
Product Placement
occasionally subtle

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Sade Olutola
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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izzy's playlists!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

oozey mess
tumblr dot com

if i look back, i am lost

roma★

#extradirty

Love Begins

shark vs the universe
Noah Kahan
One Nice Bug Per Day
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🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
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@coponder
““Well,” you say, “assume that I am braced for the battle. Assume that I have carefully weighed and comprehended your ponderous remarks, how do I begin?” Dear sir, you simply begin. There is no magic method of beginning. If a man standing on the edge of a swimming-bath and wanting to jump into the cold water should ask you, “How do I begin to jump?” you would thereby reply, “Just jump. Take hold of your nerves, and jump.” As I have previously said, the chief beauty about the constant supply of time is that you cannot waste it in advance. The next year, the next day, the next hour are lying ready for you, as perfect, as unspoilt, as if you had never wasted or misapplied a single moment in all your career. Which fact is very gratifying and reassuring. You can turn over a new leaf every hour if you choose. Therefore no object is served in waiting till next week, or even until tomorrow. You may fancy that the water will be warmer next week. It won’t. It will be colder.”
— Arnold Bennett, How To Live On 24 Hours a Day
The idea of english as a mother tongue is so strange to me, in my head english is how ppl communicate when there's no way in common to communicate, so english as a mother tongue sounds a bit like idk email as a mother tongue ykwim? Like english to me feels like the stuff that's used to fill the empty spaces between languages
Ok English is my native language and unfortunatly the only one I know yet, but this reminds me so much of that passage in Flights by Olga Tokarczuk
Don't worry if your life is in chaos, you are like the universe itself and its law of entropy. もの久保 on Pivix
Greatness is a transitory experience. It is never consistent. It depends in part upon the myth-making imagination of humankind. The person who experiences greatness must have a feeling for the myth he is in.
Finally, society managed to combine Morphology (linguistics) and Morphology (biology)
what it feels like to play pokemon ruby and sapphire on max volume
Patterns
Jaakko Pallasvuo
do u guys think clarke wouldve said i love you too if lexa hadn’t choked down the “thats why i love you”
im so mad replies ate my thing before i was done.
what i was gonna say it. what if lexa had said it. what if she hadn’t caught herself in time and it had slipped out and she’d honestly looked so ashamed and sorry and guilty at putting clarke on the spot like that. honestly looking as though she’d like nothing more than for a hole to open up in the floor and swallow her whole. bracing herself for the moment when clarke dismisses her. when clarke rebukes her. looking down. looking away. looking anywhere but at clarke, blood running cold with dread in her veins, cheeks cherry red in her mortification.
do u you think, that when clarke stepped closer and took her face in her hands to coax her to meet her gaze, lexa would have started to cry? when clarke “hey, no, lexa stop, it’s okay,” she would have shaken her head because how awful of her to say it out loud. after everything she’s done. how unfair of her to put that out in the open.
i mean. clarke knew. in a way. she knew but she didn’t know and when lexa said it, it was not unlike someone turning on a light in a dark room. it was not unlike her first breath of fresh air. her second first breath of fresh air. lexa loves her, and everything makes sense.
do u think she would have taken lexa’s face in her hands and thumbed away the tears? tipped her head back up? do u think, “it’s okay. you’re okay. i love you too.”
If theyd actually said those words prior and shit happened the way it did, nothing couldve stopped me from flying to la and banging pots and pans in front of jasons house
baby meeting cat for the first time
Cat person right there.
Look at that tiny rectangle.
thsi is one of the top 3 most important videos i’ve ever seen
I react to any and all cats in this exact same way, every time
This really warmed my heart and made me smile.
Always reblog flapping starfish baby
But also they’ve recently uploaded an update!
[the speaker is an older white man in a grey shirt with a kind voice]
Well, hello fellow hunker-downers. Coming to you high on half an Ambien. (giggling) My doctor prescribes ten milligrams when I can’t sleep. I get so wound up over all this! But I only take a half of it otherwise I eat everything in the house.
But look. [holds up a brown journal with a clasp] Another way I calm down is [clasp unopens] is I write … in my journal … [holds up the open journal, which has notes and pictures of flowers and cute animals] And I put little, [turns the page to show off more stickers that include pug dogs] stickers, I (giggling) decorate!
I’m a high school cheerleader stuck in a sixty-five-year-old male body. My Violette stickers came today [holds up a sheet of fruit and flower stickers]. Look! Aren’t they beautiful? [holds up more stickers of old-timey portraits of children] I think I fell out of the womb and landed in my mother’s high heels.
[holds up stickers of cats] I just like things pretty. I think that’s why homosexuals were put on this earth, (emphatically) just to make things pretty. [holds up stickers of rabbits] Rabbits~
[end transcription]
🔥 psychedelic drugs
