#wonder woman

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WW — Wonder Woman.

Pairing: Diana Prince x Reader

Characters: Diana Prince

Warnings: N/A

Request: Anon- Diana Prince with the word/prompt “outsider”

Word Count: 497

Author: Charlotte

When you were a teenager, you had been in an accident that resulted in you gaining superpowers. It wasn’t something you ever thought possible to happen to you, very few people in the world known to have powers. You had tried to keep it a secret, not ready to be given the responsibility of being a hero but it wasn’t long before you had to use your powers, letting everyone know that you weren’t the normal teenager that everyone had believed you were. Some people thought it was cool to be a superhero, but they didn’t really understand it and for the most part everyone feared you. Your parents kicked you out, and even your school dismissed you, for fear of you hurting their other students. You became an outsider and for years you were alone without anyone that cared or understood, not until you met Diana.

More heroes were getting known around the world, and you had been aware of Wonder Woman, but you never thought you’d meet her. She happened to be in town when you were fighting crime and together you saved the day. She was the first person who understood what you were going through, understood what the responsibility on your shoulders felt like. For the first time ever, you felt like you belonged.

The two of you became quick friends and she helped you adapt to being a real hero, how to use your powers for good and how to weigh up the stress of fighting crime and having a normal life. She gave you everything you had needed since you first got your powers.

You headed to her office with the best bouquet of flowers that you could find. You struggled to open the door and carry the vase, but you managed to get into the room. Diana looked up from her computer, cocking an eyebrow at you.

“Y/N?” She questioned.

“Hi Diana,” you smiled, placing the vase on her table, although the flowers overwhelmed everything else on the desk. “I got you some flowers.”

“What are these for?” She asked. “They are beautiful.”

You bit your lip, worried about how to tell her about the gratitude that you had for her.

“You have done so much for me,” you smiled softly. “I never thought that I could be accepted anywhere but you have provided me a safe place and I am beyond grateful that you have been there for me when I have needed someone.”

Diana’s fingers toyed with the petals of one of the flowers, before smiling up at you.

“You have no reason to thank me. Everyone deserves kindness but the fear of the unknown seems to control people. It shall be okay though; people’s eyes are opening now to see one another for who they are without the fear of who they are.”

“I know the world is getting better but I am still grateful to have you there for me when I had no one else.”

image

Pairing: Diana Prince x Reader

Characters: Diana Prince

Warnings: N/A

Request: Wattpad- “Goodbye” Kiss

Word Count: 426

Author: Charlotte

“Are you sure Diana?” You questioned, apprehensive of her fate and decision she made.

“I am positive. No one could create such pain in war other than Ares himself,” she explained.

You trusted Diana with all of your heart, you knew that if she believed something then she was going to fight for it and do everything in her power to make it right. Having been told stories of Ares as she grew, she had now decided it was her place to fight him and save mankind from his influence. Without any knowledge of where he would be, anything beyond what the stories had once told her, but her heart was too large to let the pain of the world continue.

Diana had planned to leave Themyscira with the man whom had crashed off the shore and he would guide her to where she needed to go to defeat Ares. You didn’t trust the man but if Diana did, then you would give him the benefit of the doubt. Even though you knew she was doing what was right and what she felt she needed, you didn’t want her to leave. Not only could she die, you simply did not want to be apart from the woman you had grown to love, especially knowing where she would be headed and the fact that she may not return.

“What if I never see you again?” You whispered, grasping her hand to your heart.

She offered you a gentle, reassuring smile. “I will return to you, as long as my heart still beats against my breast, I shall make my way back to you. Do not doubt that.”

“And what if it shall stop?” You asked. “What if you ended up killed?”

“Worry not of those matters. Just know I shall forever be within your heart even if I am across the ocean.”

You took in a deep breath, not knowing if this would be the last time you would have Diana by your side.

“I shall miss you dearly until you return to our shores,” you commented. “And I know you will return to our shores.”

Diana smiled at you fondly before kissing you passionately, knowing this may be the last kiss to be shared between you.

“I love you Y/N but I must leave now or we shall never get away without my mother trying to stop us,” she said apologetically.

“I love you so much Diana,” you whispered.

She trailed away until your fingers were forced to separate as she headed from the room.

