Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile
Amy

@amytheartist

Orthodox Artist ☦️ Oil paint 🎨 Piano 🎹 Fire dancing 🔥 1/2 of The Mystic Sisters with twin @juliewrites
I sell art in my online store 👇

ID: 58826629

linkhttps://linktr.ee/AmyTheArtist calendar_today21-07-2009 15:34:05

23,23K Tweet

22,22K Followers

1,1K Following

Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I've never been there either, but I care deeply about the cartoonification of anything even remotely representational/illustrative

Tara Ann Thieke (@taraannthieke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The women who want to be in an office are able to semi-avoid sacrificing quality of care/lifestyle b/c they make enough to offset costs. Their job most likely involves high prestige or splashy social media presence. Self-fulfillment is fun & easy for this group.

Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Between replacing my car, thousands in medical bills, and a wedding, I haven't saved any money at the end of the month since January. It's been such a rough year

Orphic Inscendence (@oinscendence) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A good reminder for women is that man is only a man to a degree he is an ascetic (not monk, not celibate; not without libido. ASCETIC). Anything other than that you will have to be cleaning up his “leakage.” Or destroying the cancers his leakage fathers.

Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

So stupid that I was ever convinced to stop doing yoga and meditation by the online trads. Stretching and focusing on your breath is not "demonic," I need to slow my body and mind down to be a better Christian, actually

Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If my only contact with Orthodox Christianity was the guys on twitter, I would have never in a million years converted. Some of the most legalistic, insufferable, and arrogant people imaginable.

Amy (@amytheartist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

College is the reason marriage is delayed, and paying off $90K in your 20s is not an "extended childhood" Our mothers either didn't work or were receptionists and waitresses. We navigated college, debt, and employment in cities before we could even think about marriage.