Explore the Dark Arts with the Witch Empress during Free Week

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Witch Empress Free Week The Witch Empress Free Week is an exciting event that allows players to experience the popular game character, the Witch Empress, without any cost. This event is a great opportunity for players to test out the powers and abilities of this powerful character. The Witch Empress is known for her mastery of magic and her ability to cast powerful spells. During the free week, players can play as the Witch Empress in various game modes and battle against other players. This event not only allows players to try out a new character, but also gives them a chance to improve their skills and strategies. The Witch Empress Free Week is a highly anticipated event among fans of the game and is a great way to engage and involve players in the gaming community.


College was better, but I still occasionally had people BALK when I asked them to please not eat a Nature Valley bar with whole nuts in it right the fuck next to me in lecture, thanks. Work parties and catered lunches were always impossible. A few conferences I went to as an undergrad were SUPPOSED to be nut-free, but always fucked up the catering. At one, they set up snack tables by every exit of the conference auditorium so that when people left after the talk, they all congregated around the exits and opened macadamia nut cookies and granola bars. When I had subsequently had a massive allergic reaction and needed help getting home (I’d walked) after taking like 200mg of benadryl, the staff offered me a stack of napkins and a lukewarm apology.

The principal told my mom and me I was 4 at the time and definitely in the room when this happened if she s so sick, she belongs in a bubble, not at school. I talked about how we would be covering what people are most passionate about the fun, creative endeavors that give life meaning and that this was a privilege.

Witch empress free week

The Witch Empress Free Week is a highly anticipated event among fans of the game and is a great way to engage and involve players in the gaming community. So, don't miss out on the chance to participate in the Witch Empress Free Week and unleash the magic within!.

The Empress

bethany-sensei:

cannabiscomrade:

cannabiscomrade:

I wasn’t going to derail the disability pride month post for people with peanut allergies but in relation to that topic

I have never seen another allergy that has been so viscerally hated and mocked by people working in education like nut allergies. I’ve seen fellow teachers cringe that their classroom was the “nut free” classroom that year. Support staff that are trained and willfully don’t follow cross contamination protocol in the lunchroom because it’s too “tedious” or “time-consuming”. Full preschools + childcare centers that refuse to accommodate nut allergies. Schools where the only free lunch is a PB&J. Before/after school programs and summer programs whose food curriculum has nuts and doesn’t provide an alternative activity.

Allergy discrimination is so so insidious and prevalent. It’s happening behind their back and it is everything from the exposure joke to possibly causing someone to go into anaphylaxis from willful ignorance.

Also other parents in the classroom are guilty too. The “not my child not my problem” brain rot means that those lunchboxes are like bombs for airborne exposure allergies

A woman with a severe peanut allergy says airline staff laughed at her and ignored her requests when she tried to fly to Costa Rica

A 22-year-old woman said Lufthansa staffers were not sympathetic to her condition when she tried to explain her life-threatening peanut alle

Insider

I was not downplaying this. The stigma is real, and people are 100% willing to let people with allergies die.

This woman was laughed at for asking for allergy accommodations at multiple points in her trip, and was denied to the point that she was practically told she’d be refused care in the event of anaphylaxis.

I work in healthcare. I cannot get my coworkers to consistently change their gloves after handling a PBJ. They literally do not think of it, and I don’t understand why. I also don’t know how to make it stick in their brains that this is a thing they need to do.

I grew up in the early 2000s with severe allergies to not just peanuts, but ALL nuts as well as beef, pork, shelfish, seeds, kiwi, and some food dyes. The resistance that my family faced from educators in the early 2000s is frankly bananas, not to mention the shit other parents and kids got up to.

When my mom tried to enroll me in preschool, the school principal refused any basic accommodations like asking everyone to wash their hands after lunch before re-entering the classroom, not bringing straight up peanuts to snack time, etc. There was no such thing as a nut free classroom at the time. The principal told my mom and me (I was 4 at the time and definitely in the room when this happened) “if she’s so sick, she belongs in a bubble, not at school.” THE FUCKING PRINCIPAL! My mom had to threaten legal action under the ADA to get them to comply.

