I think now not of what you may deserve, but what might make you happy. You, I may yet redeem.
KIROKAZE
wallacepolsom
One Nice Bug Per Day
Fai_Ryy

if i look back, i am lost
Game of Thrones Daily
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ojovivo

PR's Tumblrdome
macklin celebrini has autism
noise dept.

Love Begins

#extradirty

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Discoholic 🪩

gracie abrams
we're not kids anymore.

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tannertan36
taylor price
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@castlesmade-ofsand
I think now not of what you may deserve, but what might make you happy. You, I may yet redeem.
PHIA SABAN as HELAENA TARGARYEN HOUSE OF THE DRAGON // 3.02 Queen's Landing
no one coming to save you also implies no one is coming to stop you!
"Dodge this."
Livin la penis smoka
all kawaii on the western front
SEX AND THE CITY — 3.13
via fkatwigs on instagram
by Émile Vernon
and yep, you guessed it: a dark wind blows
Interacting galaxies NGC 4038 and NGC 4039 in the Corvus constellation
“At the same time, I believe that the argument about boredom has to be somewhat nuanced. It is certainly true that one could feel almost nostalgic for Boredom 1.0. The dreary void of Sundays, the night hours after television stopped broadcasting, even the endless dragging minutes waiting in queues or for public transport: for anyone who has a smartphone, this empty time has now been effectively eliminated. In the intensive, 24/7 environment of capitalist cyberspace, the brain is no longer allowed any time to idle; instead, it is inundated with a seamless flow of low-level stimulus.”
Yet boredom was ambivalent; it wasn’t simply a negative feeling that one simply wanted rid of. For punk, the vacancy of boredom was a challenge, an injunction and an opportunity: if we are bored, then it is for us to produce something that will fill up the space. Yet, it is through this demand for participation that capitalism has neutralised boredom. Now, rather than imposing a pacifying spectacle on us, capitalist corporations go out of their way to invite us to interact, to generate our own content, to join the debate. There is now neither an excuse nor an opportunity to be bored.
(…)
Perhaps the feeling most characteristic of our current moment is a mixture of boredom and compulsion. Even though we recognise that they are boring, we nevertheless feel compelled to do yet another Facebook quiz, to read yet another Buzzfeed list, to click on some celebrity gossip about someone we don’t even remotely care about. We endlessly move among the boring, but our nervous systems are so overstimulated that we never have the luxury of feeling bored. No one is bored, everything is boring.”
Mark Fisher, No One Is Bored, Everything Is Boring