#send flowers belarus
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aroma-of-love · 2 years ago
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prwlnglthr · 1 year ago
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miłej kupalnocki, happy midsummer, etc etc etc!
from both me and my favourite slavic-adjacent king!
kupalnocka (noc kupały, kupala night, etc) is the traditional west and east slavic celebration of the summer solstice, love, and cleansing. among a number of other things, women weave garlands of flowers, herbs, and ferns and send them floating down rivers and streams to divine their future luck in relationships. to have it brought back was seen as a confession of love (even if for one night...) and a man would sometimes follow a particular woman's wreath even into deep or dangerous waters to return it. people would head into the forest to search for the legendary fern flower. which does not exist, of course. but who could blame you and maybe somebody of your choice for spending hours, alone, in the woods, all night, looking for such an important, elusive flower...
fun fact: the embroidery pattern is riffed from the traditional handicrafts of a region spread between poland, ukraine, and belarus! most slav per stitch!
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hugepenishaver · 2 years ago
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my grandma is so fucking cute bro, she sends me letters from belarus with little newspaper cutouts and talks about the snow and the blooming flowers :’)
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wwwrozaby · 7 months ago
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telefloraby · 2 years ago
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Looking for a classic and elegant floral combination and flowers delivery to Belarus? Look no further than a stunning bouquet of pink roses and white alstroemeria! These two beautiful blooms perfectly complement each other, creating a timeless and sophisticated arrangement. The soft pink hues of the roses are perfectly balanced by the pure white petals of the alstroemeria. Whether you're sending this bouquet as a gift or simply treating yourself, it's sure to make a statement. So why not add some beauty to your day with a stunning bouquet of pink roses and white alstroemeria? It's the perfect way to add some classic charm and romance to any space.🌸❤️
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autumnhues · 3 years ago
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I love your art of Russia!
Just curious - how do you depict Russia's relationship to be with others? Like Ukraine, Belarus, the Baltics, America, China
Thank you so much!
Honestly it depends on how I’m feeling a particular day but for the most part, I picture….
Ivan’s relationship with Ukraine is mostly a friendly distance, as they do care for each other but don’t want to stay too close in case something happens between their countries
Belarus is still very intent on being around Ivan (erasing that incest subplot bc it’s dumb, she just really wants to chill with him) but she often gets caught up before she can visit, so they are somewhat distanced as well, not by choice though
Ivan’s relationship with the baltics is�� complicated to say the least. Modern day he leaves them alone completely and will send them flowers on occasion. In particular, Ivan has the most history with Tolys and met him in his young age. They were good friends before everything went downhill post Mongol rule.
I’m a sucker for RusAme but in a non romantic context, he and Alfred are somewhat close. Alfred tends to come to Ivan for advice when it comes to personal matters (not nation matters because. Woof) and they get along fairly well despite the odd argument every so often.
Finally, China and him are decently close, at least as close as they can be when they’re both usually busy. China actually befriended Ivan early on and when Ivan grew up… he hadn’t seen Ivan in a couple hundred years, so seeing Ivan all grown up gave him feelings he tends to try and ignore most of the time (bc I also love rochu LOL).
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top-cas-bottom-dean · 2 years ago
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The Flower of Belarus
Throughout the course of recent many years, Eastern Europe has opened out a considerable sum, prompting the remainder of the world getting to see significantly find out more here more of the entrancing contrasts between the previous Soviet nations - and Belarus is one of the more intriguing among these.
Because of this turn of events, nations like Belarus with its capital, Minsk, among the primary recipients have become traveler destinations and potential business locations as well.
Assuming you are going to Belarus on business, or know someone who is, then you might be keen on one of the many organizations that presently permit you to send flowers to Belarus - making for an ideal shock gift for your loved one on their appearance.
Additionally to this, there is presently a more open world because of the development in web programs that permit you to converse with people in other nations. Finding love over the web is a seriously typical thing to do nowadays, and it prompts a ton of long-distance relationships.
Belarus flower delivery programs permit you to track down the best bouquet to send to a possible lover in the country whose name deciphers as "White Russia". The chance to send flowers to this nation is an astonishing new turn of events.
