twisting box
Misplaced Lens Cap
Keni

blake kathryn

shark vs the universe
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

titsay
NASA

No title available
hello vonnie
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Xuebing Du

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Product Placement

pixel skylines
art blog(derogatory)
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
dirt enthusiast
todays bird

oozey mess
KIROKAZE

seen from Malaysia

seen from Portugal
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seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States

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seen from Germany
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@areyouapeople
twisting box
Gracia Scale Top
#clothes for riding dragons
#clothes for slowly becoming the dragon you were born to be
Normalize boys wearing dresses
Normalize boys wearing makeup
Normalize boys expressing femininity
Normalize breaking down gross masculine expectations
Street-Fighting Mathematics looks like a fun read: it’s a Creative Commons-licensed math textbook that teaches approximation and “down-and-dirty, opportunistic problem solving.” It’s based on a MIT course taught by the author, Sanjoy Mahajan.
In problem solving, as in street fighting,…
Please reblog if you know anyone who might take party drugs.
Who says heaven is not on the earth; for book lovers like me its right here :))
Hey Buzzfeed. I like a lot of the stuff you guys do, but I've noticed something lately that makes me (and I assume a lot of other people) question whether or not to read your website. It seems like a disproportionate number of your articles and videos cater to women and so-called "feminists". This very blog recently posted a picture that mocked the new and popular #Meninist activist movement. Do you REALLY want your readers to think you support so-called "feminist" ideology?
Yes. Unequivocally yes.
Christianity is something to do, not a philosophical puzzle. It comes about not when someone affirms a creedal proposition, but when someone does something. It is a way to be witnessed, not a proposition to be proven.
John D. Caputo (via azspot)
how the fuck characters do a thing?
which is why you don't trust people who like pets more than people.
This place is not a place of honor. No highly esteemed deed is commemorated here. Nothing valued is here. This place is a message and part of a system of messages. Pay attention to it! Sending this message was important to us. We considered ourselves to be a powerful culture. What is here is dangerous and repulsive to us. This message is a warning about danger. The danger is in a particular location. It increases toward a center. The center of danger is here, of a particular size and shape, and below us. The danger is still present in your time as it was in ours. The danger is to the body, and it can kill. The form of the danger is an emanation of energy. The danger is unleashed only if you substantially disturb this place physically. This place is best shunned and left uninhabited.
The intended message of the warning marker design project at long-term nuclear waste disposal facilities at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, and WIPP, New Mexico, meant to discourage future generations from disturbing the sites for up to ten thousand years. (via starfoozle)
if you ever feel bad about your body remember that Wonder Woman has cellulite too
Love this for so many reasons! There is so much body positive messaging. First Wonder Woman adopts a culturally appropriate variation of her costume for the people she works with. Then there is the whole aspect of her cellulite. Superheroes typically have idealized bodies and even in this specific comic Wonder Woman does have petite figure. But she accepts the imperfections in her body. In fact the issue with people taking pictures of her cellulite is not that cellulite is embarrassing but the sad fact that people want to talk about cellulite more than they want to talk about real issues. This is completely relatable to our own culture. How many world issues were ignored in order to talk about the “fappening” or any other time naked pictures have been stolen. While yes it is encouraging that Wonder Woman also has cellulite, but perhaps the more important lesson she has to teach here is that the importance of the presence or absence of cellulite pales in comparison to so many other issues. Perhaps we should devote our time and mental energies to fighting poverty, homelessness, or the continued objectification of the female form.
Reading about abusive men and the way they think. Very unsettling and an incredible book so far. Here are my very professional notes.
what book is this?
This is from “Why Does He DO That” by Lundy Bancroft.