Look, I was on a 504 accommodation plan under the ADA for the entirety of my formative education (elementary thru high school). That’s all 12 years. And yet I have had teachers hand me items I’m allergic to as a “reward”. I have had other kids intentionally try to send me into anaphylaxis. One girl in 3rd grade asked me why I “wasn’t dead yet” when she had put on a lotion with almonds in it and then held my hand. I’ve had other parents write letters to the school saying what a terrible inconvenience it was to them to not be able to send their kiddo to school with PB&J, demanding I be Removed to a special education only class if my “needs” were such a “burden” to others. During elementary school “parties” held in the classroom on holidays and for student birthdays, I was always sent to sit out in the hallway or go to the library, because even though parents were only supposed to bring safe foods into the room (they had a list of all my allergies) they never once got it right. Administrators fought me tooth and nail for the right to carry my epi pen and other meds on my person at all times. Why they thought I would start dealing benadryl on the playground, I do not know. At lunch, I was always sat at a specific segregated table labeled the “Nut Free Table” alone because who the fuck is going to sit there with the literally segregated outcast? But ONCE notably I was sat on one side of a line of blue masking tape down the table top with the rest of my class on the other. One side was the NUTS side. As if allergens would respect that tape barrier. (Spoiler alert: they do NOT!)

Literally from preschool to my senior year of high school, I was “the peanut kid”. Other parents gave my mom books about how to “cure your child’s food allergies from HOME” by micro dosing with things they are allergic to (please never ever ever even attempt anything like a food challenge with a known allergen outside of the care and supervision of a medical professional, holy shit that’s so dangerous). My mom joined the PTA in my last year of high school so that I could maybe participate in all the senior-focused events like pool parties and breakfast at school on the first Friday of the month. The number of times another parent either (a) decided it wasn’t worth it to care or (b) intentionally brought peanut products to an event to spite either me or my mom. I literally could not count. It happened constantly.

College was better, but I still occasionally had people BALK when I asked them to please not eat a Nature Valley bar with whole nuts in it right the fuck next to me in lecture, thanks. Work parties and catered lunches were always impossible. A few conferences I went to as an undergrad were SUPPOSED to be nut-free, but always fucked up the catering. At one, they set up snack tables by every exit of the conference auditorium so that when people left after the talk, they all congregated around the exits and opened macadamia nut cookies and granola bars. When I had subsequently had a massive allergic reaction and needed help getting home (I’d walked) after taking like 200mg of benadryl, the staff offered me a stack of napkins and a lukewarm apology.

Food allergy is a disability which touches literally every aspect of a person’s life. Everytime I share with someone new about what it was like growing up with my allergies, they have never heard anything like it in their lives. They’re always like “holy shit, seriously. People did that. Kids tried to kill you. Parents wanted you kicked out of the classroom. ” Yeah, man. Yeah. My own brother (who doesn’t have any allergies at all) doesn’t understand why I don’t “eat more adventurously” and why I won’t travel internationally. So, saying it REALLY LOUDLY for people in the back:

Witch empress free week

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Reviews for "Harness the Dark Forces with the Witch Empress during Free Week"

1. Sarah - 2 stars
I was really excited when I heard about the "Witch Empress Free Week" because I had heard so many good things about the game. However, after playing it for a few days, I was incredibly disappointed. Firstly, the gameplay was extremely repetitive and monotonous. I found myself doing the same tasks over and over again without any real sense of accomplishment. Additionally, the graphics were quite poor, making it difficult to immerse myself in the game. Overall, I was left feeling underwhelmed by Witch Empress and don't understand the hype surrounding it.
2. Adam - 1 star
Witch Empress Free Week was a complete letdown for me. The controls were clunky and unresponsive, making it frustrating to move my character around the game world. Moreover, the storyline was lackluster and didn't engage me at all. The dialogue was cheesy and the character development was almost non-existent. I was expecting an immersive and captivating experience, but Witch Empress fell flat. I would not recommend wasting your time on this game.
3. Emily - 2 stars
I had high hopes for Witch Empress Free Week, as I usually enjoy games with a fantasy theme. However, this game was a disappointment. The gameplay felt stale and unoriginal, offering nothing new or exciting. The quests were repetitive and offered little variation. Additionally, the user interface was confusing and poorly designed, making it difficult to navigate through the game. Witch Empress just didn't capture my attention or provide any unique features that would make me want to continue playing. I would suggest trying other games in the genre instead.

Battle as the Witch Empress and Dominate the Battlefield for Free this Week

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