Who Grooves On
A Warning: this blog contains posts featuring NSFW / NC-17 material, proceed with caution.


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Last year around this time I wrote Benedict a letter stating I was going through a stressful time in my life, and wanted to let him know how much his work has meant to me. I wrote that his work was a wonderful distraction, and stress reliever during those difficult times and he wrote me a lovely…
OMG, The first photo Benedict signed says “Had to fight my mum, not to keep this photo!”
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Catlock, part 2
art by:
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The Adorable Biology of Snoring Hummingbirds
I think we’ve all felt like this on a Monday, right? This little hummingbird has just reserved a spot in my list of Top 10 Cutest Things I’ve Ever Seen, thanks to its snoozy little snore.
Of course, hummingbirds don’t really snore, do they? Maybe … sort of … but not for the same reasons we do. When humans (or my dogs) snore, it’s usually an obstruction l vibrating the back of the throat when we try to breathe in. Not that I ever snore or anything. So, this adorable little hummingbird is definitely sawing some logs, but the reason why is way cooler than the reasons we do.
Hummingbirds have incredibly high metabolic needs. To do all that buzzing around and to keep their tiny bodies warm, they eat the human equivalent of a refrigerator full of food every day, mostly in the form of high-energy nectar and fatty bugs. Because of their small size, they also lose a lot of body heat to the air. In order to preserve energy on cool nights, they have the ability to enter a daily, miniature hibernation called torpor.
Normally, if our bodies get cold, our muscles twitch (shivering) and we crank up our metabolism to create heat. That way we stay at our “set point” of 98.6˚F. In torpor, hummingbirds actually lower their bodies’ “set point”, powering down their brains and metabolism so far that their breathing is undetectable! This way, they aren’t burning calories on cold nights when they aren’t able to eat and recharge.
Just before morning, their natural circadian rhythms kick in and they start to thaw out, like heating a car engine on a cold day. What we see in the video is probably a bird coming out of torpor (which is what the scientists in the video were studying), starting to breathe in more oxygen to raise its body temperature, and making that adorable snoring noise.
Hummingbirds can do this on a daily basis if they get cold, regularly powering down on frozen tree branches around the world. Allegedly, you can even put them in the freezer for a while, but who would do such a thing?!
If only all science was this cute!
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bwahaha!
it’s his expression in that second picture that just makes it hilarious
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John Finnemore as Arthur, miming ‘dragon fruit’.
Yay someone caught what that looked like
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oh
god
he didn’t even care enough to FINISH CLEANING THE TARDIS
that’s exactly what I thought when I was watching it, he really let poor sexy go, looking pretty beat up.
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Can I just mention how much younger he looked in that moment in the episode?
That doesn’t mean I can’t appreciate it.
There are so many Christmas pictures in my head, WHEN AM I SUPPOSED TO DRAW THEM ALL?
(via jujuproblems)

tHIS IS LITERALLY THE CUTEST THING I’VE EVER SEEN OMG
awww its so damn cute! combine two great things, Spirited Away and knitting :D
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omg the way his japan fans call him “benedict-san”
i’m sOBBING OVER THE CUTE
I never thought about the honorifics, that is terribly adorable now!

Sherlock told the story of the last six months as if it were a fairy tale, embellishing and hyperbolising as he saw fit. John let himself relax into the sound of Sherlock’s voice, against his body and the hum inside his chest as he spoke. If he could have chosen a way to go, this felt as close to perfect as he ever could have imagined. He remembered doing the same for Mary, laying with her in the hospice bed and murmuring sweet nonsense into her ear until she slipped away, holding her until she grew cold and the other doctors came to take her body from him. He looked up into Sherlock’s face, the deep lines around his eyes crinkling fondly as he returned the gaze.
“You love me,” John said.
- A Beginner’s Guide to Apiology by VictoryCandescence
OMG. This is adorable! Ahh!
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