#Ghosts Of Paraguay
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sup3rqu33n · 10 months ago
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So I have an IUD for the past 2 years…
It’s been helpful. I’ve been in remission for a year now, and it’s amazingly unstressful… but it’s not all perfect… and things have been off.
I don’t have periods anymore, but I do get these monthly days where I have lots of mucusy stuff. I call it my ghost period, because cramps too. So like there ya go.
I have the iud because of endometrial neoplasia. My oncologist said the options were taking out the uterus or putting the iud in, and other such things.
So I was trying to explain it to ai but she didn’t get it. She did help me feel a little better though.
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scp-168 · 4 months ago
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MI PAIS MI PAIS
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deathmoth-blog · 5 months ago
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Beautiful black witch moth
The erebid moth Ascalapha odorata, commonly known as the black witch, is a large bat-shaped, dark-colored nocturnal moth, normally ranging from the southern United States to Brazil. Ascalapha odorata is also migratory into Canada and most states of United States. It is the largest noctuoid in the continental United States. In the folklore of many Central American cultures, it is associated with death or misfortune.
Female moths can attain a wingspan of 24 cm. The dorsal surfaces of their wings are mottled brown with hints of iridescent purple and pink, and, in females, crossed by a white bar. The diagnostic marking is a small spot on each forewing shaped like a number nine or a comma. This spot is often green with orange highlights. Males are somewhat smaller, reaching 12 cm in width, darker in color and lacking the white bar crossing the wings. The larva is a large caterpillar up to 7 cm in length with intricate patterns of black and greenish-brown spots and stripes.
The black witch lives from the southern United States, Mexico and Central America to Brazil, and has apparently been introduced to Hawaii.[citation needed]
The black witch flies north during late spring and summer. One was caught during an owl banding project at the Whitefish Point lighthouse on the shoreline of Lake Superior in July 2020.[citation needed]
The black witch is considered a harbinger of death in Mexican and Caribbean folklore. In many cultures, one of these moths flying into the house is considered bad luck: e.g., in Mexico, when there is sickness in a house and this moth enters, it is believed the sick person will die, though a variation on this theme (in the lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas) is that death only occurs if the moth flies in and visits all four corners of one's house (in Mesoamerica, from the pre-Hispanic era until the present time, moths have been associated with death and the number four). In some parts of Mexico, people joke that if one flies over someone's head, the person will lose his hair.
In Jamaica, under the name duppy bat, the black witch is seen as the embodiment of a lost soul or a soul not at rest. In Jamaican English, the word duppy is associated with malevolent spirits returning to inflict harm upon the living and bat refers to anything other than a bird that flies. The word "duppy" (also: "duppie") is also used in other West Indian countries, generally meaning "ghost".
In Brazil it is called "mariposa-bruxa", "mariposa-negra", "bruxa-negra", and "bruxa", and it is also believed that when a moth of this type enters the house it can bring some "bad omen", signaling the death of a resident. In the Ecuadorian highlands they are called Tandacuchi and in Peru Taparacuy or Taparaco. These countries share the belief that if this moth, a messenger of death, appears in your home, someone will die very soon.
In Hawaii, black witch mythology, though associated with death, has a happier note in that if a loved one has just died, the moth is an embodiment of the person's soul returning to say goodbye. In the Bahamas, where they are locally known as money moths or money bats, the legend is that if they land on you, you will come into money, and similarly, in South Texas, if a black witch lands above your door and stays there for a while, you will supposedly win the lottery.
In Paraguay and Argentina, this insect is mostly known as "ura", and there is a popular belief that this moth urinates and leaves worms on the skin of people and animals. However, the insect that lays eggs in the skin and whose larvae become embedded in the flesh is the colmoyote or screwworm (Dermatobia hominis).
In Spanish, the black witch is known as "mariposa de la muerte". Other names for the moth include the papillion-devil, la sorcière noire, the mourning moth or the sorrow moth.[citation needed]
Black witch moth pupae were placed in the mouths of victims of serial killer 'Buffalo Bill' in the novel The Silence of the Lambs. In the movie adaptation, they were replaced by death's-head hawkmoth pupae.
