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Todayâs the day
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Beautiful Norway by :
Š J. ObenhoffÂ
<3 Blessed post <3
Blessed blep
The blep of good fortune!
Some favourite aurora pictures from recent years.
Lapland, Finland.
by Tiina TĂśrmänen | web | FB | INSTAGRAM | STOCKÂ
the only mandatory reblog i adhere to
I need this shit
Population density map of Scandinavia.
Keep reading
Obligatory FINLAND IS NOT IN SCANDINAVIA!!! But. Interesting information. Thank you for that.
I believe the English term âScandinaviaâ means Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland BUT the Finnish term âSkandinaviaâ means only Norway and Sweden (Denmark maybe??) So thats why itâs confusing
No, this is simply the English speaking world thinking that Scandinavia and Nordic are the same thing. Finland is indeed part of the Nordic countries (Finland, Iceland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden), but it is not part of the Scandinavian countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark).
Geographically, the majority of Finland is not in Scandinavia. It is true that a small bit of Finland is within the Scandinavian region, but when it comes to geography the term Fennoscandia or Fenno-Scandinavia should be used if Finland is included. Geographically, only Norway and Sweden are Scandinavia as they are located on the Scandinavian Peninsula, however Denmark is included in Scandinavian countries for historical reasons.
When it comes to languages, the majority language of Finland is Finnish, which is not an Indo-European language like the Scandinavian languages are. Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and Icelandic are all part of North-Germanic languages. Finnish is a Uralic language. Swedish is recognised as an official languages in Finland, however it is a minority language.
As for culture and aesthetics, it is true that Finland has been hugely influenced by Scandinavia because it was ruled by Sweden for a long time. However, Finnish mythology for example has its own set of gods, goddesses and spirits separate from the Scandinavian mythology. When it comes to modern culture, the term Nordic applies to Scandinavia and Finland.
Calling Finland Scandinavia is like calling Scotland or Ireland England.
Simply put
âTell me, who manipulated whom?â
Bitch D&D manipulated me into thinking this motherfucking show had a fucking point
âgame of thronesâ cast hating their own show for twenty seconds straight
lmaoo they look high
her eyebrows went through all five stages of grief
She warned us.
Itâs 2019 and Iâm still wondering why giving happy endings for characters that have worked so hard to find it is considered âunrealisticâ
It isnât unrealistic. In the 80âs-90â˛s every fantasy history HAD a happy ending. Happy endings were GUARANTEED. I know because I was there growing up, you know? Seeing those movies. Indiana Jones, Star Wars, Back to the Future (thank God for Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale for sealing those trilogy rights until they both are dead. God knows what modern Hollywood would have done with Doc Brown, Clara, Marty and Jennifer. Iâm terrified thinking about it.)
But since GRRM wrote âGame Of Thronesâ and then D&D adapted it into a TV series and, trust me in that narrative makes sense killing off characters, but like that work of fiction oppened a can of worms and suddenly audiences were ok with seeing their favourite characters DIE and big Hollywood studios like Disney took the clue.
But what they didnât realize is that GOT rules of the game were stablished early on. In the first book/season: donât get attached to anyone, because this wonât have a happy ending. You canât trust anyone. Everyone has a good and a bad side. And that was totally okay because you, as a fan or reader, willingly accepted those rules, and got into it knowing what to expect.
But applying this formula to other narratives based on hope and good vs. evil not only feels cheap it totally feels like a treason to your emotional investment, because we didnât agree to play with those other rules. At all. We were promised colorful and hopeful universes. And goodhearted heroes that would WIN.
And now we are here, thriving in shock value and plot twist and ârealâ dark, tragic endings.
We didnât ask for this.
I miss the old times, truly.
Look, I love âGame of Thronesâ and Iâm of those people who have read all the books in the âA Song Of Ice and Fireâ series and I wish sometimes that GRRMâs work had remain a series of books and never became a TV series and never became mainstream.
Because it has changed the way movies and TV series and media in general is written and consumed FOREVER, now everything is plot twists, shock value, surprising your audience every 5 minutes (as RDJ said in the âAvengers Endgameâ press conference) and killing off your favourite characters in less than satisfying endings because it feels real.