Voyaging might be fun, however there is generally a feeling of separation from those to whom you are close, so the chance to remind them you are still there nevertheless care is important. In the event that your loved one receives a bunch of flowers Belarus can feel significantly less remote.
On the off chance that you are searching for the correct method for sending a bouquet to a loved one in Belarus then there are various options, and the web has made it significantly more straightforward to do.
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spoonoftar · 3 years ago
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Day 6 of the Russia attack on Ukraine.
I decided to describe only curious and less known thing which you probably won’t hear in far West media.
- in russian’s cities anti-war protests are still going. There’s mass arresting on streets including some WW2 veterans (symbolical, isn’t it?)
- Protests are also all around Belarus - they are even more brutally pacifying then in Russia IMO.
- More about Belarus - Lukashenka hold a referendum for changing a constitution. Changes allow him to avoid consequences of his actions and allow to place nuklear missles into belarussian soil. According to “official” (governmental) results the advocacy for changes is above 60% - everyone knows the results are traditionally rigged.
- According to gossips the gremlin from cremlin put himself in a bunker in Ural, he’s chronically ill and all nightmar of the war is because he wanted be described in historic books as the Unificator of All-Russia 🤦‍♀️ Also he’s got few double for public meeting and he is paranoiac scared of poisoning - so far he forces chefs to taste his meals.
- In the first phase, Putin send young conscripts which didn’t know they are invading. Kids in their 18-20yo tricked or forced to do it. Some of them believed in the propaganda- they thought they’ll going fight nazi and will be welcome with flowers. Well, all good Soviet tradition of calling every opponent a nazi is still strong in Russia. Remember all world is nazi and are waiting to be deliver into russian occupation freedom. I’m serious - it’s official doctrine.
- Conscripts have zero morale - many of them desert or surrender leaving fresh equipment. But same also: robed groceries for food and moneys, robed an ATM, run of petrol and ask Ukrainian for it, get beaten and captured by a group of hooligans, get beaten and captured by some LGBT+ group, had a tank stollen by Roma family, had a tank stollen by a farmer, run the tank cross a wooden bridge and sunk it - to name few.
- The group Anonymous are making huge things in the war! Comedian gold! Check them out.
- During first peace negotiation the bombing of Ukraine continue. Also Lukashenka says there was no attack from Belarus, an hour later there was an shelling from it. 🤦‍♀️
- Today Lukashenko organized meeting of government ON AIR where he presented the map of Ukraine with all arrows and planned partition of Ukraine and even show places where are rackets’ silos. ON AIR. Lukashenka is Mussolini for Hitler Putin. Anyway Belarusian army entered Ukraine today.
- And now I’m must come back to sad things - russian army keep shelling hospitals. They bombed eg. Children Hospital in Kiev. Kharkov is under heavy fire as well as Mariupol and few other bigger cities. Also the russians starts using forbidden thermobaric missles - also for civilian facilities.
- Even on occupied territories civilians are protesting, tries to peacefully block roads, roast talk to soldiers. The citizens of port city Berdyansk hummed and told out conscripts so they left the city! Unlucky for short.
- Now there is offensive on Ukrainian cities - according to first news the time of conscripts ended and regular army started to operate. We will see the results in the morning of European Time.
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female-malice · 3 years ago
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Jane Lytvynenko in New York
Sat 5 Mar 2022 01.00 EST
There is more than one struggle. There is the war of bombs, the war that’s taking lives. And then there’s the battle over what can be done.
It’s Saturday 26 February, less than 72 hours after Russia invaded Ukraine, and I’m standing in New York City’s Times Square. Like other squares, boulevards, and city streets, it has been taken over by blue and gold. One by one, Ukrainians, Kazakhs, Belarusians, and even Russians step up to the megaphone to explain why they are here.
“I encourage you to support the armed forces informationally and financially,” one of the speakers tells the crowd. “Share the right information to the right people at the right time. This is as much as we can do and I think that’s even more powerful coming from here.”
“We are hashtagging Stand With Ukraine, but what are we doing?” pleads a woman in a flower crown, surrounded by children. “Action, action is what matters. Call your elected leaders. Demand more support for Ukraine.”
