World Behind The Hysteria." Salem Witch Trials - Learning Adventures. Discovery Education, n.d. Web. 12 Oct. 2016.
Schanzer, Rosalyn. Witches!: The Absolutely True Tale of Disaster in Salem. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society, 2011. Print
Schiff, Stacy. "The Witches of Salem." The New Yorker. Condé Nast, 31 Aug. 2015. Web. 11 Oct. 2016.
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