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julianalvarez9 · 2 years ago
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(1) Zona de promesas, song by Mercedes Sosa. (trans: "mom knows well, i've lost a battle) / (2) Copa América Final: Lionel Messi Tries to Slay His Ghosts - The New York Times / (3) Clarice Lispector, from the complete stories: 'one day less' / (4) Lionel Messi of Argentina closes his eyes during the national anthem prior to a match between Argentina and Paraguay as part of South American Qualifiers for Qatar 2022 at Estadio Alberto J. Armando on November 12, 2020 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Juan I. Roncoroni) / (5) Against Silence, Frank Bidart / (6) Lionel Messi of Argentina lifts the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Winner's Trophy during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Final match between Argentina and France at Lusail Stadium on December 18, 2022 in Lusail City, Qatar. (Photo by Julian Finney) / (7) Zona de promesas, song by Mercedes Sosa. (trans: it takes time to arrive and in the end, in the end there is a reward) / (8) Lionel Messi of Argentina celebrates with the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Winner's Trophy after the team's victory during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Final match between Argentina and France at Lusail Stadium on December 18, 2022 in Lusail City, Qatar. (Photo by Lars Baron) / (9) Lionel Messi speech after winning the 2023 Laureus World Sportsman of the Year. / (10) Lionel Messi of Argentina kisses the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Winner's Trophy while holding the adidas Golden Boot award after the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Final match between Argentina and France at Lusail Stadium on December 18, 2022 in Lusail City, Qatar. (Photo by Julian Finney) / (11) Tumblr textpost. / (12) Lionel Messi of Argentina celebrates with teammates after their fourth and winning penalty by Gonzalo Montiel in the penalty shootout during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Final match between Argentina and France at Lusail Stadium on December 18, 2022 in Lusail City, Qatar. (Photo by Maddie Meyer) / (13) Lionel Messi speech after winning the 2023 Laureus World Sportsman of the Year. / (14) Lionel Messi of FC Barcelona celebrates with his teammates after scoring his team's fourth goal during the La Liga match between FC Barcelona and Sevilla FC at Camp Nou on November 22, 2014 in Barcelona, Spain. Lionel Messi beat the number of goal in the Spanish La Liga of Telmo Zarra scoring his 252nd goal. (Photo by David Ramos) / (15) Lionel Messi is offered a hand by teammate Ezequiel Lavezzi of Argentina after the finial whistle and defeat at the World Cup Final match between Germany (1) and Argentina (0) at the Maracana Stadium on July 13, 2014 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Photo by Simon Bruty) / (16) Lionel Messi speech after winning the 2023 Laureus World Sportsman of the Year. / (17) Lionel Messi greet fans during a victory parade of the Argentina men's national football team after winning the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 on December 20, 2022 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Gustavo Pagano) / (18) Lionel Messi of Argentina holds the FIFA World Cup trophy during World Champions' celebrations after an international friendly between Argentina and Panama at Estadio Mas Monumental Antonio Vespucio Liberti on March 23, 2023 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo Endelli) / (19) Zona de promesas, song by Mercedes Sosa. (trans: in the zone of promises) / (20)  Lionel Messi of Argentina shoots the ball during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Group C match between Argentina and Mexico at Lusail Stadium on November 26, 2022 in Lusail City, Qatar. (Photo by Fu Tian).
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brookston · 5 months ago
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Holidays 6.12
Holidays
Anne Frank Day
Bedstraw Day (French Republic)
Blue Galaxy Day
Children’s Day (Haiti)
Crowded Nest Syndrome Day
Dia dos Namorados (Brazil)
Flag Day (Brazil; New Zealand)
Ghost in the Machine Day
Grimace Day
Helsinki Day (Finland)
Idol Day
Indiana Jones Day
International Adobo Day
International DDX3X Day
International Dubbing Day
International Shia Day
Interracial Marriage Day
June 12 Commemoration (Lagos State, Nigeria)
Lancaster Day (UK)
Little League Girls Baseball Day
Lover’s Day (Japan)
Loving Day
Magic Day
Man of Steel Day
Mother’s Day (Luxembourg)
National Automotive Service Professionals Day
National Black Men Don’t Cheat Day
National Button Battery Awareness Day
National Cancer Thriver Day
National Chiropractic Health Assistant Day (Canada)
National Control Room Worker’s Day
National Cougar Day
National Dairy Goat Awareness Day
National Dame Day
National Esther Day
National Great Dane Day
National Harm Reduction Day (Canada)
National Hospital at Home Patients Day
National Magic Day
National X Day
Orlando United Day (Florida)
Peace Day (Kosovo)
Perfect Game Day
Portland Trail Blazers Day (Oregon)
Pulse Remembrance Day
Queen’s Birthday (Pitcairn Islands, Tuvalu)
Railway Day (Japan)
Red Rose Day
Rock Around the Clock Day
Russia Day (Russia)
Science Day (Turkmenistan)
Senior Race Day (Isle of Man)
Sharon Needles Day (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
612 Day (Minnesota)
Spoonful of Sugar Day
Spousal Abuse Day
State Protection Service Day (Poland)
Stock Market Employees Day (Ukraine)
Superman Day
Swiss Army Knife Day
Tear Down This Wall Day
Valentine’s Day (Brazil)
Welsh Bands T-Shirt Day (UK)
We Remember 612 Day (Hong Kong)
Women’s Veterans Day
World Day Against Child Labour (UN)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chuy’s National Taco Day
International Cachaca Day
International Falafel Day
National Apple Cinnamon Muffin Day
National Jerky Day
Peanut Butter Cookie Day
Pink Spaghetti Day
Poultry Day
Independence & Related Days
Act of Settlement Day (UK; 1701)
Bill of Rights Day (Virginia; 1776)
Chaco Armistice Day (Paraguay)
Constitution Day (Turks & Caicos Island)
Democracy Day (Nigeria)
Philippines (from Spain, 1898)
2nd Wednesday in June
National Time Out Day [2nd Wednesday]