We are 5,000 miles away from our land. As mortar shells and cruise missiles bombard our home, we are safe. As over a million refugees flee into the rest of Europe, we are safe. Safe, but not silent. We know that words and actions are our weapons. In the face of the Russian president questioning whether Ukrainians as a people exist, the best answer is a resounding, global echo: we exist.
The crowd, a couple hundred people, clutch their phones as they chant “glory to Ukraine” and sing the national anthem. On my own phone, a constant stream of Telegram notifications: “‼УВАГА! У Києві оголошена повітряна тривога!” – “ATTENTION! Air raid sirens in Kyiv!”
I take a video to send to my family. The first message is to loved ones under siege in the capital. “The world is with you,” I tell them. Next I text a family member in Canada. He responds with a video, too. “Fights near the house where you grew up,” he writes. “Right now.”
I grew up in Kyiv, at a time when the newly independent Ukraine was restructuring itself and life was difficult. I moved to Canada at 11, but I was never fully untethered. Until the pandemic, I made a trip back every year, sometimes spending entire summers there. I grew up to become a journalist, and for the last five years or so, I’ve been reporting on what’s real on the internet and what isn’t. It’s personal now.
Citizen diplomacy for Ukraine’s freedom is moving mountains. As Putin’s blitzkriegs bomb military and civilian targets alike, Ukrainians and their allies have zeroed in on a list of demands for politicians that boil down to this: isolate Russia, shield Ukraine.
These demands are listed in hashtag campaigns, in tweets and TikToks, on Stories, in Facebook groups. They’re shouted in the streets and formally requested in letters. They’re discussed in group chats. Economic sanctions that were previously unimaginable are now politically necessary. Since Russia’s recognition of occupied Ukrainian territories as so-called independent republics on 22 February, 977 sanctions have been imposed. And counting. Countries including Germany and Switzerland are breaking with long political traditions to stand with Ukraine. Their citizens continue demanding even more.
As do the citizens of other countries Putin trampled over.
“Our country is sending troops to fight with Russia against Ukraine, and I don’t support that either,” says a young woman who declines to give her name because her parents are in Belarus. Since brutally quelling the 2020 protests around the presidential election, the Belarusian president, Alexander Lukashenko, has moved even closer to Vladimir Putin. The two countries have continuously held joint military exercises ever since. Belarus is now Putin’s launchpad.
Downtown at the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village, [LGBT] Ukranian activists are holding a rally of their own.
“I’m from Kazakhstan, and Kazakhstan is fighting a very similar fight right now,” says Dina, another young woman who declines to give her full name. Like me, she rushed here from Times Square. In January, Putin sent 2,500 troops to Kazakhstan, where they shot live rounds at protesters. “Putin is dangerous,” Dina says. “The more we talk about it, the better.”
Through his inhumane actions, Putin has built a coalition of very angry people. At the Stonewall Inn – site of a riot that launched the gay liberation movement in the US – [LGBT] activists recall the torture and killings in Chechnya’s “gay purge”, climate activists call out Russia’s oil industry, Americans speak of democracy, Jews scoff at Putin’s rhetoric about “denazification”.
Each of them is a node, mobilizing their networks online and off, branching out into more angry people making more demands.
Things are moving fast; the communication is interconnected.
I see a woman holding a QR code for a sign and scan it, perhaps unwisely, with my continuously buzzing phone. The page loads and I’m looking at a resource document I know well. It was put together by a person in Kharkiv, a city now brutally bombed. On the first day of the invasion, on a Twitter Spaces channel populated by thousands, someone had said, “We need to organize donation resources in one place.” Someone else had said, “An English translation would be nice.” A couple DMs later I was helping write a brief introduction for the very list that the woman at the Stonewall protest is promoting with her QR code.
I snap a photo and send it to the original activist in Kharkiv, a city under brutal bombardment. “Nice,” they respond. A transatlantic flow of information. I try to speak to the woman with the sign but the protest organizer comes around and she puts him in front of my recorder instead.
The organizer is Bogdan Globa, founder of LGBTQ Ukrainians in America. His mom is in Kyiv, he says after a deep breath. I tell him I have family in Kyiv, too.
Ukraine’s [LGBT] people face even more danger from Russia than [straight] Ukrainians because of Putin’s draconian anti-gay laws, he says. The rally is a way to show them that they have support even thousands of miles away.
