IMG_1176 by Rebuilding Together NYC
dirt enthusiast
Today's Document
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
hello vonnie
cherry valley forever

ellievsbear

#extradirty
One Nice Bug Per Day
Show & Tell

JVL
Keni
almost home
sheepfilms

if i look back, i am lost
Three Goblin Art
Stranger Things

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
styofa doing anything
i don't do bad sauce passes
seen from Dominican Republic

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from France
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seen from Peru

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from T1

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from T1
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@danylandy
IMG_1176 by Rebuilding Together NYC
The Glass House
Ở SG có 1 quán thế này
Goals
Hillary Clinton’s 1992 Wellesley College commencement address.
Sunshine all the time makes a desert.
Arab proverb
These simple words are so profound & thought provoking. Storms make roots deepen. Rain brings growth.
(via amccalltoarms)
by Anne Emond
Perfect.
This is the first time my team has lived together in one space, and for the most part it's been really great! We have team dinners together and a fun family night once a week on Thursdays where every week a different person chooses an activity based on something they want to share with the team. It's been really wonderful continuing to get to know each other in this way. The most difficult thing about living together however is making meals together since our diets are all so different. 7 out of the 9 people on our team eat meat and then Britt eats vegan and I'm mostly vegetarian, except when I'm not. I took on the extremely challenging task of being our teams “Food POC”...essentially I create the shopping list based on everyone's needs, check inventory every week before grocery shopping to see what we need more of, facilitate discussion on what meals we plan to make, who will cook, who will clean, and then I recreate the shopping list based on meals we plan. Every week. And with 9 people it's no east task. I even created a fucking survey to make sure everyone's needs were being met. It's definitely been a struggle but we're getting there. Why the fuck would I ever want to take on this role you may ask...well, I've cooked for large groups of people before and I am the only advocate for Britt's vegan diet on our team. So if I didn't step up, she wouldn't be getting what she needs to stay sane. I've spent a lot of time (probably too much time) trying to make everyone happy, which I'm realizing is impossible and I should probably stop putting my energy into it. Tonight I helped make dinner with Chris and then when the grocery shoppers came back I helped put bags away. I immediately realized that they had not gotten hummus, the one main protein me and Britt eat. They also got a huge container of tomato sauce...with meat in it...because it is so gosh darn hard to get tomato sauce that only has tomatoes in it. I brought it up during dinner and immediately get attacked by all the meat eaters saying that hummus is expensive and their meat needs aren't being met. Oh, I'm sorry, but I'm pretty sure the freezer is full of chicken and beef...in fact there's so much I could barely fit it in the freezer. And you can't get one small container of hummus? So there me and Britt are...sitting at the table being attacked for how pricey almond milk and hummus are...and now they want to make these specialty items that we have to buy ourselves. Thanks guys, y'all really make me feel great for trying to accommodate you're every fucking wish.
Last few days in Providence before starting Round 2...location still yet to be determined.
I haven't written since leaving Philly and starting Round 2 in Providence, Rhode Island...there is just so much to say! From now on I am challenging myself to post at least one thing per day.
I want to get more comfortable being uncomfortable. I want to get more confident being uncertain. I don’t want to shrink back just because something isn’t easy. I want to push back, and make more room in the area between I can’t and I can.
Kristin Armstrong (via elenamjacobs)
Be confident. Be compassionate. Be intelligent. Be humble. Be generous. The universe returns to you what you put out.
Lauren Jauregui (via gudda)
Personal Reflection from AmeriCorps Round 1
Round 1 has given me such an amazing opportunity to live in a city and really dive head first into everything Philadelphia has to offer. I have reconnected with old friends, explored the city with new friends, and found love in the City of Brotherly Love. I never thought I would feel so alive in a city, and I feel incredibly grateful to have been here for Round 1. My time in Philadelphia started off on an amazing note due to my adventures touring the entire city as a participant in the Philly Naked Bike Ride with an old friend of mine. It was definitely the best way to connect with where I was and meet likeminded adventurous spirits! I spent a lot of time wandering the streets for miles and miles and seeing and experiencing as much as I could in the time given. Some of my favorite places are West Philly, Fairmount Park, Old City, Penn Harbor, the South Street Magic Gardens, the Wildlife Refuge in Eastwick and meandering down random streets away from the Center City.
The moment we started working at the Region III HQ in Center City Philadelphia, I was immediately brought on board with the All Hazards Plan Conference. The people I worked with in NDRF were absolutely wonderful: hardworking and passionate about the work they do, inclusive and welcoming, and conscious of the importance of creating a positive work environment. I feel blessed to have had the chance to be a part of their team during my time in Philadelphia. During our time here I also assisted with the RISC & RAC Conference and the COA Workshops as a note-taker. Some people may find note-taking tedious, however I feel that documenting conversation and discussions are extremely important for productive outcomes. I also feel that my comments about making language accessible helped to encourage a more inclusive environment for State and Local participation in the recovery planning process.
Of course there were challenges and struggles as well, as the universe aims to balance us in life and keep us humble and whole humans. Our team dynamics we not the best and I found myself escaping most weekends to stay in the city, or going on mini-road trips to New York City. Personally, I loved these adventures as they kept me from going crazy in Eastwick and gave me a chance to really be myself in a program that requires a lot of forced interactions. However, our team did not bond in Round 1 and this made it very difficult to express and be true to myself and I found myself highly frustrated with team dynamics and wanting to leave the program multiple times. It is extremely difficult to be on a team with such different backgrounds, personalities, and such an age and experience gap. Coming from a very liberal background, I found myself getting easily irritated and upset with sexist comments, immature behaviors, and teammates who did not have the same desire to travel with an open mind.
When we left for Michigan to assist with recovery efforts, I had hoped our team would become closer with a new experience, however the long hours and disappointment with the work we were doing led to an increase of separation and bad feelings. In order to find much needed balance in my life, I reached out to a friend in the area and met new people through networking. Just as I had done in Philadelphia, I escaped the discontent of our Michigan DSA work by getting out as much as possible. I wish that my team could have had the same opportunities that I did with meeting new people in the area and learning that there was more to Michigan than shopping plazas and traffic, however most people on my team expressed that they did not want to hang out after work anyways, and I did not want to force interactions that did not organically happen. I seriously considered leaving the program while we were in Michigan but decided against it.
Although this year already has presented a lot of challenges, I strongly believe that how we deal with suffering makes us grow and become stronger. There is a lot to be learned through every encounter, experience, interaction, and opportunity. As humans we will always be tested, and having just graduated from college, this is the perfect year to rise up and accept that challenge. It is the perfect year to realize what works and what doesn’t, to find that indestructible inner peace, to make deep connections with people and place, to attempt to let go of the negative and as much as possible—embrace life to the fullest.
Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi (2007)
black man is shot: he was being aggressive
woman is raped: she was asking for it
white boy shoots up a school: he's disturbed and needs help
Unfriendly reminder that in America it’s reasonable to say an unarmed black kid deserved to be shot six times because he might have robbed a convenience store, but a white kid shouldn’t be kicked off the high school football team just because he violently raped a girl.
#and filmed it #and shared it online
This is America
It is not enough for me to stand before you tonight and condemn riots. It would be morally irresponsible for me to do that without, at the same time, condemning the contingent, intolerable conditions that exist in our society. These conditions are the things that cause individuals to feel that they have no other alternative than to engage in violent rebellions to get attention. And I must say tonight that a riot is the language of the unheard.
Martin Luther King Jr.
Just in case anyone tries to deploy his words to condemn Ferguson.
(via ninjaruski)