Worshipful Company of Vintners of the City of London Annual Procession [2nd Wednesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning June 12 (2nd Full Week)
California State Parks Week (thru 6.16)
International Listening Association Week (thru 6.16)
Raggedy Ann and Andy Days (thru 6.13)
Festivals Beginning June 12, 2024
Emmett Cherry Festival (Emmett, Idaho) [thru 6.15]
Ice Cream Days (Le Mars, Iowa) [thru 6.15]
Mattituck Strawberry Festival (Mattituck, New York) [thru 6.16]
North by Northeast [NXNE] (Toronto, Canada) [thru 6.16]
San Diego County Fair (Del Mar, California) [thru 7.7]
Taste of London (London, UK) [thru 6.16]
Teapot Day (Tea, South Dakota) [thru 6.15]
W. C. Handy Blues & Barbecue Festival (Henderson, Kentucky) [thru 6.15]
Feast Days
Adriaen van Stalbemt (Artology)
St. Anthony’s Day Eve (Portugal)
Antonina (Christian; Martyr)
Bannocks Day (Celtic Book of Days)
Basilides, Cyrinus, Nabor and Nazarius (Christian; Martyrs)
Be More Paranoid Day (Pastafarian)
Bob Katz (Muppetism)
St. Charles Borromeo (Positivist; Saint)
Dave Berg (Artology)
Egon Schiele (Artology)
Enmegahbowh (Episcopal Church)
Eskil of Sweden (Christian; Martyr)
Feast of the Blessed Polish Martyrs of World War II
Festival of Mut (Ancient Egypt)
First Ecumenical Council (Lutheran)
Gaspar Bertoni (Christian; Saint)
Gerard Hoffnung Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Gin Day (Pastafarian)
Guy of Cortona (Christian; Saint)
Henry Scott Tuke (Artology)
Hildegard Burjan (Christian; Blessed)
Johanna Spyri (Writerism)
John of Sahagún (Christian; Saint)
Korean Rice Farmers Stream Hair Washing Day (Everyday Wicca)
Len Wein (Artology)
Leo III, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Media Ver VII (Pagan)
Odulf (Christian; Saint)
Onuphrius (Christian; Saint)
Peter of Mount Athos (Christian; Saint)
Sparky Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Ternan, Bishop of the Picts (Christian; Saint)
Zeus’ Day (Ancient Greece)
108 Martyrs of World War II (Christian)
Hebrew Calendar Holidays [Begins at Sundown Day Before]
Shavuot, Day 2 (Judaism) [6-7 Sivan] (a.k.a. …
Feast of the Harvest
Feast of Weeks
Festival of Weeks
First-Fruit festival
Wheat Harvest
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Prime Number Day: 163 [38 of 72]
Taian (大安 Japan) [Lucky all day.]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [34 of 57]
Premieres
Admission Free (Betty Boop Cartoon; 1932)
All About Dogs (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1942)
Andy Warhol’s Blue Movie (a.k.a. Fuck; Adult Film; 1969)
Are You My Mother?, by P.D. Eastman (Children’s Book; 1960)
The Brighter Buccaneer, by Leslie Charteris (Short Stories; 1933) [Saint #12]
Bullet Park, by John Cheever (Novel; 1969)
Can’t Hardly Wait (Film; 1998)
Chesapeake, by James A. Michener (Historical Novel; 1978)
Chuck Berry Is On Top, by Chuck Berry (Album; 1959)
Clash of the Titans (Film; 1981)
Cleopatra (Film; 1963)
Clockwork Angels, by Rush (Album; 2012)
Coming Up for Air, by George Orwell (Novel; 1939)
Deep Throat (Adult Film; 1972)
Donald’s Garden (Disney Cartoon; 1942)
Donovan’s Reef (Film; 1963)
Farmer Al Falfa’s Bedtime Story (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1932)
Food, Inc. (Documentary Film; 2009)
Foundation and Empire, by Isaac Asimov (Novel; 1952) [Foundation #2]
Go Bo Diddly, by Bo Diddly (Album; 1959)
History of the World: Part 1 (Film; 1981)
The Horse Soldiers (Film; 1959)
I’ll Chase the Blues Away, recorded by Ella Fitzgerald (Song; 1935)
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, by Rebecca Skloot (Science Book; 2010)
Jurassic World (Film; 2015)
Line of Duty (BBC TV Series; 2012)
Love and Kisses, recorded by Ella Fitzgerald (Song; 1935)
Mariah Carey, by Mariah Carey (Album; 1990)
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (Film; 2015)
Moon (Film; 2009)
Palestrina, by Hans Pfitzner (Opera; 1917)
Predator (Film; 1987)
Raiders of the Lost Ark (Film; 1981)
Rhapsody in Blue, by George Gershwin (Orchestral Jazz; 1924)
The Sailor’s Home (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1936)
She’s Not There, recorded by The Zombies (Song; 1964)
Some Time in New York City, by John Lennon (Album; 1972)
Speedway (Film; 1968)
Superman vs. The Elite (Animated WB Film; 2012)
Surfer Girl, recorded by The Beach Boys (Song; 1963)
Swingers (Film; 1997)
Take Off Your Pants and Jacket, by Blink-182 (Album; 2001)
Testimony of Two Men, by Taylor Caldwell (Novel; 1968)
Toreadorable (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1953)
2 Cool 4 Skool, by BTS (Album; 2013)
The Witches of Eastwick (Film; 1987)
Today’s Name Days
Florinda, Guido, Leo (Austria)
Bazilid, Gašpar, Leon (Croatia)
Antonie (Czech Republic)
Balisius (Denmark)
Eskel, Esko (Estonia)
Esko (Finland)
Guy (France)
Florinda, Guido, Leo (Germany)
Onoufrios (Greece)
Villő (Hungary)
Basilide, Guido, Onofrio (Italy)
Ija, Narda, Nora (Latvia)
Anupras, Dovė, Kristijonas, Kristis, Ramūnas (Lithuania)
Sigfrid, Sigrid, Siri (Norway)
Antonina, Bazyli, Jan, Leon, Onufry, Wyszemir (Poland)
Onufrie, Pavel, Petru (România)
Zlatko (Slovakia)
Juan, Onofre (Spain)
Eskil (Sweden)
Onopriy (Ukraine)
Ahmad, Ahmed, Aisha, Asia, Mohamed, Mohammad, Mohammed (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 164 of 2024; 202 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 24 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Duir (Oak) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 5 (Geng-Wu), Day 7 (Ding-Wei)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 6 Sivan 5784
Islamic: 5 Dhu al-Hijjah 1445
J Cal: 14 Blue; Sevenday [14 of 30]
Julian: 30 May 2024
Moon: 36%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 23 St. Paul (6th Month) [St. Charles Borromeo]
Runic Half Month: Dag (Day) [Day 4 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 86 of 92)
Week: 2nd Full Week of June)
Zodiac: Gemini (Day 23 of 31)
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legend-collection · 10 months ago
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vengeful Ghost
In mythology and folklore, a vengeful ghost or vengeful spirit is said to be the spirit of a dead person who returns from the afterlife to seek revenge for a cruel, unnatural or unjust death. In certain cultures where funeral and burial or cremation ceremonies are important, such vengeful spirits may also be considered as unhappy ghosts of individuals who have not been given a proper funeral.
