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#Buxine
kaltranis1718 · 9 months
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sexy Ghost Madame Buxine's
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culturedub · 2 years
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🔥🔥🔥 Live Report – Bux’In Dub #6 – La Rotative, Buxerolles (86) – Le Culture Dub Sound System retrouve son parrain dans un ambiance de folie ! 🔥🔥🔥 Samedi 15 Octobre 2022 avait lieu la 6ème édition des Bux’In Dub à La Rotative Buxerolles (86). 5 ans après sa première venue, le parrain du Culture Dub Sound System, Weeding Dub, est de retour pour nous faire vibrer et jumper aux côtés de Remy Likklemc aka Little R, Roots Zombie, Thomas Anton, Stepper, Guru Pope et du Culture Dub Sound ! Retrouvez l’Aftermovie et le Live Report de Manon Kaya ainsi que les photos de Manu Hoorelbeke inna Culture Dub : https://culturedub.com/blog/live-report-buxin-dub-6-la-rotative-buxerolles-86/ The Dub Mission Continues... Large up, AlexDub #aftermovie #reportage #livereport #soiree #soundsystem #reggae #dub #picture #photography #photo #video #party #roots #steppa #stepper #livemusic #live #musician #independent @weedingdub @rootszombie @steppersonssoundsystem @mcthomasanton @culturedub @manon.kaya @manu_hoorelbeke (à La Rotative Buxerolles) https://www.instagram.com/p/CkXk-i6soBX/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Commission
OC Buxine X Penny Plasm Fusion >>More commission info and samples can be found here<<
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bcashopnet · 2 years
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colettte · 3 years
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buxin faz layout e icon p aniversário do seokjin pfvr 😓
——> prontu, aqui!
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luke0maker · 5 years
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Feliz Natal Luke
Vlw <3 to aproveitando ele de buxin chei na cama, espero que você esteja aproveitando o seu
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jaunes-erotic-world · 5 years
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Jaune and Nora making sweet love inside a Chuck E. Cheese.
The buxin ginger girl bounced on her leaders big thick cockthe duo hiding behind the arcade games at the kids restaurant
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kaltranis1718 · 9 months
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sexy Madame Buxine TLH version and IA Version
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saracellos · 4 years
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Letra ( CHARE )
Eu bebi água
Eu bebi água da caçimba
E eu fiquei com o "buxin chei"
Ah! porque mae mandou.
Toma meu chare, chare, chare
Com água da caçimba
E mato do sitio , sitio , sitio
Toma meu chare !
Vocabulario :
CHARE - ISSO É SEGREDO NOSSO !
Compositor : Sara Cellos
Produção musical : Sara Cellos
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bi-bis-posts-blog · 5 years
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Eu desepsionada com meu buxin porquê não posso usar nada colado que ele quer se aparecer.
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imdoomjelly · 6 years
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Here is Madame Buxine requested by @thunderfoxjt
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moatoxinas · 5 years
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Vo enche o buxin de comida. Vamos voltar pro mato, vai saber onde vai ter uma comida top dessa.
- cade os bacana da diplomacia?
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Chinese Off-year customs
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The small year is a festival in Chinese traditional culture. Because of the different customs and customs, the days of being called the young age are not the same. The Chinese folks have the tradition of “official three people, four boats and five”, and the official’s small year is the twelfth lunar month. The home of the people is twenty-fourth of the twelfth lunar month, and the water family is twenty-five of the twelfth lunar month. It is the beginning and foreshadowing of the Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations.
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There are many of the customs in addition to people ceremony in off-year. Such as Spring dust, stick couplets, cut window, bath and hair, and marriage held,etc. It can be said that off year is the prelude of the Spring Festival. This time is known as "early spring day" by the folk people.
Spring Dust  
In order to welcome the stove prince, people remove the stove ash and sweep the wall, commonly known as "sweeping dust." According to the folk saying: "dust" and "Chen" are homophonic, and the dust has the meaning of "except Chen Buxin". The intention is to sweep all the "poor" and "heavy" out. This custom entrusts people with the desire to break new ground and to pray for the old and welcome the new. Therefore, there is an atmosphere full of joy and happiness, and a clean and welcoming New Year.