“The first day was a shock. But now I see the power of the people rises, more and more people are involved.” He talks about his mom with a shaking voice. “Today is the first day I put myself together. I did not expect I would be so broken. Yesterday the last message from my mom was, ‘Russian tanks are there.’ And then she disappeared for 10 hours. And I didn’t know what to think.”
They’ve re-established contact, he tells me. She’s OK.
In the face of Russian disinformation and attacks, telling our stories, the stories of our families and our people, telling them honestly and clearly, has become one of our best weapons.
Putin wanted this war to be held in muddied waters. Before the full-scale invasion, his delusional speech tried to rewrite Ukrainian history. It’s easy to see how this could have been a tempting narrative for the world to indulge in. The world, after all, stood by when Crimea was annexed, and when the Ukrainian east was occupied. Perhaps they saw it through the lens of “regional complexities”. But no amount of “denazification” narratives or false claims of “genocide” against Russians could stand up to the truth: he is bombing innocent people.
In the basement of a church in Manhattan, volunteers for Razom have come straight from a protest to an organizing meeting. It’s mostly women in sight as they talk to volunteers and offer Ukrainian food to visitors. Razom – translated as “together” – is a product of the 2014 revolution. They’ve helped veterans, trained doctors, and organized cultural exchanges. Now, Razom has been elevated to global fame as good people seek out places to support. Already they’ve raised nearly $1m for humanitarian aid. And they know exactly what needs to be done.
The leaders present a PowerPoint about the expected phases of the war, including the increasingly desperate refugee crisis. They talk through logistics, humanitarian aid corridors, and letter-writing campaigns.
“This is going to be a marathon, not a sprint,” says Mariya Soroka, one of the organizers. But first, the room watches the Ukrainian choir perform the cold open for Saturday Night Live. Like many others, I try not to cry.
“To say that the past five days have changed my life is to say nothing,” Soroka says. Everyone in the room nods. I nod with them. The scale of the loss is settling in. All of us, all of us are losing something. Instead of how are yous, people here greet each other with facts. Here’s who I have in Ukraine. Here’s what city they are in. Here are the losses of the latest blitzkrieg against my city.
Among the volunteers is Luke Tomycz, Soroka’s husband and a neurosurgeon who has been training doctors in Ukraine for the last five years through a project called Co-Pilot. He tells me that a Syrian doctor reached out to him to say, “We feel a kinship to Ukrainians because we feel like we have experienced what they’re going through.” Russia has bombed hospitals in Syria, worsening the refugee crisis then as it is now. Doctors in the Ukrainian Medical Association of North America are helping with advocacy and medical logistics, including the urgent delivery of specialized medications that need refrigeration.
The volunteers split into working groups, and Razom broadcasts it on Instagram live. Their list of resources has gone viral, like so many other lists of resources. In all directions, at every opportunity, citizen diplomacy presses politicians to act, forces people on to the streets, urges them to give money and attention.
I stop Maryna Prykhodko mid-Instagram post. She’s in charge of communication around here and she tells me the next target. Sanctions have been implemented. Russia has been cut off from the Swift banking system. Now, Razom wants protection for the Ukrainian sky. Putin’s action and his nuclear threats “should outrage the entire world”, she says.
“You cannot stop asking politicians for more support for Ukraine and more sanctions against Russia,” she says. “This is like our mantra. We have to say it out loud.”
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residentraccoon · 3 years ago
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✨ esc 2012 top ✨
for some reason I'm nostalgic for this year even though I haven't watched it back then lmao
Love them!!
1. Sweden - a classic and iirc the first esc song I've ever heard but never knew it was from esc
2. North Macedonia - outstanding, she really killed it that year ngl
3. Romania - the good old days when our representatives were always on the radio and romanian ppl supported them <3 good times
4. Serbia - just beautiful, king of balkan ballads
5. Italy - could have used more italian but aaaa love this jazzy sound
6. Bulgaria - multilanguage party song my beloved how tf didn't this qualify
7. Cyprus - so fkn catchy i la la love this
8. Iceland - greta salome being underrated at esc part 1
9. France - oh shit so many tempo changes
10. Azerbaijan - the og pretty colored long dress
11. Moldova - if title in romanian then why not romanian lyrics :( great fun song nonetheless
12. Estonia - gosh he has such a beautiful voice..
13. Spain - ohhh yesss power ballad with power vocals bring it girlll
14. Russia - old women baking bread...
15. Finland - never expected finland to send a swedish song, this is wonderful
16. Lithuania - I pretend I do not see
Like them!!
