The noble that I hate

Product Placement
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

shark vs the universe
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Love Begins
taylor price
No title available
i don't do bad sauce passes
Sade Olutola

roma★

blake kathryn
h
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Kiana Khansmith
occasionally subtle
tumblr dot com
sheepfilms

@theartofmadeline

#extradirty

Origami Around
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore

seen from Argentina

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
@aubergenial
The noble that I hate
Hélène Béland (Canadian, 1949) - Un Capteur de Lumière (Light Catcher) (2012)
This is an anti-despair checkpoint! You must share something you're looking forward to before scrolling on.
one of the most difficult things about deciding you want to write a fictional doctor (of the non-who variety) is writing actual medical scenes. we all know that medical dramas are notoriously cliched, and i for one fully understand how unimportant factual accuracy can be to the emotional importance of a scene. sometimes you don’t have to get it write for your story to work. i have a disclaimer on my blog that i myself am just a layman, but i like to at least know what i’m writing about! in the interest of being as accurate as i can, i would like to spread that love around. here’s a list of medical fiction/fantasy writing resources i’ve found!
surgeonsblog
article i found this from^ (w/even more resources)
redwoods medical edge
^article where i found that
this article is short/basic/doesn’t link anywhere else, but i found it very helpful anyway
supposed to be good but to me, seemed difficult to navigate. (dp lyle)
this on the otherhand, is the jackpot (novelmalpractice)
tumblr blog centered around this topic
this is more about the common pitfalls/anachronisms of medical fiction but still helpful
writing medical scenes: useful links by paul anthony shortt
the last one im going to include is an article by a doctor about common mistakes in popular medical shows, i liked this one
tagging who liked the interest check on this @hesjustcarter @prodigiumamare @frankengeeks
one of the guys in the kitchen at work got called irritating and replied “I am not irritating. You just find me irritating. There are many people who love me.” I think we should all adopt his attitude
Aleen Sabbagh
advice i think we should tell children is that when adults say stuff like ‘now that i’m an adult i get really excited about stuff like coffee tables and bathrooms and rugs etc’ they don’t mean ‘and now i don’t care about blorbo and squimbus from my childhood tv shows anymore’ bc your average adult still loves all the same pop culture stuff they always did; they just have a greater appreciation for the mundane as well. growing up just means you can enjoy life twice as much now. you can get really excited about a new stuffed animal AND about a new kitchen sponge. peace and love
You get bigger so you can store even MORE love and appreciation for the world inside of you
It means you'll be at the antique mall looking at a coffee table and thinking "blorbo and Squimbus would LOVE this coffee table"
Aleen Sabbagh
incredible
i bring a "technically i could do this tomorrow" energy to things that tomorrow me really resents
It is wild talking to people online where you'll be like "Hey, you're kind of being an ass," and they'll rant about how as a member of a marginalized community... oppression and violence... societal forces... lack of opportunity... and it's like "Ok, people who share some demographic with you are pushed into homelessness and sex work but they are not being assholes online. You are a grad student at Reed who works part-time as a paralegal and you are a real dick."
Zuko
don’t care didn’t ask + you’ve projected onto this character to the point that your characterisation is unrecognisable to the source material
people who cant work deserve to have sex and fine foods and drugs and several libraries of games and movies and any media they want. people who cant work deserve to live
- joyce byers, will you spend the rest of your life with a tired, grumpy, stubborn old man, who loves you very much? - yes. i will.
"She's cooking tea."
I hope I'm not just a mutual to you, but someone you want to bring up in irl conversation so you have to awkwardly and cryptically say "my friend..." and refuse to elaborate on my origins or the origins of our friendships