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The concept of a vengeful ghost seeking retribution for harm that it endured as a living person goes back to ancient times and is part of many cultures. According to such legends and beliefs, they roam the world of the living as restless spirits, seeking to have their grievances redressed, and may not be satisfied until they have succeeded in punishing either their murderers or their tormentors.
In certain cultures vengeful ghosts are mostly female, said to be women that were unjustly treated during their lifetime. Such women or girls may have died in despair or the suffering they endured may have ended up in early death caused by the ill-treatment or torture they were subject to.
Exorcisms and appeasement are among the religious and social customs practiced by various cultures in relation to the vengeful ghost. The northern Aché people group in Paraguay cremated old people thought to harbor dangerous vengeful spirits instead of giving them a customary burial. In cases where the person has been killed and the body disposed of unceremoniously, the cadaver may be exhumed and reburied according to the proper funerary rituals in order to appease the spirit. Another option is to salt and burn their remains (bones).
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ruhkie · 11 months ago
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@yngai said: if i didn't know any better, i'd say you were jealous.
❝   jealous?   seriously?   ❞ he huffs, muscular forearm rising to wipe the sweat beads from his forehead. eyes once bright with eagerness how hold a carved death of endless nightmares— if not by the bloodshot veins in the whites of eyes, then by the stygian bags resting beneath them. he'll bite this once, though. if not for the south america heat creating a sensation of boiling irritation, then for all the bile formulating in the pits of his stomach over the past decades. not all entirely from her. but ada's more than capable of handling leon's snark. ❝ maybe a part of me is. you've always had a way of walking in and out of shit unscathed. ❞ the ghost of a smile plays on his lips, but it doesn't quite reach his eyes. those eyes have witnessed horrors, have stared into the abyss, and what looked back had eaten him irrevocably.
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❝ let me guess: this is where you make my life a living hell for the next five minutes before you ride off into the sunset? ❞ his question is entirely serious— ada's done it before and she'll do it again. all leon can hope is it doesn't cost him another vacation. his plane ticket out of paraguay is directed to aruba.
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metaleterno · 4 months ago
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Poseidótica lanza su nuevo disco ¨Las palabras y la realidad¨.  La banda de rock instrumental expansivo, para este disco, se planteó el desafío de evolucionar tanto a nivel compositivo como sónico, abundando en matices con su particular psicodelia energética, más allá de la inconfundible dinámica de la banda que los lleva desde pasajes fuertes, densos y oscuros a momentos de luminosidad, calma y reflexión. 
Grabado en el legendario Estudio del Abasto Monsterland por Gonzalo Villagra y en el coqueto estudio del C.C. Richards por Maxi Leivas, este álbum tiene la particularidad de contar con un ingeniero de mezcla diferente para cada tema, elegidos especialmente para otorgarle su toque personal de acuerdo a lo que necesite cada canción, es así que la búsqueda y la experimentación rodea este nuevo trabajo de Poseidótica, dando como resultado una atrapante, variada e hipnótica sucesión de sonoridades que se desarrollan en cada track dando forma a una heterogénea y adictiva obra.
Entre algunos de los productores que participaron podemos mencionar a Billy Anderson (Melvins, Sleep, High On Fire), Estanislao López (Mujer Cebra, Buenos Vampiros, Atrás Hay Truenos) y Santiago De Simone (Dillom, Winona Riders, Nenagenix).
“Las palabras y la realidad” también cuenta con invitados como Nico Bereciartúa en guitarra slide (The Black Crowes) y Santiago Córdoba en percusión (Violentango), ambos en la canción “El Duelo”, y Matías Romero (Miembro estable de la Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional) aportando violín en “La Gema”.Escucha ¨Las palabras y la realidad¨
Sin letras, desde un aparente silencio, Poseidótica logra conmover con sus épicas melodías, estimula la imaginación con su sonido envolvente y sacude el pensamiento con sus estructuras complejas llenas de progresiones, en esta ocasión ampliando el abanico estilístico a terrenos inexplorados. Una buena dosis de música no convencional para sumergirse a través de las profundidades de la mente.
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POSEIDOTICA PRESENTA ¨LAS PALABRAS Y LA REALIDAD¨ EN VIVO EN EL TEATRO FLORES
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Poseidótica, grupo de rock instrumental expansivo formado en la ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina, a finales del año 2000, posee una identidad propia y un sonido particular, en gran parte posibilitado por la facilidad que tiene la banda en filtrar diferentes estilos, logrando una música intensa, progresiva, psicodélica, matemática y experimental, a partir de estructuras variadas y complejas, que abundan en matices, climas y un permanente juego de dinámicas, sin perder en ningún momento su sello personal.
La banda tiene cinco discos editados, “Intramundo” del 2005, “La Distancia” del 2008, “Crónicas del Futuro” del 2011, “El Dilema del Origen” del 2015 y “Pascuas Profanas” (En Vivo) del 2018, además de un DVD llamado “En Viaje Hacia una Nueva Dimensión”.
A lo largo de su historia Poseidótica ha pasado por una enorme cantidad de escenarios destacados, compartiendo festivales con legendarios artistas internacionales como Iggy & The Stooges, Megadeth, Motley Crue y Marilyn Manson, y también han tocado junto a bandas de culto como Dead Meadow (USA), Kadavar (Alemania), Earthless (USA), Mars Red Sky (Francia), Yawning Man (USA) y The Shrine (USA).  