17. Ireland - jedward being jedward as usual
18. Greece - a bop!!
19. Turkey - no i won't love you back
20. Norway - hey eric saade I'll copy ur homework but nobody will notice
21. Denmark - this was so cute and emotional
22. Germany - what a sweetheart tbh
23. Hungary - ngl I lowkey dig this, it's catchy
24. San Marino - omg oKAY my guilty pleasure of this year like?? it sounds like 2005 not 2012 and that's funny as fuck
25. Ukraine - her voice doesn't match her looks, and btw flower crown !!
26. Slovenia - sounds so magical
27. Croatia - poor croatia never gets recognition :(
28. Albania - a bit too grating on my ears sorry but the story behind this is heartbreaking.. 💔
29. Bosnia Hertzegovina - it's a sweet ballad but doesn't get to the level of past bosnian entries sadly
30. Malta - a little bit too repetitive but nice vibes overall
31. Switzerland - took me 2 years to realize he was singing in english lmao
32. Belarus - we are the heroes of our time- oh wait wrong song
33. Israel - love their wacky stage presence, the song is pretty catchy too
34. Portugal - good, but i kinda ran out of stuff to say abt these kinda regular ballads
They're good
35. Georgia - this is so trashy lmao
36. Slovakia - it's solid but just a lil forgettable
37. Netherlands - they really did have a dark period of time back in the early 2010s
38. Latvia - underwhelming at best
39. Montenegro - ik it's a joke entry but really not my taste
40. UK - just a cheesy 70s ballad
Not my thing
41. Austria - too noisy and obnoxious for me i'm sorry
42. Belgium - okay looks like i fell asleep
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aroma-of-love · 2 years ago
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Seeking for delivery of flowers to Belarus? Nothing quite brightens up a room like a gorgeous bouquet of pink flowers! The soft hue of these blooms brings a sense of calm and relaxation to any space. Whether it's a gift for a loved one or simply a treat for yourself, a bouquet of pink flowers is the perfect way to add some beauty to your day. So go ahead, indulge in some floral therapy and let the sweet scent and vibrant colors of these blossoms lift your spirits! 🌸💕
We provide you with fresh flowers, professional florists and fast delivery of flowers to Minsk. Send flowers with shop.solard.com.
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thetreeturnedoff · 4 years ago
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alright! hyperfocus was on my side tonight so i compiled a list of all the caretakers from @hetalia-caretakers for them since people were asking for a list and one hadn’t been made yet (also side note y’all should totally go check out that blog, it’s amazing). i’m planning on updating this list as more people are added, too, and if anyone spots any mistakes here please let me know so i can fix them!
first, here’s the list of the caretakers with names and pronouns:
america - jerry (he/him), madeline/maddie (she/her)
china - zhang huijiong (they/them)
cuba - maria elena (that’s just a first name) (she/her)
england - bruce (he/him), alicia (she/her)
finland - adelaide (she/her)
france - michel (they/them)
germany & prussia - edith (she/her)
iceland - gabriel (he/him)
japan - naomi (she/her), hotaru (she/her)
latvia - agnese (she/her), twins aivars (he/him) and anita (she/her)
liechtenstein - ana (she/her)
n. italy - dante (he/him)
norway - eleanor (she/her)
romania - alina (she/her)
russia - maeve/maeves (she/her), irene (she/her)
sealand - harold (he/him)
s. italy - juno (she/her)
s. korea - jin ae (she/her)
spain - santiago (he/him)
switzerland - leila (she/her)
next, countries with unnamed caretakers:
all the micronations - (he/him)
belarus
denmark
greece - (she/her)
greece & turkey - (they/them)
sweden - (he/him)
ukraine
and for fun, some honorable mentions:
alina’s dog - anghel (she/her)
bruce’s mom who sends bruce off with cookies to give to england
jin’s cat - gilmack (he/him)
jerry’s cat - sugar (she/her)
below this i’m also putting the appearance and personality descriptions that we have because i’ve seen people talk about that before. i’m really just taking quotes and sometimes rephrasing them to make more sense here, but i’m also providing a link to the post it’s coming from so you can see the original context. because this is coming from multiple anon messages, it’s entirely possible that i’ve gotten things wrong, so if anyone (especially the creators) find anything i did get wrong i’d appreciate being corrected.
