I've spent my like travelling the Seven Seas and have never seen you until now! Now that I no longer have a ship to sail. That's not really a question though. Have you got a rough latitude and longitude to find you?

ellievsbear
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
RMH

shark vs the universe
Stranger Things
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
ojovivo
No title available
Sade Olutola

@theartofmadeline
taylor price
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
The Stonewall Inn

Product Placement
Not today Justin

pixel skylines

tannertan36

PR's Tumblrdome
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Russia

seen from France

seen from T1
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Mexico
@aquafare
I've spent my like travelling the Seven Seas and have never seen you until now! Now that I no longer have a ship to sail. That's not really a question though. Have you got a rough latitude and longitude to find you?
Grace Jones by Deni Dimochka
Wherever you go, walk with your head held high. You’re not a waste of space. You’re not what’s “wrong” with our society. You’re not what they say you are. Don’t let other people’s negativity make you forget how wonderful you are. You are loved and I’m glad you’re here with me.
Happy Big Girl Appreciation day, Queen! Let’s live to slay another day! XD
Gabourey Sidibe Covers NYLON Magazine April 2017. Images by Shxpir.
My dad needs help
I use to try avoid post like these but, karma has a funny way of working. I know that I don’t post a lot and am not really that popular but my family needs help. My dad, Carlos, fell down a flight of stairs and hurt his arm and shoulder and is now unable to go to work. He is has a very strong sense of pride, so he didn’t even tell me. (machismo, but anyway) I just noticed that my family back home was struggling more than we usually do. I’m in college, so I don’t regularly get to see them. My sister told me what happened, and how there isn’t enough money to make bills.
He’s a good man and I am soooo soooooo lucky to have this man as a father. He was the best father to me when I came out, and actively worked to make schools more accepting of the LGBT+ community ever since. He has ALWAYS been serious about keeping our roots (Afro-Cuban), and our religion. If anyone was down the would always make time to make people smile.
He actively tries to make peoples days brighter, whether it’s at work or in the grocery store. I know that he’s in a bad place right now, and just won’t mention it. He went to the doctor yesterday and was told that he needs to have the surgery as soon as possible to prevent any permanent damage to his shoulder and arm, he estimated that he would need the surgery by May 5th before the injury does damage to his nervous system. My mother and my sister are constantly at their alter praying for change in this situation.
So, all my siblings and I are starting a GoFundMe campaign for him so we can pay for the surgery. I completely understand if you can give any donation (I’m a college student, I know), I would just ask to please please please share, or pray to whichever god(dess) you worship, or even do a small spell for us to reach the goal. I just want my dad to be back the goofy, kind man that he is.I can’t thank you guys enough for even reading this.
LINK: https://www.gofundme.com/carlos-needs-your-help-for-surgery
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE SHARE
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PRAY FOR US
LINK: https://www.gofundme.com/carlos-needs-your-help-for-surgery
📸📸 IG : https://www.instagram.com/sethnocentric/ 📸📸 IG : https://www.instagram.com/_centrism/ Snapchat : @sethnocentric
Model IG : @sj_jomandy
Hey. Im Kechie, an 18 year old Nigerian photographer interested in using portraiture as a means of exploring black femininity and representation in our media. Im using my art as a means of self love and discovery, and I use a Nikon d5300. Here are some photos from my, ‘For the sake of it’ series. Twitter: @kechieee Ig: @kechie.a Website coming soon💕
I haven’t worn a pink lippie in the longest lol And for anyone wondering, it’s “are n bee” by colourpop on top of “dark brown” lip liner by morphe
Gaku’s Ethereal Food Carvings
Japanese artist Gaku carves fruits and vegetables, etching intricate patterns on their skins.
Keep reading
Happy Black History month. Model IG: @blissfullqueen Tumblr: blissfullqueenn.tumblr.com
"The revolution has always been in the hands of the young. The young always inherit the revolution"- Huey P Newton.
“And kid, love will be the simplest yet most complicated thing you will ever experience.”
Part of the brain on valentines day series- see more on @tobeagenius
You didn’t love her. You just didn’t want to be alone. Or maybe, maybe she was good for your ego. Or maybe she made you feel better about your miserable life, but you didn’t love her. Because you don’t destroy people you love.
Grey’s Anatomy (via onlinecounsellingcollege)
This.
An entire Manhattan village owned by black people was destroyed to build Central Park
Three churches, a school, and dozens of homes were demolished
^^^^Prominent abolitionist Albro Lyons and Mary Joseph Lyons were residents of Seneca Village.
The community, called Seneca Village, began in 1825 and eventually spanned from 82nd Street to 89th Street along what is now the western edge of Central Park. By the time it was finally razed in 1857, it had become a refuge for African Americans. Though most were nominally free (the last slave wasn’t emancipated until 1827) life was far from pleasant. The population of African Americans living in New York City tripled between abolition and complete emancipation and the migrants were derided in the press. Mordecai Noah, founder of The New York Enquirer, was especially well-known for his attacks on African Americans, fuming at one point that “the free negroes of this city are a nuisance incomparably greater than a million slaves.”
More than three-fourths of the children who lived in Seneca Village attended Colored School №3 in the church basement. Half of the African Americans who lived there owned their own property, a rate five times higher than the city average. And while the village remained mostly black, immigrant whites had started to live in the area as well. They shared resources ranging from a church (All Angels Episcopal), to a midwife (an Irish immigrant who served the entire town).
But in 1857, it was all torn down.
Even as the church was being built on 86th street, then painstakingly painted white, the original settlers fought for their lands in court. Andrew Williams was paid nearly what his land was worth, after filing an affidavit with the state Supreme Court. Epiphany Davis was not as fortunate, losing hundred of dollars.
By 1871, Seneca Village had largely been forgotten. That year, The New York Herald reported that laborers creating a new entrance to the park at 85th Street and 8th Avenue had discovered a coffin, “enclosing the body of a Negro, decomposed beyond recognition.” The discovery was a mystery, the paper reported, because “these lands were dug up five years ago, when the trees were planted there, and no such coffins were there at the time.” That’s unlikely, as the site was the graveyard of the AME Zion church.
Researchers from Columbia, CUNY, and the New York Historical Society have been working on excavating the site of Seneca Village since the early 2000s. The work has been slow, with excavation starting in 2011.
The only official artifact that remains intact on the site is a commemorative plaque, dedicated in 2001 to the lost village.
source
#BlackHistoryMonth
this completely fucked up central park for me. It was always weird why there was such a big park in Manhattan (and it’s not even really in the center).
Healing the Past
The fastest way to heal injuries from your past is to let your past injuries heal. If something hurt you ten years ago or ten minutes ago, you have now suffered long enough from that pain. That past suffering was inevitable. You have lived through it and learned from it. It has shaped who you are, but it is no longer essential to who you are becoming. Now is the time to let that hurt heal.
The way to let that hurt heal is not to forget it and move on. That is impossible. We remember everything. The way to let it heal is to immerse yourself in the present, where that particular pain is a memory. You can breathe in a deep healing breath and feel the longstanding, familiar pain for a good bye visit. Then you breathe out again. If you are still there, then you have survived. You can try it again if necessary.
Who you are does not rely on the pain of the past. You can live without it, especially if it is difficult to live with it. Who you are in the present is somebody who has survived and now has a completely different set of circumstances in your life. As you continue into the future, you can meet past and present pain with the same resolve and heal it upon first contact. That can save you a lot of carrying. Although you have proven that you are strong enough to carry all that pain, you don’t need to anymore. You can now use those emotional muscles to carry peace. You deserve peace.
Mahershala Ali makes history as first Muslim actor to win an Oscar