En la actualidad, habiendo girado por Latinoamérica (Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay) después de editar en vinilo toda su discografía a través de su sello Aquatalan Records, la vibrante agrupación continúa su imparable marcha en el marco del “Alquimia Tour” y se encuentran más vigentes que nunca, luego de ser elegidos por Ghost para abrir su recital en el Movistar Arena ante 15 mil personas en septiembre del 2023 y habiéndose presentado en 2024 junto a artistas internacionales del calibre de Brant Bjork (Ex Kyuss y Fu Manchu) y Austin TV (México).
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brookstonalmanac · 5 months ago
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Holidays 6.19
Holidays
Arbor Day (Paraguay)
Artigas Day (Uruguay)
Baseball Day
Beggar's Banquets (Brazil)
Butterfly Day
Constitution Day (Seychelles)
Día del Nunca Más (a.k.a. Never Again Day; Argentina)
Emancipation Day (Texas)
Farmer’s Day (Ukraine)
Feast of Forest (Palawan)
Festival of the Coming Ice Age
Garfield the Cat Day
International Box Day
International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict (UN)
International Fathers Mental Health Day
Jose Rizal Day (Luna, Philippines)
Juneteenth (US)
Labour Day (Trinidad and Tobago)
Laguna Day (Philippines)
Mass Market Paperback Book Day
Midsummer’s Eve (a.k.a. Midsommarafton; Aland, Finland, Sweden)
Midsummer’s Eve [Day before Summer Solstice]
National Ding Free Day (Canada)
National FreeBSD Day
National Heroes’ Day (Bermuda)
National Parks Free Entrance Day
National Pets in Film Day
National Reading Day (India)
National Thank a Teacher Day (UK)
National Tuccelli Day (ASL)
National Watch Day
Never Again Day (Uruguay)
New Church Day (Swedenborgian)
Pediatric Headache Awareness Day
Red Soda Celebration
Rye Day (French Republic)
619 Day
Spooky Stories Appreciation Night
Surigao del Norte Day (Philippines)
Surigao del Sur Day (Philippines)
Svalbard Global Seed Vault Day
"War Is Hell" Day
World Albatross Day
World Sauntering Day
World Sickle Cell Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Eat An Oreo Day
National Dine Out Day
National Martini Day (a.k.a. Dry Martini Day)
Real Food Day
Independence & Related Days
Day of the Independent Hungary (Hungary)
Mondero (Declared; 2010) [unrecognized]
Surigao del Norte Province Day (Philippines)
Surigao del Sur Province Day (Philippines)
Thebes (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
3rd Wednesday in June
Ageless Motion Day (Alberta, Canada) [3rd Wednesday]
National Healthcare Estates & Facilities Day (UK) [3rd Wednesday]
Festivals Beginning June 19, 2024
Beijing International Book Fair (Beijing, China) [thru 6.23]
Copenhell Festival (Copenhagen, Denmark) [thru 6.22]
Homestead Days (Beatrice, Nebraska) [thru 6.23]
Raindance Film Festival (London, United Kingdom) [thru 6.28]
Rock Imperium (Cartagena, Spain) [thru 6.22]
Feast Days
Asatru Alliance Founding Day (Asatru)
Boniface of Querfurt (Christian; Saint)
Cornelius Krieghoff (Artology)
Day of All Heras (Ancient Rome)
Deodatus (a.k.a. Didier or Die) of Nevers (or of Jointures) (Christian; Saint)
East of the Holy Ghost begins (Brazil)
Feralia: Day of Purification (Pagan)
Festival for Minerva (Ancient Rome)
Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes (Artology)
Gervasius and Protasius (Catholic Church; Martyrs)
Hildegrim of Châlons (Christian; Saint)
José Sanchis Grau (Artology)
Jude (Christian; Saint)
Juliana Falconieri (Christian; Saint)
Maginel Wright Enright (Artology)
Martini Day (Pastafarian)
Ollamh (Celtic Book of Days)
Pelayo (Positivist; Saint)
Princess Gwendolynda (Muppetism)
Robert Heinlein Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Romuald (Christian; Saint)
Salmon Rushdie (Writerism)
Tiger-Get-By’s Second Birthday (Shamanism)
Ursicinus of Ravenna (Christian; Saint)
Zosimus (Christian; Saint)
Islamic Lunar Holidays
Eid al-Adha, Day 4 [Muslim Feast of Sacrifice] (a.k.a. ... 