first, appearances:
adelaide (finland)
taller than finland, standing at around 5′8; hair is shoulder length and curly, and brown with blonde highlights; eyes are hazel [x]
eleanor (norway)
much shorter than norway [x]
5′9; dirty blonde hair and brown eyes [x]
gabriel (iceland)
around the same height as iceland, give or take an inch or two [x]
roughly 5′4; brunette hair and hazel eyes [x]
gilmack (jin)
fattest boy [x]
harold (sealand)
a “middle aged dude” [x]
redheaded with a relatively short style; average height, around 5′9; brown eyes; wears glasses even with decent vision to prevent his vision from deteriorating; a bit thin and lanky, but with a little muscle; visible signs of not sleeping [x]
jerry (america)
5′7.5, or roughly 172cm [x]
argentinian, but born and raised in new york; has brown eyes, black hair, and tan skin; wears glasses and has a “typical cute, tired nerd look”; very skinny and pretty underweight, but he’s just naturally like that, it has nothing to do with him not eating [x] [x]
jin ae (south korea)
short and brunette [x]
maddie (america)
young and 5′ [x]
filipino [x]
maeve (russia)
“has a death glare that makes flowers wilt” [x]
somewhere around 4′11 [x]
sugar (jerry)
grey with green eyes [x]
drawings of caretakers:
jerry
maeve, michel, jeremy, naomi, irene, and maddie
jerry and maddie (and alfred)
michel
maeve and irene
maeve and maddie
and now personalities (and some other facts):
adelaide (finland)
probably scared of finland because he sleepwalks with a gun or something [x]
"helps Finny with his Santa job every year and loves it" [x]
agnese (latvia)
started out sweet and outgoing, and now she and latvia are drinking buddies; keeps trying to keep up with drinking with latvia, despite him being immortal [x]
alina (romania)
"absolutely the snarkiest person you will ever meet"; "will absolutely bully romania into behaving, too varying degrees of effectiveness" [x]
ana (liechtenstein)
"[liechtenstein's] easy to lose due to both of them being easily distracted, so Ana's life is a constant game of hide and seek" [x]
anghel (alina)
"[alina's] main method of tracking romania" [x]
belarus’ unnamed caretaker
"flips between "oh you're angry don't worry I'll leave you alone for a bit" & "drop the knife belarus, don't play that shit with me"" [x]
denmark’s unnamed caretaker
“just as chaotic as Denmark himself” [x]
edith (germany and prussia)
super lax, and lets germany and prussia do whatever; gets into frequent trouble for not doing her job [x]
while supposedly watching prussia, she plays on her phone the whole time, loses track of him, or “helps him with whatever crime he’s trying to commit”; is definitely addicted to candy crush [x]
eleanor (norway)
"carry a spray bottle of water for when [norway] gets sassy with her"; "essentially “screw the rules you’re gonna do it no matter what I say”" [x]
gabriel (iceland)
he and eleanor are enemies because she feels like he’s too strict with iceland; he refuses to relax the rules he has for iceland [x]
"has threatened to quit because of how whiny Ice gets" [x]
has a long list of rules from both iceland’s government and norway that he enforces with iceland [x]
gilmack (jin)
laziest boy; “lives up to his name [name means roadblock]”; “will always be in front of your feet, or in the way, or be a bed hog” [x]
hotaru (japan)
actually enjoys her job, for the most part; “internally screams” around other nations because she only knows how to handle japan [x]
irene (russia)
“just rather confused” [x]
jerry (america)
probably has ptsd [x] [x]
has hit a point where he just kinda goes along with everything [x]
is aroace; is good at playing classical piano; "anxiety is through the roof, as are his caffeine levels"; "most unlucky guy in the world" [x]
gets random instances of super strength on occasion [x]
jin ae (south korea)
headstrong; “will thwap South Korea with a newspaper if he acts out“ [x]
leila (switzerland)
"sort of a pushover, but can be an amazing older sister figure when [switzerland] needs one" [x]
“not the interrupting type” [x]
maddie (america)
"made [america] back down with a single glance" [x]
is probably a black belt [x]
maeve (russia)
russia is the one scared of her; she doesn’t take russia’s shit [x]
“terrifying” [x]
