It’s me and my Kodak PIXPRO FZ55 against the world.
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
art blog(derogatory)
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Product Placement
KIROKAZE
Claire Keane
hello vonnie
Sade Olutola
Not today Justin
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines
RMH
NASA

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Kiana Khansmith
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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@crippledclaire
It’s me and my Kodak PIXPRO FZ55 against the world.
There are two wolves inside u. One wants to move to the biggest city ever and party and the other wants to live in a small town in the mountains and be a hick
if your biggest accomplishment lately has been just keeping yourself alive, that is enough to be proud of
From Hanoi, with love.
Beautiful Cambodia, the Kingdom of Wonder.
Thailand, through the lens of my Kodak PIXPRO FZ55.
I’m definitely getting there.
My side quests. 💗
'lilacs in a window,' oil on canvas, mary cassett, american c. 1880-83.
Eugène Samuel Grasset (Swiss, 1845-1917) - Trois Femmes et Trois Loups (Three Women and Three Wolves) (ca. 1900)
I just realized that I’m on Tumblr, which means I can literally post anything my heart desires.
Everything changed the day Amira was born. The world outside was collapsing — bombs, dust, screams, and fear. Yet inside a small room, by the dim light of a single candle, a new life began. While others were running for shelter, I was holding my newborn daughter, trembling, crying, trying to believe that something so pure could still exist in a place like Gaza. I named her Amira, because I wanted her to feel like a child of life —not a child of war.
A year has passed since that night, but nothing has really changed Our house is still rubble, our streets still carry the smell of smoke, and the sky still echoes with sounds that make Amira flinch in her sleep. She has just turned one. She’s learning to walk, holding my finger with her tiny hand, laughing at the smallest things — as if she doesn’t see the destruction around her. She doesn’t know the word “loss.” She never met her father, but when she smiles, I see him there. Sometimes I watch her sleeping, and I wonder what kind of world she will grow up in — whether she will ever know what peace feels like, what home smells like. And yet, when she opens her eyes in the morning and says “mama,” everything becomes bearable again. I want to rebuild our home. Not just for the walls — but for her future. For Amira to have a small room, a safe place to dream, a life that belongs to her, not to war. I’m not asking for much. Only for a chance to give her a beginning filled with warmth instead of fear
My name is Saja. I am a mother, a wife, and just one of many women in Gaza trying to hold on — to hope, to my family, and to a life that no
A Mother’s Message
To everyone reading this — thank you for listening to our story. Your kindness means more than words. Every share, every message, every donation — it all helps me rebuild not just a house, but a future for Amira. From the heart of Gaza, from a mother learning to hope again — we will live. And I will make sure my daughter grows up in a world that knows love more than war.
Oh, sweet Fancy! let her loose;
Every thing is spoilt by use:
Where's the cheek that doth not fade,
Too much gaz'd at? Where's the maid
Whose lip mature is ever new?
— John Keats