Al Adha (Egypt)
Eid al Adha (Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia)
Eid ul-Ad’haa (Maldives)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 28 of 60)
Premieres
American Gods, by Neil Gaiman (Novel; 2001)
Batman Returns (Film; 1992)
The Brave Little Toaster (Animated Film; 1987)
Bukowski (Film; 2013)
Canned Dog Feud (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1965)
The Cannonball Run (Film; 1981)
Dancing in the Street, recorded by Martha and the Vandellas (Song; 1964)
Devil May Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1954)
Down to Earth, by Patricia Wrightson (Novel; 1965)
Dream for an Insomniac (Film; 1998)
The Enigma Variations, by Edward Elgar (Orchestral Piece; 1899) 
Fish Fry (Andy Panda Cartoon; 1944)
For Your Eyes Only, by Sheena Easton (Song; 1981)
Garfield (Comic Strip; 1978)
The Gospel According to the Son, by Norman Mailer (Novel; 1997)
Ham and Eggs (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1933)
Hatari! (Film; 1962)
Here Comes the Surfs (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Special; 1981)
Horton Hatches the Egg, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1940)
How to Save Your Own Life, by Erica Jong (Novel; 1977)
The Idler Wheel…, by Fiona Apple (Album; 2012)
I’m a Honky Tonk Girl, recorded by Loretta Lynn (Song; 1960)
Inside Out (Animated Pixar Film; 2015)
Jason and the Argonauts (Film; 1963)
The Last of Us Part II (Video Game; 2020)
Mulan (Animated Disney Film; 1998)
Mumbo Jumbo, by Ishmael Reed (Novel; 1972)
The Music Man (Film; 1962)
No Longer Human, by Osamu Dazai (Novel; 1948)
Porky’s Building (WB LT Cartoon; 1937)
The Proposal (Film; 2009)
Purple Haze, by Jimi Hendrix (US Song; 1967)
Ramblin’ Rose, recorded by Nat King Cole (Song; 1962)
Robin Hoodwinked (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1967)
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (UK Musical Play; 1973)
Rough and Rowdy Ways, by Bob Dylan (Album; 2020)
Roxanne (Film; 1987)
Sleepy-Time Squirrel, featuring Barney Bear (MGM Cartoon; 1954)
Streamlined Greta Green (WB MM Cartoon; 1937)
Superman II (Film; 1981)
Time Enough for Love, by Robert A. Heinlein (Novel; 1973)
Tim McGraw, by Taylor Swift (Song; 2006)
A Waif’s Welcome (Rainbow Parade Cartoon; 1936)
Who Killed Who? (Tex Avery MGM Cartoon; 1943)
X-Files: Fight the Future (Film; 1998)
Today’s Name Days
Juliana, Romuald (Austria)
Božidar, Julijana, Romuald (Croatia)
Leoš (Czech Republic)
Gervasius (Denmark)
Sigrid, Siiri, Siivi (Estonia)
Siiri (Finland)
Gervais, Romuald (France)
Juliana, Romuald (Germany)
Paisios, Zosimos (Greece)
Gyárfás (Hungary)
Gervasio, Protasio, Romualdo (Italy)
Nils, Vaironis, Viktors (Latvia)
Dovilas, Dovilė, Ramunė (Lithuania)
Elling, Erling (Norway)
Borzysław, Gerwazy, Julianna, Odo, Protazy, Sylweriusz (Poland)
Iuda (România)
Alfréd (Slovakia)
Aurora, Gervasio, Romualdo (Spain)
Germund, Görel (Sweden)
Carisa, Carissa, Jarvis, Jervis, Karissa, Ralna (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 171 of 2024; 195 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 25 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Duir (Oak) [Day 11 of 28]
Chinese: Month 5 (Geng-Wu), Day 14 (Jia-Yin)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 13 Sivan 5784
Islamic: 12 Dhu al-Hijjah 1445
J Cal: 21 Blue; Sevenday [21 of 30]
Julian: 6 June 2024
Moon: 94%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 2 Charlemagne (7th Month) [Pelayo]
Runic Half Month: Dag (Day) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 93 of 93)
Week: 3rd Full Week of June)
Zodiac: Gemini (Day 30 of 31)
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vamprlestat · 6 months ago
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seriously considering going to paraguay to watch the ghost movie
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rhetoricandlogic · 8 months ago
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‘Our Share of Night’ is a masterpiece of supernatural horror
Mariana Enriquez’s novel, her first published in English, uses otherworldly elements to consider Argentina’s violent history
Review by Hamilton Cain
February 5, 2023 at 8:00 a.m. EST
As political partisanship boiled over in the aughts, showrunner Alan Ball rolled out HBO’s “True Blood,” adapting Charlaine Harris’s pulp series about a coven of vampires — and the humans who love them — for the small screen, tapping horror tropes to plumb deeper truths surrounding xenophobia and desire. Excessive gore, spiritual angst, sexy bodies: They were all there for the audience, no holds barred. Moody yet hilarious, the show won an Emmy and a Golden Globe.
I frequently thought of “True Blood” as I read Mariana Enriquez’s masterpiece of genre mash-up, “Our Share of Night,” the Argentine writer’s first novel published in English. Lauded for her short fiction, Enriquez here slathers on supernatural conceits: How better to respond to that country’s violent history than with a shadowy sect teeming with wraiths and demons, a haunted house, a dynastic family that would sacrifice its own to maintain power? Make no mistake, though: “Our Share of Night” is a literary achievement, gorgeous and exacting in its execution.
Tall, blond and 30-something, Juan Peterson resides with his only child, Gaspar, in a spooky Buenos Aires mansion. “Our Share of Night” opens in January 1981, as the persecution of citizens has ebbed. Both man and boy are grieving the accidental death of Rosario, wife, mother and daughter of Mercedes, the stone-cold matriarch who shepherds a mystical, murderous cult known as the Order.
Born with a severe heart defect, Juan’s living on borrowed time. He’s volatile and sexually omnivorous, seducing everyone in his path, such as Rosario’s empathic half sister, Tali; his best friend, Stephen; and casual hookups. He’s also the sole medium between the Order and its deity, a ravenous Darkness that feeds on Argentines much as the fascistic government did in the 1970s. The cult has amassed a fortune, and Juan is a pawn in its game.
At the height of summer, he drives Gaspar to Puerto Reyes, near the Paraguay border, for the annual Ceremonial, a grisly ritual that mirrors the recent reign of terror. In a dazzling array of scenes, Enriquez dabbles in occult motifs, as when Tali, who reads tarot cards, is approached by a woman inquiring about her missing daughter: “Tali had seen her dead, drowned, and she’d said so. One of the many girls the military had murdered and thrown into rivers, their eyes eaten by fish, their feet tangled in vegetation: dead mermaids with bellies full of lead. Tali didn’t lie, she wouldn’t give false hope. The fathers and mothers of young people who had been disappeared by the dictatorship sought her out; they wanted, at least, to know how their children died, if their bodies were in a pit of bones or underwater or in a secret cemetery.”