“would just generally do questionable things, such as eating red red meat at 3 am with all the lights off”; actually volunteered for the job [x]
“small feral woman [who] can and will climb onto everything to get what she needs” [x]
maria elena (cuba)
"super chill, but super strong"; "Whenever Cuba and America get into a fight, she's usually the one to hold back America"; "She's a combo of the mom friend and the wine aunt" [x]
naomi (japan)
seems lazy or like she doesn’t care but actually just constantly gets lost; is always losing track of japan or getting turned around or distracted; probably pretty anxious too [x]
santiago (spain)
“stressed 24/7″; can’t really be upset with spain though [x]
really relaxed with spain as long as he’s alone, but things can get out of hand when he’s with portugal [x]
sugar (jerry)
mean to everyone but jerry; anything but sweet; also basically jerry’s emotional support animal [x]
sweden’s unnamed caretaker
can find sweden in ikea when sweden’s in there [x]
ukraine’s unnamed caretaker
just as emotional as ukraine is [x]
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mysticalmusicwhispers · 4 years ago
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APH Switzerland Headcanons
🇨🇭HAPPY BIRTHDAY BASCH ZWINGLI!🇨🇭
🇨🇭He softens up considerably when he’s taking care of his goats. Obviously he doesn’t do “baby talk” to them (ex. “Oh you’re suuuch a good boy, aren’t you, aren’t you” in that voice) but he does talk to them like they’re real people with (often very stubborn) personalities. He loves them dearly, even if it’s not entirely obvious.
🇨🇭Grammatically correct texts, which ends up making his texts super long because everything is a complete sentence. However, he really only texts Liechtenstein, so the time he wastes typing things out isn’t a big deal.
🇨🇭Sometimes he worries that he’s too grumpy, but then he’ll try to interact with literally anyone and he’s like “nah, I’m good”
🇨🇭He often relishes being able to do manual work. Yes, he’s a banking country, and he’s quite adept with numbers and accounting (although he tries not to reveal that to people), but he likes the feeling of doing physical stuff. This is partially why he likes taking care of his goats; he is using his body and he is using his hands to move hay, to shovel waste, to do physical labor, and he finds something satisfying in that.
🇨🇭He’s quite strong as well and rather sturdily built. Don’t underestimate him in a fight just because he’s short; he will beat you up.
🇨🇭He sends texts to Liechtenstein and his s/o if he had one, typed letters (which he thinks are a more sentimental form of communication next to texting) and emails to nation personifications he contacts regularly and has a casual friend relationship with, and stiff, professional sounding emails to everybody else so they don’t have an excuse for why they didn’t answer him back (for business partners, his tone is considerably friendlier).
🇨🇭He’s very smart; well read, good at math (fast and accurate in his calculations), knows way more languages than he should, and is sort of a jack-of-all-trades handyman. Give him a machine and he’ll be able to figure out how it works, as long as it’s not a lawnmower.
🇨🇭Re: above, he gets the hang of things quickly but most of his skills are due to his hard work at mastering them and not because he’s innately clever or a genius or something; he just tends to apply himself to a task so thoroughly he’s beyond proficient in a short time.
🇨🇭He admires a lot of things about Liechtenstein because she is all the things he is not: she is bright and sunny, cheerful, easygoing, and never hides what she’s truly feeling or thinking. Even though he thinks she trusts too easily sometimes and worries about her faults a lot, he likes that she’s a different person than him; he knows that his personality is rather off putting and prickly and likes that she’s not taking after him too much.
🇨🇭He’s content with his personality. He knows that he’s prickly, stubborn, temperamental, and gives out insults more than compliments, but he doesn’t feel trapped by his facade; he doesn’t need to let everybody know what is underneath (aka his soft side) and he’s ok with that. Having just a few people know everything about him is fine for Switzerland.
