Rest in Peace Elijah Cummings, one of the most powerful African American voices in politics. Thank you for your service.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

roma★
tumblr dot com
i don't do bad sauce passes

Product Placement

JVL
Keni

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

No title available
Cosimo Galluzzi
h
$LAYYYTER
we're not kids anymore.
KIROKAZE

Kaledo Art
One Nice Bug Per Day
Peter Solarz
YOU ARE THE REASON
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
No title available
seen from United States
seen from New Zealand

seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from Canada

seen from France

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from South Africa

seen from Malaysia

seen from Israel
@blarevoyancy
Rest in Peace Elijah Cummings, one of the most powerful African American voices in politics. Thank you for your service.
🐏 aries full moon affirmations 🐏
i break free from the shackles that once held me back. there is no limit to my inner-power. i have everything i need in order to move forward. my old situations are left behind me. i move forward from old situations and feelings in an act of self-preservation and love. i am strong, powerful and courageous. i understand that the universe has my back. i put my trust and faith in my guardian angels. i can do anything i put my mind to. the world rewards me for my courage. i hold my ground in tough times. ultimately, everything works out for me in the end. i am grateful for everything past and present.
i am loved and well taken care of
“I’m high maintenance a little bit but not in a, not in a negative way I just like extremely expensive things“.
Amber Rose is credited on Drake`s album “Views” for providing a line for his song “Faithful”.
where! has! my! passion! gone! I had it abundantly when I was a child, and I must have dropped it along the way, but I cannot figure where!
oh hey folks fun update, i found my passion again? i just had to find my right outlet, get to a place where I have aspirations, dispel apathy and pursue what I love, it’s all good and swell!
reblog this to find the right outlet, get to a place where you have aspirations, dispel apathy and pursue what you love, and rediscover your passion.
i wrote half an essay in 20mins today when it’s not even due for another 4 weeks, reblog this to have a productivity lightning bolt strike you like it did me today
I hope all of yall find $20 on the ground tomorrow.
And I mean that.
I found a MTA/PATH card $45 attached to my LIRR ticket. Yes!
“Did I say that she was beautiful? I was wrong. Beauty is too tame a notion; it evokes only faces in magazines. A lovely eloquence, a calming symmetry; none of that describes this woman’s face. So perhaps I should assume I cannot do it justice with words. Suffice it to say that it would break your heart to see her; and it would mend what was broken in the same moment; and you would be twice what you’d been before.”
— Clive Barker
Here’s a Μάτι (“Evil Eye”) charm for your dash to help keep the bad energy at bay
Sol Koroleva 𝓈𝒽𝑒𝓇 @soldatsot https://twitter.com/soldatsot/status/1123606012060098561
So there’s a post going around that mentions that most of us can’t name any Native American intellectuals and I didnt want to derail it (because it went some other places after that) so I’m making my own post
If you would like to become familiar with a Native American intellectual and activist, Kim TallBear is really cool. She’s a Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate professor and researcher based in Alberta. She specializes in the intersection between science and technology and culture, usually specifically pertaining to Native Americans. I read a paper of hers for a class and was so into it that I sought out a couple others on my own. Her writing style is really engaging and she’s generally unapologetic and just very cool. Her work in recent years has involved a lot of attention to how genetic ancestry testing is screwing over Native Americans. And she’s on Twitter!
She’s really cool and if you want to familiarize yourself with Native American scientist/intellectual/activists id recommend checking her out, especially if you’re into anthropology!
Mikael Chukwuma Owunna, a queer Nigerian-Swedish artist raised in Pittsburgh, has spent the past two and a half years photographing Black men and women for a series titled Infinite Essence. Hand-painted using fluorescent paints and photographed in complete darkness, Owunna’s subjects are illuminated by a flash outfitted with a UV filter, which turns their nude bodies into glowing celestial figures.
Owunna tells Colossal that the series was his response to the frequent images and videos of Black people being killed by those sworn to protect them: the police. The photographer’s friends, family members, dancers, and one person he connected with on Instagram serve as models for the project, which is named after an idea from his Igbo heritage. “All of our individual spirits are just one ray of the infinite essence of the sun,” Owunna explains. “By transcending the visible spectrum, I work to illuminate a world beyond our visible structures of racism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia where the black body is free.”
And if the body were not the soul, what is the soul?
The pink and gold one is one of my best friends!!!! Ahhhhhhh!!!!
Did you know that modern C sections were invented by African women— centuries before they were standard elsewhere?
Midwives and surgeons living around Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria perfected the procedure hundreds of years ago. When a baby couldn’t be delivered vaginally, these healers sedated the laboring mother using large amounts of banana wine. They tied the mother to the bed for safety, sterilized a knife using heat, and made the incision, acting quickly as a team to prevent excessive blood loss or the accidental cutting of other organs. The combination of sterile, sharp equipment and sedation made the procedure surprisingly calm and comfortable for the mother.
After the baby was delivered, antiseptic tinctures and salves were used to clean the area and stitches were applied. Women rarely developed infections, shock, or excessive blood loss after a cesarean section and the most common problem reported was that it took longer for the mother’s milk to come in (an issue that was solved with friends and relatives who would nurse the baby instead).
In Uganda, C sections were normally performed by a team of male healers, but in Tanzania and DRC, they were typically done by female midwives.
The majority of women and babies survived this, and when questioned about it by European colonists in the mid-1800s, many people in Uganda and Tanzania indicated that the procedure had been performed routinely since time immemorial.
This was at a time when Europeans had only barely started to figure out that they should wash their hands before performing surgery, when nearly half of European and US women died in childbirth, and when nearly 100% of European women died if a C section was performed.
Detailed explanations of Ugandan C-sections were published globally in scholarly journals by the 1880s and helped the rest of the world learn how to save mothers and babies with minimal complications.
So if you’re one of the people who wouldn’t be alive today without a C-section, you have Ugandan surgeons and Tanzanian and Congolese midwives to thank for their contributions to medical science.
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/cesarean/part2.html
Thank you, my sisters.
Currently reading a book about the beginning of germ theory and antiseptic technique and I wish this info was in there. I’d like to know more.
Thank you 🙏🏾
Night Comes On (2018) dir. Jordana Spiro
I wish I could pin this
malachite bathroom
Ig: @thesagegoddess