Juan recognizes that Gaspar has inherited his gift, and he’s desperate to turn the boy over to the safekeeping of his brother, Luis, who had fled Argentina to escape the crackdowns. He cobbles together a network to protect Gaspar while occasionally surrendering to his inner sadist, beating and berating his son (and others) to salve the torment of the monster within. Scarred torsos, amputated limbs, wrists cut to the bone: These are the signatures of a man caught between genocide and the burdens of his fate. Juan’s a morally treacherous triumph of Enriquez’s towering imagination.
Gaspar thinks his father’s crazy. “I hope Dad dies once and for all and puts an end to all this and I can live with my uncle,” he notes, “and I don’t ever have to think again about locked rooms, voices in my head, dreams of hallways and dead people, ghost families, boxes full of eyelids. … I wish I could stop loving him, forget him.” Enriquez toggles between decades, between South America and Europe, filling in lacunae amid her characters’ biographies — Rosario narrates a lavish sequence from beyond the grave — while blurring lines that divide our world from adjacent realms. Her cinematic technique spans the globe: There’s a go-go, Carnaby Street vibe to her London flashbacks, for example.
The novel’s translator, Megan McDowell, won the National Book Award in translated literature last year for “Seven Empty Houses,” by Samanta Schweblin, a fellow Argentine whose themes dovetail with those of Enriquez. An American based in Santiago, Chile, McDowell has grasped the torch passed by luminaries such as Edith Grossman; translation, to invoke Grossman’s famous metaphor, isn’t merely copying one language over another, like tracing paper, but rather an act of creation unto itself. “Our Share of Night” teases out the nuances of Enriquez’s spirited, in-your-face style, political epic masquerading as satanic farce.
As Gaspar navigates adolescence, he feels the stir of attraction, his father’s son. “The girl let him light her cigarette,” Enriquez writes. “Gaspar looked at her legs. She had visible muscles. The lighter had illuminated her very dark eyes, lined in blue like a punk Cleopatra. … She said she thought Gaspar was a great name. One of the Magi.”
By novel’s end, Gaspar’s a Wise Man, weaving gingerly toward selfhood, fending off forces hellbent on his destruction. As the millennium approaches, he confronts his country’s brutal legacy and his affluent family’s role, the havoc colonialism has wrought in the Americas. “Our Share of Night” is not only a bloody valentine to the bonds between parent and child, but also an inspired evisceration of how the powerful prey on the powerless, often beneath the guise of democracy and freedom. As Mercedes opines: “Money … is a nation in itself.”
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cr0ss0veronlymusic · 5 years ago
Video
youtube
Ghosts Of Paraguay - The River
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danceoftheday · 6 years ago
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Performed by: Jeannie Lin and Lucas Weismann
Number: “The River” 
Improvised by: Jeannie Lin and Lucas Weismann
Style: Fusion
From: “Lucas Weismann and Jeannie Lin Fusion Demo Dance - OmniDance” (2014)
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sdbyfmz · 3 years ago
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brookston · 5 months ago
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Holidays 6.19
Holidays
Arbor Day (Paraguay)
Artigas Day (Uruguay)
Baseball Day
Beggar's Banquets (Brazil)
Butterfly Day
Constitution Day (Seychelles)
Día del Nunca Más (a.k.a. Never Again Day; Argentina)
Emancipation Day (Texas)
Farmer’s Day (Ukraine)
Feast of Forest (Palawan)
Festival of the Coming Ice Age
Garfield the Cat Day
International Box Day
International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict (UN)
International Fathers Mental Health Day
Jose Rizal Day (Luna, Philippines)
Juneteenth (US)
Labour Day (Trinidad and Tobago)
Laguna Day (Philippines)
Mass Market Paperback Book Day
Midsummer’s Eve (a.k.a. Midsommarafton; Aland, Finland, Sweden)
Midsummer’s Eve [Day before Summer Solstice]
National Ding Free Day (Canada)
National FreeBSD Day
National Heroes’ Day (Bermuda)
National Parks Free Entrance Day
National Pets in Film Day
National Reading Day (India)
National Thank a Teacher Day (UK)
National Tuccelli Day (ASL)
National Watch Day
Never Again Day (Uruguay)
New Church Day (Swedenborgian)
Pediatric Headache Awareness Day
Red Soda Celebration
Rye Day (French Republic)
619 Day
Spooky Stories Appreciation Night
Surigao del Norte Day (Philippines)
Surigao del Sur Day (Philippines)
Svalbard Global Seed Vault Day
"War Is Hell" Day
World Albatross Day
World Sauntering Day
World Sickle Cell Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Eat An Oreo Day
National Dine Out Day
National Martini Day (a.k.a. Dry Martini Day)
Real Food Day
Independence & Related Days
Day of the Independent Hungary (Hungary)
Mondero (Declared; 2010) [unrecognized]
Surigao del Norte Province Day (Philippines)
Surigao del Sur Province Day (Philippines)
Thebes (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
3rd Wednesday in June
Ageless Motion Day (Alberta, Canada) [3rd Wednesday]
National Healthcare Estates & Facilities Day (UK) [3rd Wednesday]
Festivals Beginning June 19, 2024
Beijing International Book Fair (Beijing, China) [thru 6.23]
Copenhell Festival (Copenhagen, Denmark) [thru 6.22]
Homestead Days (Beatrice, Nebraska) [thru 6.23]
Raindance Film Festival (London, United Kingdom) [thru 6.28]
Rock Imperium (Cartagena, Spain) [thru 6.22]
Feast Days
Asatru Alliance Founding Day (Asatru)
Boniface of Querfurt (Christian; Saint)
Cornelius Krieghoff (Artology)
Day of All Heras (Ancient Rome)
Deodatus (a.k.a. Didier or Die) of Nevers (or of Jointures) (Christian; Saint)
East of the Holy Ghost begins (Brazil)
Feralia: Day of Purification (Pagan)
Festival for Minerva (Ancient Rome)
Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes (Artology)
Gervasius and Protasius (Catholic Church; Martyrs)
Hildegrim of Châlons (Christian; Saint)
José Sanchis Grau (Artology)
Jude (Christian; Saint)
Juliana Falconieri (Christian; Saint)
Maginel Wright Enright (Artology)
Martini Day (Pastafarian)
Ollamh (Celtic Book of Days)
Pelayo (Positivist; Saint)
Princess Gwendolynda (Muppetism)
Robert Heinlein Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Romuald (Christian; Saint)
Salmon Rushdie (Writerism)
Tiger-Get-By’s Second Birthday (Shamanism)
Ursicinus of Ravenna (Christian; Saint)
Zosimus (Christian; Saint)
Islamic Lunar Holidays
Eid al-Adha, Day 4 [Muslim Feast of Sacrifice] (a.k.a. ... 