🇨🇭He gets along with the female nations better than the guys; the first reason for this is because Liechtenstein is friends with most of them and he knows them better through her. The second reason is because he thinks all the guys are airheaded and at least the girls have some level of common sense in each of them. Some of them (Belarus, Czechia) are also way more serious than the male nations he’s had to interact with, and he likes that.
🇨🇭He dresses rather plainly, but flashy clothes don’t suit him very much anyways. Sweaters, turtlenecks, and trench coats in natural colors (blue, dark green, white, varying shades of brown and tan); black pants or blue jeans and dress shoes or worn out sneakers.
🇨🇭He takes very stunning landscape photographs; sometimes he gives them to the tourist department in his government to put on their official website.
🇨🇭He’s very good at making pressed flowers for Liechtenstein, who collects them in a scrapbook. Also, clever with his hands; he would be really good at origami if he ever wants to try, and knows a lot of ways to tie ribbons into fancy bows (which comes in handy at Christmas).
HAPPY BIRTHDAY SWITZERLAND!
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wwwrozaby · 11 months ago
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Flower delivery Minsk and Belarus - florashop.by
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telefloraby · 2 years ago
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sole-cuore-amore-e-droga · 5 years ago
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How do I feel about Eurovision 2020 songs, shortly summarized.
Albania: every telenovela wants this as its soundtrack now
Armenia: ritch bitch raps intimidatingly about how she wants to "chainsaw you", adds a lot of hi-hats
Australia: clown ballerina being hurdled around by anxiety
Austria: when everyone forgets you, bring on a banger. trust me, it works
Azerbaijan: San Marino did it better
Belarus: that's just a nickelback store "Like It"
Belgium: that one song you hear in the movie during a grim scene that you forget the name of
Bulgaria: the one song Billie Eilish wished she wrote
Croatia: so generic it's hard to remember
Cyprus: it's titled "Running" to influence gym people to run on treadmills faster
Czech Republic: where begone the trumpets?! :(
Denmark: the summer love song written by the campfire
Estonia: the unexplored angle of being a boyband solo reject
Finland: if it was a color it'd be faint seagreen... because it's too okay to have any meaning
France: how many keychanges until I lose my will to live?
Georgia: how do I want you to make khinkali like a Georgian
Germany: wanting some of those Luca Hänni royalties
Greece: the quality of this song is like that cat stuck in the tree, but no one cared to save it
Iceland: SWEATERS! DISCO! CUTE SONG ABOUT CHILD!
Ireland: Avril Lavigne meets P!nk meets Disney Channel
Israel: when Amharic is not just for satanic Twitter memes
Italy: once in a while it's excused they didn't choose anything other than some male heartstrings-tugging ballad
Latvia: that dubstep drop you forgot to delete from your computer in 2010
Lithuania: middle aged man contemplates being middle aged, dances, dances some more
Malta: when X Factor runs out of inspirational background music
Moldova: genetically modified Sergey Lazarev's Eurovision entries
The Netherlands: you don't know how good is it until it kicks off that one last chorus
North Macedonia: walk into the club like wait nevermind can I go home
Norway: what's a Eurovision without a female powerballad... wait nevermind, she doesn't scream, jury can't vote this
Poland: sorry but Billie Eilish did record a Bond theme while being 17, and she didn't even need to sound very Bond-sy either
Portugal: a garden full of love, flowers, and occasional pixie dust
Romania: Bulgaria's confused sister
Russia: "Mom I want a latino club banger!" "We have latino club banger at home *chugs vodka*"
San Marino: if Ralph Siegel was asked to re-write "What's the Pressure"
Serbia: what if I told you that Sanja Vučić is the Terminator
Slovenia: here's a way to make Iceland 2017 more boring and time-wasting
Spain: when you're asking for forgiveness from that one bae that doesn't even care about you
Sweden: and you said they'll never send women!
Switzerland: the ultimate sadboi
Ukraine: takes the baton from Tulia for to continue the tradition of starting cults from folklore culture
United Kingdom: when everyone only comes for Wim Hof but doesn't vote the UK anyway because he's not allowed on stage
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