I donât want it to be real, you fool. I donât want stakes. I entered in your fantasy world to scape my own awful real life, everyday reality.Â
In real life, good persons lose.
We loved in fiction, for once, to see good persons WIN and be happy and survive to tell the tale. Because thatâs what good people deserve and rarely get in real life.
Because real life is unfair and sad enough.
i really needed this today, so for anyone else who might
Thanks I needed this also. Iâll pass it on
Just the Rock blessing your feed
Thanks, Mr. The Rock.
You learn everyday.
I grew up hearing the phrase âyou never stick with anything, whatâs the pointâ a lot. Iâve always been attracted towards seemingly disconnected interests, and gone through phases of being really into something. But eventually my interest would fade and I would move onto something else.Â
Or at least thatâs always how itâs been phrased for me, by others. Now I realize that my interest for the old thing didnât fade so much as my interest for something new outshined it, and thatâs vastly different.Â
I was always made to feel bad about it, with every abandoned endeavour I was told I needed to stop starting things if I wasnât going to stick with them. I was told I was wasting time and money picking up these random interests and abandoning them after a year.Â
So eventually, I stopped picking things up. I told myself âwhatâs the point, Iâm going to give up in a year anywayâ. Even worse, I started dismissing every new interest, because I had no way of knowing if my interest was ârealâ enough or just another passing phase. I stopped trying new things, I stopped looking up stuff that piqued my curiosity, and having chronic depression made it really easy to leave everything on the dirty floor of neglected ideas. The more they piled up, the more depressing it was. All these things that could be nice, but I just canât take care of them.Â
I realize now how bullshit that kind of thinking is. So what if I stopped doing karate after a year? Thatâs one more year of karate than most people I know. And in that year I learned discipline, I learned to listen to a teacher, something I had never done before in all my years of private education. I learned the true meaning of respect, that itâs something you do out of faith at first and maintain as itâs reciprocated, not something you do blindly and regardless of how youâre treated.Â
It gave me the foundation for the determination and grounding I needed to practice yoga. Another year. Not enough to be good at it maybe, but again a year more than most people I know and a year that is not lost, but gained. I learned balance, I learned to listen to my body, I learned how to let go of emotional tightness through physical stretching.Â
And then iaido, only a few weeks because I couldnât afford to keep going. The year of yoga I had done a couple years previous had given me a better starting point than the other newcomers to the class. I already had balance, I had strength in my legs and I had better posture. In those months I learned the importance of precision, the true definition of efficacy, the zen state that is incessant repetition.Â
Did I practice long enough to get good at iaido, and yoga, and karate? No. Of course not. It takes years to become proficient and decades to master any of those things, but I learned other skills and those skills were an invaluable part of my growth both spiritually and emotionally. Likewise for my forays into painting, sewing, graphic design, film. Iâm a photography student now heading into my second year of school, and every single second of practice I have in those other disciplines has given me more experience in those areas and made learning easier.Â
Skills carry over. They intersect and connect in ways that are sometimes unexpected. Nothing is ever lost, experience is never a waste of time or worthless or stupid. Allow your focus to wander, reflect on what you learn, and consider how you can keep using it in other aspects of your life. Stop telling people their interests arenât worth their time.Â
A lot of my friends give me shit when I get excited about something, because they know I go in 3-year cycles and by year 4, Iâm going to be off to something new. Why bother, they ask. Itâs just temporary, they remind me.
You can learn a lot in 3 years. You can accomplish a lot in 3 years. And you can tap back into that experience (and the skills and the materials) for the rest of your life. So I donât knit as much as I did a few years ago and Iâve got huge bags of yarn? Hey, I just heard about this thing called kumihimo, and itâs really cool, and all you need is a disc - and a boatload of yarn. Sweet!
Some of my friends have been giving me this âwhy bother, you donât really care, youâre only going to wander awayâ attitude for around 30 years. Bite me; thatâs 10 whole new things Iâve done and learned.
I reblog this every time I see it, because itâs one of lifeâs hardest lessons.
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