remember to drink lots of water, because your insides are a swampy bog and a water shortage would affect the local frog population
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Claire Keane
Xuebing Du
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
KIROKAZE

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occasionally subtle

if i look back, i am lost

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Discoholic 🪩

pixel skylines

★
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
will byers stan first human second

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JVL
hello vonnie
wallacepolsom

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@cedricdigglory
remember to drink lots of water, because your insides are a swampy bog and a water shortage would affect the local frog population
“I liked Hell, I liked to go there alone relieved to lie in the wreckage, ruined, physically undone. The worst had happened. What else could hurt me (…)”
— Marie Howe, from Magdalene: The Addict in “Magdalene: Poems” (via adrasteiax)
Russia during the 1990s by Lise Sarfati (x)
Disillusionment
Due to personal reasons I’ll be going feral
Derry Girls | 1x03
And in the depths of music, I didn’t find the answer, And again there was silence, and again the ghost of summer.
Anna Akhmatova, from The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova; “Stravinsky’s “Jeremiah”” (via horrorshow)
the WHAT now ?
GUILLERMO STOP
IT’S TOO MUCH
“One day there was an anonymous present sitting on my doorstep—Volume One of Capital by Karl Marx, in a brown paper bag. A joke? Serious? And who had sent it? I never found out. Late that night, naked in bed, I leafed through it. The beginning was impenetrable, I couldn’t understand it, but when I came to the part about the lives of the workers—the coal miners, the child laborers—I could feel myself suddenly breathing more slowly. How angry he was. Page after page. Then I turned back to an earlier section, and I came to a phrase that I’d heard before, a strange, upsetting, sort of ugly phrase: this was the section on “commodity fetishism,” “the fetishism of commodities.” I wanted to understand that weird-sounding phrase, but I could tell that, to understand it, your whole life would probably have to change. His explanation was very elusive. He used the example that people say, “Twenty yards of linen are worth two pounds.” People say that about every thing that it has a certain value. This is worth that. This coat, this sweater, this cup of coffee: each thing worth some quantity of money, or some number of other things—one coat, worth three sweaters, or so much money—as if that coat, suddenly appearing on the earth, contained somewhere inside itself an amount of value, like an inner soul, as if the coat were a fetish, a physical object that contains a living spirit. But what really determines the value of a coat? The coat’s price comes from its history, the history of all the people involved in making it and selling it and all the particular relationships they had. And if we buy the coat, we, too, form relationships with all those people, and yet we hide those relationships from our own awareness by pretending we live in a world where coats have no history but just fall down from heaven with prices marked inside. “I like this coat,” we say, “It’s not expensive,” as if that were a fact about the coat and not the end of a story about all the people who made it and sold it, “I like the pictures in this magazine.”A naked woman leans over a fence. A man buys a magazine and stares at her picture. The destinies of these two are linked. The man has paid the woman to take off her clothes, to lean over the fence. The photograph contains its history—the moment the woman unbuttoned her shirt, how she felt, what the photographer said. The price of the magazine is a code that describes the relationships between all these people—the woman, the man, the publisher, the photographer—who commanded, who obeyed. The cup of coffee contains the history of the peasants who picked the beans, how some of them fainted in the heat of the sun, some were beaten, some were kicked.For two days I could see the fetishism of commodities everywhere around me. It was a strange feeling. Then on the third day I lost it, it was gone, I couldn’t see it anymore.”
—
Wallace Shawn, The Fever
(To understand it, your whole life would probably have to change.)
Gregorian monks singing “Boulevard of Broken Dreams.”
EVERYONE STOP WHAT YOU’RE DOING AND LISTEN TO THIS RIGHT FUCKING NOW
Why is this a thing that exists?
THIS IS BEAUTIFUL
“on the boooooolovarrrd of brooookennnn dreeeemmsss”
I turned this on and at that moment my roommate opened the curtains, and I immediately had this epic video in my head of us cleaning our apartment, and raising a castle around it with hammers and magic.
I’ve introduced so many people to Gregorian: the best way to do it is to slip it into a normal playlist.
This is the soundtrack of an angel that was thrown out of heaven unjustly and is existing on earth, and being tracked by an adversary, while an angel friend is preparing to come rescue him.
I. LOVE. THIS.
for all intents and purposes
i am NOT real
i do NOT have a legal name
i do NOT have a “face”
Do Not Think About Me
I Am Not A Concept
“…she did not allow herself tears. When she did cry, she would explain her tears in this way: ‘I am not weeping, I am bursting with rage.’”
— Gabriella Fiori, from Simone Weil: An Intellectual Biography
epigraph to On Sympathy by Sophie Ratcliffe
To be a poet is to surface plainly // from the wound of sleep.
Kiki Petrosino, from “Cygnus Cygnus,” Hymn for the Black Terrific (via lifeinpoetry)