“Goodbye.”

eropix:Art: Justin Long

eropix:

Art: Justin Long


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sluttyasiangamer: heres your treat for halloween my dear @queenfutaslut

sluttyasiangamer:

heres your treat for halloween my dear @queenfutaslut


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#hentai    #wonder woman    #cum drinking    
Hey, guys! It’s been a while!  Here’s a piece I made for Toronto Comicon next week. They&rsquoHey, guys! It’s been a while!  Here’s a piece I made for Toronto Comicon next week. They&rsquoHey, guys! It’s been a while!  Here’s a piece I made for Toronto Comicon next week. They&rsquoHey, guys! It’s been a while!  Here’s a piece I made for Toronto Comicon next week. They&rsquo

Hey, guys! It’s been a while! 

Here’s a piece I made for Toronto Comicon next week. They’ve since canceled the show, but I thought I’d post it anyways! Hope ya like it! :D


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#dc comics    #dc comics fanart    #dc trinity    #justice league    #wonder woman    #superman    #batman    #digital art    #fanart    #trinity    
wonder womanwonder woman
#superheroes    #superheroine    #wonder woman    #hanging    #asphyxiation    #lesbian    

Spots also have been reopened due to deactivation or cannot simply role play anymore due to their work schedule etc. 

Reserve these characters today before it’s too late! All you have to do is send an application and that’s it!

Originally published at: https://www.eschergirls.com/photo/2022/04/01/wonder-woman-boobs-and-butt-doOriginally published at: https://www.eschergirls.com/photo/2022/04/01/wonder-woman-boobs-and-butt-do

Originally published at: https://www.eschergirls.com/photo/2022/04/01/wonder-woman-boobs-and-butt-double-feature

Two types of boobs and butt Diana, but at least she managed to pull that wedgie out of her butt.

(Panels from Justice League of America vol. 2 #23)


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wonder how she came up with this ideaoh

wonder how she came up with this idea

oh


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#cosplay    #costume    #wonder woman    #bodysuit and pearlyhose    #clever    
Daisy’s got a new movie out, so I’m told…Daisy’s got a new movie out, so I’m told…Daisy’s got a new movie out, so I’m told…Daisy’s got a new movie out, so I’m told…

Daisy’s got a new movie out, so I’m told…


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a wonder woman i wanted to paint her

a wonder woman i wanted to paint her


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WONDER WOMAN TIN  LUNCHBOX PURSEON SALE NOWNeed a wondrous geeky accessory to go with your most wondWONDER WOMAN TIN  LUNCHBOX PURSEON SALE NOWNeed a wondrous geeky accessory to go with your most wond

WONDER WOMAN TIN  LUNCHBOX PURSE
ON SALE NOW

Need a wondrous geeky accessory to go with your most wonderful outfit? This custom Wonder Woman tin “lunchbox” style purse is the perfect addition to any outfit! Available in sizes small and large, depending on your needs. The small are 6″x6″x3″ deep, the large are 8″x”10″5″ deep (picture the tin lunchboxes you had as a kid: basically that size!) Order one now for only $50.00 and feel the strength of Wonder Woman protecting your valuables!


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sexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejo

sexyversegames:

Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames

Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames

Gamejolt Page: gamejolt.com/@SexyverseGames/games


Captain Marvel Sex with Vines – Don’t worry, this isn’t any worse than the numerous times she got really drunk and woke up in bed with some random stud. She just shrugs it off and wishes she remembered it better.

Captain Marvel Sex 1 and 2 – Next up on the fucking block is Carol and she’s enjoying every second and inch! Luckily for her you’ll be providing her with a lot of both!

The DC and Marvel universes have been merged and all men have been removed! How has this happened and who’s responsible? It’s up to you, the last man in the merged universe, to find out! Female heroes will aid you, female villains will get in your way, and you’ll see all of them naked and lustful for you!

Art:@ayayanagisawaand@kiraelart

And $10 Sexyverse Comics Patrons also get full resolution art!


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secretversecomics: Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomicsJessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s apprsecretversecomics: Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomicsJessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s apprsecretversecomics: Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomicsJessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s apprsecretversecomics: Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomicsJessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s apprsecretversecomics: Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomicsJessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s appr

secretversecomics:

Gumroad: gumroad.com/sexyversecomics


Jessica Cruz joins the cruise as she’s approached by a cute boy willing to keep her company! Who is it and will he be too much to handle for her?

Thanks to the great support we got this month there’s two bonus pages! Here’s the first and the second will be up in a week!


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sexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejosexyversegames: Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames Gamejo

sexyversegames:

Patreon: patreon.com/sexyversegames

Gumroad Store: gumroad.com/sexyversegames

Gamejolt Page: gamejolt.com/@SexyverseGames/games


X-Mansion – Xavier’s Institute for Gifted Mutants aka the place where a bunch of horny teenage mutants sleep around when not saving the world. Only the girls are left and you’re expected to do the latter and the former with them.