Al Adha (Egypt)
Eid al Adha (Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia)
Eid ul-Ad’haa (Maldives)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 28 of 60)
Premieres
American Gods, by Neil Gaiman (Novel; 2001)
Batman Returns (Film; 1992)
The Brave Little Toaster (Animated Film; 1987)
Bukowski (Film; 2013)
Canned Dog Feud (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1965)
The Cannonball Run (Film; 1981)
Dancing in the Street, recorded by Martha and the Vandellas (Song; 1964)
Devil May Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1954)
Down to Earth, by Patricia Wrightson (Novel; 1965)
Dream for an Insomniac (Film; 1998)
The Enigma Variations, by Edward Elgar (Orchestral Piece; 1899) 
Fish Fry (Andy Panda Cartoon; 1944)
For Your Eyes Only, by Sheena Easton (Song; 1981)
Garfield (Comic Strip; 1978)
The Gospel According to the Son, by Norman Mailer (Novel; 1997)
Ham and Eggs (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1933)
Hatari! (Film; 1962)
Here Comes the Surfs (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Special; 1981)
Horton Hatches the Egg, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1940)
How to Save Your Own Life, by Erica Jong (Novel; 1977)
The Idler Wheel…, by Fiona Apple (Album; 2012)
I’m a Honky Tonk Girl, recorded by Loretta Lynn (Song; 1960)
Inside Out (Animated Pixar Film; 2015)
Jason and the Argonauts (Film; 1963)
The Last of Us Part II (Video Game; 2020)
Mulan (Animated Disney Film; 1998)
Mumbo Jumbo, by Ishmael Reed (Novel; 1972)
The Music Man (Film; 1962)
No Longer Human, by Osamu Dazai (Novel; 1948)
Porky’s Building (WB LT Cartoon; 1937)
The Proposal (Film; 2009)
Purple Haze, by Jimi Hendrix (US Song; 1967)
Ramblin’ Rose, recorded by Nat King Cole (Song; 1962)
Robin Hoodwinked (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1967)
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (UK Musical Play; 1973)
Rough and Rowdy Ways, by Bob Dylan (Album; 2020)
Roxanne (Film; 1987)
Sleepy-Time Squirrel, featuring Barney Bear (MGM Cartoon; 1954)
Streamlined Greta Green (WB MM Cartoon; 1937)
Superman II (Film; 1981)
Time Enough for Love, by Robert A. Heinlein (Novel; 1973)
Tim McGraw, by Taylor Swift (Song; 2006)
A Waif’s Welcome (Rainbow Parade Cartoon; 1936)
Who Killed Who? (Tex Avery MGM Cartoon; 1943)
X-Files: Fight the Future (Film; 1998)
Today’s Name Days
Juliana, Romuald (Austria)
Božidar, Julijana, Romuald (Croatia)
Leoš (Czech Republic)
Gervasius (Denmark)
Sigrid, Siiri, Siivi (Estonia)
Siiri (Finland)
Gervais, Romuald (France)
Juliana, Romuald (Germany)
Paisios, Zosimos (Greece)
Gyárfás (Hungary)
Gervasio, Protasio, Romualdo (Italy)
Nils, Vaironis, Viktors (Latvia)
Dovilas, Dovilė, Ramunė (Lithuania)
Elling, Erling (Norway)
Borzysław, Gerwazy, Julianna, Odo, Protazy, Sylweriusz (Poland)
Iuda (România)
Alfréd (Slovakia)
Aurora, Gervasio, Romualdo (Spain)
Germund, Görel (Sweden)
Carisa, Carissa, Jarvis, Jervis, Karissa, Ralna (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 171 of 2024; 195 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 25 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Duir (Oak) [Day 11 of 28]
Chinese: Month 5 (Geng-Wu), Day 14 (Jia-Yin)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 13 Sivan 5784
Islamic: 12 Dhu al-Hijjah 1445
J Cal: 21 Blue; Sevenday [21 of 30]
Julian: 6 June 2024
Moon: 94%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 2 Charlemagne (7th Month) [Pelayo]
Runic Half Month: Dag (Day) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 93 of 93)
Week: 3rd Full Week of June)
Zodiac: Gemini (Day 30 of 31)
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punchland · 6 years ago
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Ghosts Of Paraguay – Serum https://ift.tt/2w2D61F
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