AnasAbdin
trying on a metaphor
d e v o n
i don't do bad sauce passes

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đȘŒ

shark vs the universe
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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izzy's playlists!
Today's Document

Janaina Medeiros

romaâ

Origami Around

Discoholic đȘ©

blake kathryn

if i look back, i am lost
Not today Justin
todays bird
YOU ARE THE REASON

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@danigurl-mag
Parachutgirl
https://iglovequotes.net/
Jon Snow and Ghost - 1x01/8x06
Goodnight Reddit!
via @extramadness
why do these men care what women do with their bodies? i donât care what y'all do with your droopy-ass balls.
leslie jones (via novafulseavey)
Models of All Sizes Stage Time Square Takeover to Challenge Victoria Secretâs Beauty Standards
Remember that sometimes not getting what you want is a wonderful stroke of luck.
Dalai Lama (via sydneyajallen)
Yes, I was infatuated with you. I am, still. No one has ever heightened such a keen capacity of physical sensation in me. I cut you out because I couldnât stand being a passing fancy. Before I give my body, I must give my mind, my dreams. And you werenât having any of those.
Sylvia Plath (via quotemadness)
pools // glass animals
If you look back only at your mistakes, youâd think you were an idiot. If you look back only at your wiser choices, youâd think you were infallible. But if you look back on everything, you realize youâre a human being who has been through a lot, grown a lot, is always still learning, and improving as time goes by.
Doe Zantamata (via onlinecounsellingcollege)
The Art of Healing Part IV: Move in Space
She was changed after Cuba.Â
Something about the lack of cell reception allowed her own vibration to increase. It warmed her and rose to a dull hum in her earsâthat and the constant sound of LOUD!Â
Damn, Cuba was loud. Music everywhere; scratchy love songs blaring from 1952 Chevrolets; Cubaton on mindless repeat in every restaurant; Spanish classics blurted from an ancient trumpet by a leathery man with round cheeks. Sound followed you with every footstep and mixed in the heavy breeze of the Gulf with the constant weight of diesel and dust.Â
It was dizzying. It wasâŠÂ
Intoxicating.Â
Small pleasures; dollar Cristal beers full with amber, not thin and heartless like their cheap American counterparts. A five dollar bottle of Havana Club to swing around your newfound group of friends. (The girls always mixed it with Coke, which was sweeter there.) Thick tobacco on the tongue of a cat call:Â
âAh! Que lindaâŠâÂ
You met deep brown eyes in mutual acknowledgement. Yes, I am woman, you are man, and in the natural order of things we wouldâŠ
It was all so palpably out in the open. No need to hide your small, swelling frame. This is not the place for modesty. You, here, on rapturous display and in full force. You must give everything it is that youâve got because the world around is unforgiving. And tomorrow is a distant place.Â
(âAmericans, you pay for your expensive healthcare and schooling out of pocket, yes. But here in Cuba, we pay for these things with our lives.â She had been told not to talk of politics, but she could always listen.)Â
Nothing made sense but night.Â
The days were long and night came suddenly. Hit you hard. The moon is out ânow you find a place to dance. Warmed with rum she roamed the streets, fumbling through Spanish like someone trying to see in the dark; feeling for familiar words, stubbing a toe trying to conjugate a verb in past tense. No, she was bound to speak only in the present.Â
Metaphoric.Â
But on the lips of othersâoh the delicious intercourse of oral expression! Like a Spanish she had never heard beforeâsoft, round words sagging with sweat. She heard it for days after returning, that Spanish was everywhere. Coming from the mouths of Asian undergrads, and Middle Eastern deli clerks, and WASPY stroller pushers. She responded to the Heights Falafel waiter in kind, and he looked puzzled and continued in English.Â
Of course the Spanish hadnât followed her back to Brooklyn. She was hearing things. Her ear had momentarily been trained to a different tune, a deeper tune, and had to now readjust to the harsh, nasal assertions of New York.
And maybe it all only felt like paradise because she left; could leave. Unlike so many there. (For even Utopia darkens when one is confined.) Having settled back into her normal life she had to ask herself, had Cuba even happened? If not for the sunburnt skin and stream of photos sheâd have thought not.Â
It felt so distant, so far away, so unimaginable now. Like⊠the other thing. She had forgotten all about it. It too felt unreal. Like some distant time in an unfamiliar place. But unlike Cuba, she had absolutely no desire to return. Â
Sometimes to move on you have to actually move. Move through space. Move across the earth. Move physically elsewhere. Move your body, make it sweat, make it taste new things and new people and the saltwater of the various seas.Â
Hell,
Make it learn a new damn language.Â
People fall in love with how someone makes them feel and call that love, I fell in love with you, for you.
M.I. (via wnq-writers)