Rina Sawayama by Ivan Ruberto for i-D Online June 2018
styofa doing anything
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

★
i don't do bad sauce passes
Claire Keane
DEAR READER
NASA

titsay
Show & Tell
Today's Document
todays bird
Jules of Nature
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
Cosimo Galluzzi
cherry valley forever
Sweet Seals For You, Always
KIROKAZE
occasionally subtle
Three Goblin Art

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@cindycorns
Rina Sawayama by Ivan Ruberto for i-D Online June 2018
越南人民必胜
The people of Vietnam must be victorious
“I love you, my darling. Try to be cheery when I come back (but I love you when you’re low, too).”
Letters to Vera, Vladimir Nabokov
Louise Bourgeois - Insomnia (1995)
things i needed to hear (as conversation hearts)
bag details @ gcds ss2020
evary cat is a little celebrity 2 me
“Instead of seeing yourself as an empty vessel who is filled up, drop by drop, with your achievements, you need to begin to recognize your intrinsic worth as a human being. This means that you begin to entertain the idea that you are already enough just the way you are. You do not need to achieve anything in order to be of value. Your inner critic would have you believe that you have no intrinsic value, that we are born empty with only the potential for becoming someone worthwhile. But you were born with a tremendous amount of goodness, wisdom, and strength.”
— Beverly Engel. Healing Your Emotional Self: A Powerful Program to Help You Raise Your Self-Esteem, Quiet Your Inner Critic, and Overcome Your Shame (via weltenwellen)
Faerie Haven by Devajoy Gouss and Julie Jumper from Faerie Magazine
Rico Nasty
“To see clearly and without flinching, without turning away,”
— Margaret Atwood, from Notes Towards A Poem That Can Never Be Written (V) in “Selected Poems II: 1976-1986″ (via kehrouac)
“Anger is a signal, and one worth listening to. Our anger may be a message that we are being hurt, that our rights are being violated, that our needs or wants are not being adequately met, or simply that something is not right. Our anger may tell us that we are not addressing an important emotional issue in our lives, or that too much of our self–our belief, values, desires, or ambitions–is being compromised in a relationship. Our anger may be a signal that we are doing more and giving more than we can comfortably do or give. Or our anger may warn us that others are doing too much for us, at the expense of our own competence and growth. Just as physical pain tells us to take our hand off the hot stove, the pain of our anger preserves the very integrity of our self. Our anger can motivate us to say “no” to the ways in which we are defined by others and “yes” to the dictates of our inner self."
-Harriet Lerner, The Dance of Anger
“The trees you planted in childhood have grown too heavy. You cannot bring them along. Give yourselves to the air, to what you cannot hold.”
— Rainer Maria Rilke, “Part One IV,” from Sonnets to Orpheus (via willowingsleep)