Don’t ask me to wimper when you fuck me…I maybe your fucktoy but not your Japanese porno fantasy.
when you just take them. Their body is yours. Their holes for you to use at your will. And they love it so much, that it makes you even harder. A vicious, wonderful circle
Sad update everyone, Tama recently passed away… An estimated 3,000 people, including railway officials, attended Tama the cat’s funeral on Sunday, days after she died of heart failure aged 16. [x]
For those who haven’t read articles about it, the local shrine elevated her to a god. She’s now the Eternal Stationmaster and patron god of the station.
Beautiful.
Now I’m crying thanks
and a new cat was hired right?
yep! her name is Nitama (essentially ”second tama” or “tama II”) and she served under Tama as an apprentice before being appointed her deputy
she works very hard
Everytime this crosses my dash, I reblog. It is the law.
b) this animal is so stressed out and I would not be surprised if it actually bit the hand.
Opening its mouth = very pissed off crocodilian
Closing its eyes = very stressed crocodilian
@starr-berry I can help with that! I actually work with a juvenile Nile Crocodile and am very in-tune with how she reacts & what to look for with stress. While alligators and crocodiles are not the same, they share many similarities when showing stress (and with a lot of other species of reptiles!)
for proving claims:
You can tell its an alligator by looking at the skull and head shape. Crocodiles tend to have a “v” shaped skull, alligators have a “u” shaped skull.
(alligator on the left, crocodile on the right)
As for knowing the signs of stress:
Opening the mouth is something that I’ve encountered with several animals. My Crocodylus niloticus does it when she’s stressed. Here’s an example of her doing it during measuring time:
Reptiles close their eyes for several reasons, but this reason specifically is definitely stress related. They close their eyes to block of visual stimuli, though there are no official papers or articles done on this because there is a lack of formal research regarding reptiles. I don’t really know how to prove it other than hand-on experience & watching out for other signs of negative body language, though.
I’m mostly worried about the image that those gifs are spreading to others–that an alligator is a cute animal (”dog”, some people say un-ironically) that enjoys pets, when it definitely is not.