I’m so glad I’m seeing more and more Lundy Bancroft quotes on my dash because this book CHANGES THE LIVES OF ABUSE VICTIMS. The programs run for rehabilitating abusive men through the courts? Bancroft DESIGNED THEM. His programs are replicated ALL OVER THE WORLD. He literally wrote THE book on abuser rehabilitation.
Here’s a link to a pdf copy. If you haven’t read this book yet, read this book.
Can we talk about how it seems like the entirety of the book is online on PDF, this making it accessible to anyone with an internet connection?
That is how we stop abuse.
We enable everyone to know what it looks like, so that when it happens, they can shut it down.
I need this book. Now.
I actually want to reblog this to SBD because this book also covers the myth of abuse being caused by mental illness. I also know a lot of you guys are abuse victims. I own this book and am working my way through it, and I highly highly recommend it. -Mea
Mountain Moon Volcano by Louis Graham [tumblr | facebook]
Who covers all the big payouts after police violate people’s civil rights? You do.
this isn’t a fucking competition, bard.
I…I recognize the joke, but these are totally different kinds of bows, each with its own benefits and suited to its user.
Bard’s using a longbow.
Longbows are awesome and take a fuckton of regular practice to use, because the muscle strain required to be a longbowman(/woman) actually deforms the arms and back of the user.
"Bard the Bowman" is still known by that sobriquet even though he’s low status, his family’s life and profession changed when the dragon attacked. Why would he be called that, if not that he’s still in regular practice and people see him using the thing over and over and over?
Longbows are less-damaged by damp than composites, being made of once single piece of wood rather than layers of material, which is handy if one lives in the middle of a freaking lake.
The longbow changed the face of warfare in real life, esp. for England. They’re effective killing machines over long distance, even against armored enemies.
Conclusion: Bard’s a tank-muscled distance shot used to fighting with good sightlines.
Legolas and Tauriel use recurve bows, albeit in different styles.
Legolas’ looks like a Turkish bow, though I don’t recall seeing him use a thumb draw (which is not mandatory if you’ve got super strong elf-fingers, I guess).
Tauriel’s looks to be a Scythian composite bow by the shape.
Composite recurve bows are much easier to use in confined spaces and at odd angles.
They have been historically used by folks who specialize in archer tricks like multiple arrow shots (a thing we have seen Legolas do).
Because of the curves, composites pack heavy draw weight (the factor that determines with what force, i.e. how fast and far, the arrow will travel) into limited space.
Short draw (the distance you have to pull back the arrow to shoot it) means a quicker release time and quicker time to get your next arrow on the string.
Legolas and Tauriel fight in a forest, not know for long sight lines or easy travel, nor for enemies who can be seen coming. They need weapons that won’t be getting caught on a bush at an inopportune time. Likewise, you see fewer spears and longswords among the elves of the Greenwood.
Conclusion: Legolas and Tauriel are guerrilla fighters from a heavily-forested territory and their weapons reflect that.
Kili also uses a composite recurve bow.
For practical purposes, note that Kili has significantly shorter arms than any of the other archers here mentioned. Long draws, like on Bard’s longbow, are not feasible and that means he’s not going to get the power he is capable of producing.
Dwarves are fucking strong, all right? That wee little bow looks very like the Mongolian horse-bow in size and shape that my friend used with a draw weight of 55 lbs. (I’m not a weakling and I can draw 35 for a decent length of time when in practice). Kili’s could easily be upwards of 75-100 lbs.
Kili’s a hunter. Likely, his main concern with a bow (when not following his uncle on an inadvisable quest) is the procurement of dinner for his family. To do that with a bow you need to be very quiet or very quick on the draw. Dwarves are not known for being super-quiet, though I believe I remember something about Fili and Kili being better at that than is typical.
Anything that can kill a deer can probably kill a person (or an orc). That little horse-bow can easily kill or maim.
Conclusion: Kili is a hunter. He uses a bow that allows for the production of a lot of power at short notice and is suited to his size and strength.
Bigger is not always most effective. Your medieval weaponry rant has concluded for the day, unless someone wants to talk to me about swords.
"When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property."
Thomas Jefferson (via moralanarchism)