Obviously unethical as hell, not to mention impossible because tolerance is a thing, but I wonder what’d happen if you raised ten to twenty kids on a low-dose LSD drip. How’d they interpret the world? How’d they think? How would they respond to being taken off of it for a while?
Repeatedly cycling them through small doses of several hallucinogens that don’t produce cross-tolerance: still ethically horrifying, most likely possible given relatively unconstrained resources. Though there would be other complications, like the fact that most hallucinogens are also stimulants, so you’d need them to be off at least some of the time so they could sleep. Still, it would be interesting even just to see how people who had spent their whole lives with their perception and experience substantially and routinely altered a good portion of the time developed psychologically.
Consider: Children’s brains are already pretty close to being on LSD all the time anyway. I distinctly recall the pictures on the walls of my room warping and melting and moving when I was three or four; I had no sense of time, barely a sense of place outside of my immediate experience. If LSD melts the sense-making structures of the adult brain so they can re-form (see: Friston’s REBUS paper & the concept of neural annealing), children’s brains are already in a state of liquid meaning-goo.
I used to start my day with a few hours of translating, but my clients have all temporarily stopped their activity, so I found a new project in order to keep my ritual going (the hardest thing about rituals is starting them…) My grandparents both wrote journals of their experience in WWII, and I started translating them for my English cousins who are interested in reading them. I have to say, I rolled my eyes at my president’s “We are at war” speech, yet I am struck by the many similarities I am finding with the current situation:
the “eeriness of empty city streets”, the curfews, the panic buying, the movie theatres closing, the inability to travel to be with family, or even to walk in the street without a written attestation (Ausweis)
French people from the cities being asked by the government to go help farmers with harvest due to a shortage of seasonal labour, just like we are seeing now
(Of course the situation was incomparably worse—I’m not equating the two, I just didn’t expect to find all these parallels)
The most striking similarity is in the way they feel about the events: they both write about how the uncertainty of these times produces a strange mixture of stress and morbid fascination. My grandmother describes the first time she saw the Nazi flag flying above the City Hall, saying she felt “distress, and an incongruous curiosity—how will all of this end?” My grandfather, writing about the dangerous process of changing his identity and obtaining fake documentation to avoid being deported to Germany, says “Tout cela est très éprouvant pour les nerfs. Malgré tout… quelle année intéressante nous traversons.” (“This is all very nerve-wracking. Nevertheless, what an interesting year we are living through.”)
My grandmother writes about how stunned she would feel if “myself from not so very long ago” could get a glimpse of her current life: all of her projects frozen in time, her studies interrupted (“I wish I had been able to finish the year—they’ve had such trouble organising the classes and exams, they gave the Baccalauréat almost to everybody!”), her wedding cancelled, “I am now hiding people in my basement”, and her fiancé, “formerly fond of insect collecting”, now “keeps himself busy planting bombs on railway tracks” to stop freight trains going to Germany.
(She uses a lot of breezy euphemisms; at one point she briefly mentions being interrogated by Nazis re: her fiancé travelling to the ‘forbidden zone’ then starts the next paragraph with “Despite this contretemps—” and moves on to how she still had time to fill her purse with dead leaves on the Champs Elysées so she could light the stove.)
She writes about the difficulty of getting accurate information amidst all the contradictory news sources (Resistance radio broadcasts, rumours around her, German propaganda, lies from her own government), and about how unsettling it feels “quand la vie ne va plus de soi” (“when life no longer goes without saying”)
I saw French people on twitter joking about how “after coronavirus, we won’t bring back cheek-kissing, okay?” and was amused to find an entry in my grandmother’s journal saying in the middle of all this turmoil, she & her fiancé have started using the informal “you” with each other, and she hopes that when the war is over, French society won’t go back to expecting people to use “vous” until marriage.
The very beginning of the war, around her 19th birthday, also presents interesting parallels: she is frustrated with her mother who is planning a holiday trip and acting like nothing serious is going on, and is simultaneously still confused about “the events” and wondering if she is misjudging their severity
In April 1944, as she finally hopes to see “this nightmare end soon”, she speculates on what aspect the future post-crisis society will take, when will normal life resume and what will ‘normal’ be? Then she says making conjectures is futile for the time being because “we cannot measure the depth of a derangement that is still under way.”
One last arresting part, in 1942: “Ce que j’ignorais quant aux calamités et bouleversements est que, lorsqu’on les vit soi-même, le temps passe très lentement.” (“What I didn’t know about life-altering disasters is that, when you are living them, time goes by very slowly.”)
we cannot measure the depth of a derangement that is still under way
Woke up from an extremely disorienting nap and my first thought was 'prime numbers are the vowels of the integers' and now im hyperventilating