Aesthetic

fierceawakening:

kai-ni:

drferox:

The computer said my next patient’s name was Lucifer, and that he was a domestic. Not that an unusual name for a pet, I have to admit.

“Come on in. Do you have Lucifer hiding in that box for me?” I say. A gentleman dressed all in black with a rather spiky aesthetic and a selection of piercings comes into my consult room and opens the box.

He places a perfectly black rabbit on the table.

Honestly, I had been expecting a cat.

Turns out Lucifer is his new rabbit. He’d insisted on taking it from a friend who wasn’t taking care of it a few months ago.

Lucifer, for his part, had decided the table was too scary and that his dad’s leather clad armpit was the best place to be.

To my surprise and delight, our new goth rabbit owner is doing everything right. Perfect diet, read up on rabbit health, vaccinating, enrichment, the works.

He even started a vegetable garden to grow treats for the rabbit, or as he put it, “tributes for lucifer.”

I….. I love this …..

I still love this post. Are there any updates on how Lucifer is doing?

uncannykate:

madamehearthwitch:

madamehearthwitch:

fitter4me:

Black smoothie bowl?? 😱😱 made with frozen bananas and activated charcoal!

FYI – charcoal absorbs stuff (toxins) in your stomach, which sounds like a great idea unless of course you happen to be on any meds. 

In particular it will fuck your antidepressants and birth control right up.

Ofttimes it’s used to induce vomiting. If you’re super duper lucky, it’ll cause a blockage in your intestines.

It’s used MEDICINALLY to treat poisonings. Not to make something ~aesthetic~

Try food coloring instead y’all.

Reblogging this for the day crowd because I’ve been seeing a LOT of posts about using activated charcoal in recipes and just… like don’t. Pls. Don’t.

Also, kudos for the very rare correct use of the word toxins on a food health post.

At the very least, it’s important not to eat it within a few hours of taking any medications unless you want them neutralized in your digestive system. That’s kinda what it does. Once the medication has a chance to get absorbed, it shouldn’t be a problem.

Edible charcoals should be fine in moderate quantities to color food, as long as you do take that into account. It can also absorb nutrients in the food, so you probably don’t want to use it regularly.