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Stick the picture of The kitchen   
On the eve of the year, the grocery stores and department stores in the streets and alleys sold the "King of the Kitchen". Most of the idols of this woodblock watermark come from the "hometown of printmaking" - Tianjin Yangliuqing. The sturdy, solemn, and quiet stove king sat in a costume, giving the impression of a family owner. People have to "please" back to a new frame of the king of the stove (can not say "buy"), instead of the old and unbearable stove king image.
Write couplets   
Every household has started to write couplets. The couplet before the gods is particularly particular about the words of admiration and blessing. On both sides of the statue of Buddhism, a pair of couplets should be affixed. The Shanglian writes "Good things in heaven", and writes "Peace in the lower world to protect peace" or "Go back to the palace to return to good fortune". The banner is "the head of the family." Because the Spring Festival Spring Festival couplets are also written together. The folks pay attention to the fact that there must be stickers, and every door must be posted. Rich in content, wonderful language.
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Cut window  
In all preparations, the scrapbooking window is the most popular folk activity. There are various kinds of animals, plants, etc., such as Magpies, Plums, Peacocks, Peacocks, Peacocks, Lions, Hydrangeas, Sanyang Kaitai, Erlongzhuzhu, Lotus, and water.  
Bath and hair   
Adults and children must take a haircut. The folks have the saying that "there is money, no money, and shaving the head for the New Year." 
Marriage held 
After twenty-three, the folks believed that the gods had gone to heaven and there were no taboos. A daughter-in-law does not have to choose a date, which is called chasing marriage. Until the end of the year, there were a lot of wedding ceremonies.
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120cvred-blog · 6 years
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Red in Chinese Culture
Chinese Red vs. Other Global Reds
Often times, whether in Europe, America, and almost anywhere else on Earth, red is seen as a color connected to a multitude of bad connotations. From a widely conceived notion of red leading to anger or pain, people tend to stay away from red for these frightening reasons. However, there is a certain culture that naturally gravitates towards red as their favorite color, because it emphasizes attributes like passion and desire. From ancient myths such as red fighting off legendary monsters, China has had the most faith in the color red than any other country. China takes the positive side of red and blows it up to a scale that is so immense that the entire country follows the need to make it an almost national color. Whether red is meant to be everyone’s favorite color in China is not clear; however, red has become a symbol of not only luck and happiness, but fortune as well.
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Mainland China flag.
Red and Modern China
Looking at the stock market will give us the best indication of how different China’s use and belief of red is, compared to other countries. First off, while in other countries, “contrary to the meaning generally associated with red as negative and green as positive, red represents a rise in stock price and green stands for a decrease,” in China (Han & Zhang 2014). Even though, in this day and age, there are typically universal patterns and symbols for translating businesses and work over to another country, China stays steadfast in its culture and belief that red is a good color. They believe that red and money go together hand in hand, more so if red is not somehow connected to finances, money loss will occur.
In a study done by Han and Zhang in 2014, 24 male college students and stock brokers were recruited to see if red would affect their ability to fulfill tasks such as take an IQ test and do standard matrices. The results, however, did not show the dramatic spike in ability as the researchers would have expected.
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Results of the Han & Zhang (2014) experiment.
These results reveal that red does not really have an effect on the success of stockbrokers, but rather it is a mental thinking that they default to in order to hope for good results. As Han and Zhang stated in their research, the similar results, “might [have been] due to a culture-specific response strategy among Chinese participants.” This means that the Chinese participants had already come in with preconceived ways of taking tests and so on, so not knowing that color was involved in the study just made them go about their test taking and task doing like they would have on a normal basis.
While this research did not prove that red can change the results of a test or task, it rather just strengthened the opinion that Chinese people enjoy the color red. Although not strongly supported by science, culturally, red is seen as a color that older working folk tend to lean towards, because it has produced some kind of result for them in the past. That being said, red is not biologically known to be inherently good, but it seems to give a placebo effect to people that work in financial sectors of China. Additionally, red may not be scientifically helpful in Chinese culture, but it will still be prized for a long time. Red is not a color that most people associate with success, but if it can cause people to believe in their abilities more, would that still make it a negative color?