Art:@kiraelartand@ayayanagisawa


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In January of 1977, I turned ten-years-old. And around that time, I would up getting my second book

In January of 1977, I turned ten-years-old. And around that time, I would up getting my second book collection of vintage comic book stories–a book that, up until that point I didn’t even know existed. We found it in the remaindered section at Two Guys, a regional low-rent department store chain, kind of like the K-Mart of its day. And because I had money that had been given to me for my birthday, I was able to buy it. By that point, it was twelve years old and had gone through several printings–it was, in fact, the very first collection of vintage comic book stories ever published, coming out in 1965 just ahead of the Batman TV show craze.

THE GREAT COMIC BOOK HEROES began life as an article that Jules Feiffer had written for Playboy magazine, of all places. It was a nostalgic look back, warts and all, at the comic books that were a part of his youth and the state of the industry a few years later when he was able to get into the business working for Will Eisner. From there, Feiffer went on to be a successful syndicated cartoonist, his strip primarily appearing in the Village Voice, as well as an accomplished playwright. He was so well-regarded, in fact, that he was able to convince a number of publishers to reprint stories from their back catalog in this hardcover collection–publishers who, up to this point, has never really worked in concert before. 

As no good reproduction materials existed, Feiffer worked in concert with DC’s Jack Adler to pioneered a process by which old comic books could be photographed under certain conditions to create a usable black line image, and then recolored. This same process was later used on many of DC’s reprints, in particular the FAMOUS 1st EDITION treasuries–I gather that the reason its use wasn’t more widespread is that it was more costly and time-consuming than was considered worthwhile for a regular comic book release.

Feiffer was also enough of a bigwig in 1965 that he was able to negotiate a minor detente in the legal agreement between DC/national Periodicals and Fawcett Publications, enough to allow him to reprint a single page’s worth of Captain Marvel. In 1977 when I read this book, I didn’t understand why this was a big deal (and in fact I had read this same story twice before already.) I believe it was the one and only exception ever granted, at least up until the point where DC began licensing the rights to Captain Marvel from Fawcett in 1973.

I will confess that, when I first bought this volume, I didn’t read any of Feiffer’s text. That seemed like work to me, who needed it? It was the stories that I was here for! I was hypnotized by the reproduction of one of the comic books that Feiffer had made and sold on the neighborhood street when he was a kid. I had begun to make my own comic books before this, and so this was a very primal point of connection for me–I think I may have read the text of just that one “chapter” (they were all short enough that they were only three or four pages long.)

I also didn’t read the stories featuring the Human Torch, the Sub-Mariner and Captain America that were included in the volume. Why would I? I had learned from past experience that I adamantly disliked Marvel comics, decried them whenever I was asked about them, so there was no need to investigate these stories. It would literally be months, not until the summer of 1977, when, on one dull day with nothing better to do, I finally cracked and read through both Feiffer’s full text and the three Marvel stories. And they (along with the write-ups on Timely in the Steranko History of Comics, coming soon) were enough to compel me to give Marvel another chance. But we’ll get to that in due time.

The one disappointing aspect of Feiffer’s book to me, coming to it twelve years later, is that there were already a number of stories in it that I’d read already. Because Feiffer tried to hit all of the mainstays of the big comic book houses in his reprints, and as often as possible, the opening or origin installments. The only times he varied from this approach was when there was some other aspect of the character or the strip that he was trying to highlight–a number of these series took a little while to completely crystallize in their final forms, and Feiffer took that into account when choosing his stories.

So what was reprinted in this volume? It opened with a two-page origin of Superman, taken not from ACTION COMICS #1 but rather from the more expanded version first shown in SUPERMAN #1. Thereafter, he ran a story that he sourced from SUPERMAN #3 but which was first published in ACTION COMICS #5. It’s really the first full story in which all of the quintessential elements of the Superman series coalesce: the Lois-Clark-Superman relationship in particular. There are several pages in the middle of it that were clearly reworked from newspaper strip samples, panels extended and reformatted into comic book pages haphazardly. 

Following the single page of Captain Marvel he could show, Feiffer then reprints the origin of Batman, from BATMAN #1 (which I’d read), as well as the first story featuring the Joker (likewise). This was about a year in, by which point Robin had been introduced, and wit the debut of the Joker all of the elements were in place. But not new to me. Next was a relatively late Human Torch story from MARVEL MYSTERY COMICS #20–like Batman, by this point the Torch’s young partner Toro had come into the series, and it had settled down into typical super-heroics. But I didn’t read it, not yet.

A pair of stories that I’d already experienced came next: the first adventure of the Flash (my third copy of it!) from FLASH COMICS #1 and the first installment of Green lantern from ALL-AMERICAN COMICS #16. Next came a solo Spectre story from ALL-STAR COMICS #1. I was familiar with this early version of the Spectre from the FAMOUS 1st EDITION reprint of ALL-STAR #3, but he wasn’t especially interesting to me. Because he was already dead and could do literally anything, there wasn’t a lot of drama to be found in his stories. Even as a kid, this deficit was apparent to me. Superman, at least, had to struggle to accomplish whatever his goal was.

Next came an adventure of Hawkman, sourced from FLASH COMICS #5. Here, Feiffer skipped the earliest adventures of the winged wonder so as to showcase the work of Shelly Moldoff on the strip (and in particular how often he was swiping Flash Gordon panels by Alex Raymond, which happened everywhere.) This was followed by a Wonder Woman story from WONDER WOMAN #2–actually, it was a single chapter of a four-chapter larger story, but I wouldn’t discover this for decades. Feiffer chose it as a good example of some of the strange sexuality that was operating under the hood of what at first glance appeared to be a patriotic heroine series. This was the stuff that really made Wonder Woman sizzle, and the lack of which one of the reasons why her series had such a lack of pop in the 60s and 70s.

Then came a Sub-Mariner adventure from MARVEL MYSTERY COMICS #7, by which point creator Bill Everett had worked out the bugs. I didn’t read it for several months, but essentially it’s an orgy of destruction, as Namor returns to Manhattan to carve out vengeance for his undersea race by wrecking and destroying his way across the city–he even at one point accosts Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. There isn’t much plot, only carnage–and it ends with Namor’s friend Berry Dean warning him that the Human Torch would be on his trail. But that historic meeting wasn’t included.

I also skipped the origin of Captain America, from CAPTAIN AMERICA COMICS #1. It’s a pretty crude piece of work, like most of what was reprinted in this volume. There are only hints of the explosiveness that Jack Kirby would bring to the comic book page in the next few issues, to say nothing of the next few decades. The pages were a little bit more jigsaw puzzle-y, but only a little bit. That would change as Kirby got going on Cap.

Next came the first Plastic Man adventure, from POLICE COMICS #1, and which I’d read a few weeks earlier in SECRET ORIGINS OF THE SUPER DC HEROES. It was still a fun tale, but one that only hinted at the inventiveness that Jack Cole would bring to the character and to the page. I felt the same way about the Spirit based on the story that Feiffer reprinted here. He spent a lot of time talking up how innovative and impressive a series it was, but from this sampling, I just couldn’t see it. Part of that, no doubt, is that most scholars consider the best period of Eisner’s Spirit to run from around 1946-1950 or so. But Feiffer was working for Eisner for most of that period–he wrote several of the most memorable tales–and so his interest was in the earliest Spirit adventures, the ones he read as a kid.

So it was a highly-enjoyable volume, and one that would have a greater impact on me over the course of time, but also slightly disappointing. But I was glad to have it, in particular because its existence came as a total surprise to me. At this point in time, there were precious few compilations of old comic book stories, so each one was like a treasured gem.


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It was an unimaginable 41 year ago today, on Christmas day of 1976, that I finally got my hands on t

It was an unimaginable 41 year ago today, on Christmas day of 1976, that I finally got my hands on this much-desired beauty, a gift from Santa Claus. And actually, having asked for it specifically on the Christmas list that my mother would demand that each child write (usually sourced out of the Sears Christmas catalog, with an upper cap of $40.00 total), I wound up finding it among other gifts secreted away in our as-yet-unfinished attic, so I knew that it was coming at last.

To say that it was a treasure trove is underselling the situation. It’s unthinkable today, when so much classic material is readily available, either collected in book for or simply available digitally, but in the mid-1970s there wasn’t any way to read old comic book stories that you were interested in other than to find those old comics, or stumble across those stories being reprinted somewhere. So it was extremely difficult for a nine-year-old to make sense of the history of comics, as I was eager to do. Books like this one were invaluable and loved. Indeed, my original copy of this volume is in pieces, the cover and earliest pages having eventually fallen off–I had the paper cover edition, not the more expensive clothbound one. (I couldn’t for the life of me work out why anybody would spend the larger amount when they could have used that money to buy more comics. I get it now.)