Red and Cognition
Many times red can be seen as a color that hinders people’s experiences, even in the research previously mentioned, they mentioned that some of the college students skills were slightly decreased due to their dislike of red. While younger generations tend to have a more negative perspective of red, older generations still prize, and emphasize the prestige of red because it has produced positive results in the past.
In the research by Mo et al. (2016), they reveal how colors, in general, can cause a association when continuous positive results are presented. When life presents us with, “some situations in the context of different colors [they] are often accompanied by particular experiences,” causing us to create social cues that will link not only that event and a color, but also the overall experience with a color (Mo et al. 2016). The way we feel and how our bodies reacted at that moment in time start to become interconnected. If we now look at China and its red culture, it can be seen that older generations tend to push for red in many social situations.
Red envelopes that are filled with money and passed out since young, pretty red clothes for New Years parties, or even the red worn on a brides wedding day, all of these create memories in a person’s mind that can last for years, eventually just becoming a habit. Even though kids can grow up to learn what society thinks about specific colors, if they are exposed to that color in a different way that causes joy and pleasure, their experiences of it can change. Color in general creates cues within each human being that does not change as much as each individual grows older. Each individual’s perspective sticks to the clearest memory of a color and attaches to that cue in their mind.
Red in Comparison
At this point, it can be taken that red is seen as both a positive and negative color in different cultures, and while it is very positive in Chinese culture that does not mean it is positive in all Chinese cultures. In a research done by Au et al. (2013), results showed that Mainland Chinese folk saw a higher positive correlation between red and success, while Hong Kong Chinese citizens saw the opposite and rather preferred green. Not all Chinese cultures are alike, in how they deal with colors and their associations. Within China/Hong Kong there is a main comparison between red and green, particularly for the stock market, as mentioned in the Han and Zhang article.
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Results of Au et al. (2013) experiments.
While Au et al. (2013) article showed that study one’s trends for red and green in Mainland China were positive and negative, respectively, Hong Kong had completely opposite results. When compared to a color like green, anywhere around the world, red becomes the color that people would less often choose as the good color. Even within Chinese cultures, in general, the tendency to have red as the supreme color is not universal. Finances and their success can be linked to the color red; however, it does not need to be, because colors and individual associations are brought upon through experience and the society within our proximity. Overall, red is seen in Chinese culture as a color of luck but it is taken with a grain of salt, because in the end it is our personal experiences that develop how we perceive color.
-Sammi Wu
Jiang, Feng, Su Lu, Xiang Yao, Xiaodong Yue, and Wing Tung Au. "Up or Down? How Culture and Color Affect Judgments." Journal of Behavioral Decision Making 27.3 (2014): 226-34. Web.
Tengxiao Zhang, and Buxin Han. "Experience Reverses the Red Effect among Chinese Stockbrokers." PLoS ONE 9.2 (2014): E89193. Web.
Xia, Tiansheng, Lu Song, Ting T Wang, Ling Tan, and Lei Mo. "Exploring the Effect of Red and Blue on Cognitive Task Performances." Frontiers in Psychology 7.MAY (2016): 784. Web.
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dareal3snoveldotcom · 4 years
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Book 25, Chapter 40 - Close the Gates
Book 25, Chapter 40 – Close the Gates
The battle between Arroyo and World God Buxin went on for nearly an entire hour. Finally, the battle came to an end. “Impossible. How could this have happened?” The golden-robed Fukai was muttering to himself, a look of disbelief in his eyes. He truly couldn’t believe what he had just seen. “How could this have happened? Is this… is this my destiny? My doom?” Fukai felt his entire body turn as…
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hugotendaz · 7 years
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After Madame Buxine, Hilda and Nargarita, next ghost girl commissioned by @thunderfoxjt is Jin Se Kua.
Join us on stream -  Picarto or Twitch
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