SECRET ORIGINS OF THE SUPER DC HEROES was the follow-up to Crown Books’ successful collections of vintage Superman and Batman stories. But it was really a reaction to Simon & Shuster’s ORIGINS OF MARVEL COMICS and its profitable follow-ups. Carmine Infantino and DC certainly wanted a piece of that marketplace (even if Carmine would be ousted as DC’s Publisher by the time the final product reached the marketplace in mid-1976). So the book is structured remarkably similarly to ORIGINS, with chapters devoted to ten DC heroes reprinting their origin stories (in most cases, two different ones from over the years) and introductory chapters written by Denny O’Neil outlining the behind-the-scenes story as to how these characters came to be.

Sadly, Denny is many wonderful things, but he’s not Stan Lee, so his secondhand recountings aren’t as engaging or fun to read as Stan’s–they read more like a homework assignment. It’s mostly the editors that Denny speaks to and who comment on the genesis of these heroes, and while they’re appreciative of the gainful employment such characters have provided them, you can’t help but get the feeling that it was all just a job to these guys.

Remarkably, the introduction to the Superman chapter speaks of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, at a time when their byline was still stricken from the rolls at DC–this is notable in that, in that previous Superman collection that Crown had published years earlier, neither man was mentioned by name. Similarly, the Batman chapter talks about Bill Finger as well as Bob Kane–in fact, it mentions Finger’s name first. This was an extraordinary thing in 1976, and something that DC would walk back for at least a few more months on Jerry and Joe’s side, and for decades longer when it came to Finger. Whether this was due to Denny, or a desire to give a true accounting so as to mimic ORIGINS (whose accounting is far more compromised), it almost doesn’t matter.

The book also bridged the gap between the Golden Age and the more modern Silver Age, the Earth-1 and Earth-2 incarnations of the characters. In all but the final two instants, two stories were run featuring each character: their initial Golden Age appearance (or origin, in the case of Batman and Wonder Woman) and then either a more recent retelling or updating of that origin, or the origin or first appearance of the Silver Age incarnation of that hero. So you got Jay Garrick along with Barry Allen, Alan Scott besides Hal Jordan, and Al Pratt as well as Ray Palmer.

So, just walking through the volume a little bit, after some introductions and dedications (Sheldon Mayer!) it gets down to business with Superman, starting with a reprint of the first page of his initial story in ACTION COMICS #1 (which I’d already seen in the FAMOUS 1ST EDITION reprinting) followed by the expanded Origin of Superman from the AMAZING WORLD OF SUPERMAN special edition–this one I’d also previously read, in a SUPERMAN treasury Edition.

This is followed by the origin of Batman from BATMAN #1 (I’d read it) and then the well-regarded 1948 story in which Batman tracks down Joe Chill, the man who had killed his parents. It’s a story that packs a punch. Next came Wonder Woman, whose origin from the first issue of her comic was reproduced (Again, I’d read it in reprint before) followed by a more modern recounting by Robert Kanigher and Don Heck that also built up the mystery of Nubia, Diana’s long-lost sister.

Then came the main event, the reason I had jonesed over this volume for so long: the origin of the Flash. It began with a reprint of the first Jay Garrick story (read it already!) and then reprinted the inaugural Barry Allen story from SHOWCASE #4. And I loved it, boy, every nonsensical second of it. This was followed by the first Green Lantern story, featuring Alan Scott–Scott doesn’t don his costume until the very last panel in this story, which was a bit disappointing–and then the first Hal Jordan tale (in which he does wear his costume, but no mask yet.) The fact that so many of DC’s characters had debuted in anthology titles, and so their stories were shorter than their Marvel competitors made it easier to fit more stories into a single volume.

Then came two Hawkman origins (I’d read the first in the FLASH COMICS #1 Treasury, but not the Silver Age story) and a pair of Green Arrow stories, neither the Emerald Archer’s first appearance but both detailing contradictory origin stories for his costumed identity and mastery of the bow. I naturally concluded that the first must be the Earth-2 Green Arrow, which turned out to be true. The Atom came next, and he never even got a costume in his initial outing as Al Pratt, nor did Ray Palmer in his initial story. Still, these were all fun and inventive.

The final two slots in the book were devoted to DC “acquisitions” that had originated elsewhere. So next came the first Captain Marvel story from WHIZ COMICS #2 (the first issue had been an ashcan–and I’d read this story when #2 was reissued as a FAMOUS 1ST EDITION) and the first Plastic Man yarn from POLICE COMICS #1. This book is a treasured favorite, and I’ve replaced it twice over the years. It was also the start of what became a long Christmas tradition in which I would be given books on comics by my family, friends and relatives. And so it was a merry Christmas indeed.


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Muscles and stuff: WeightsAndCrossfit.tumblr.com
#deadlift    #weight lifting    #muscles    #muscle    #fitness    #healthy    #workout    #wonder woman    
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