
Product Placement

ellievsbear
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
taylor price

pixel skylines

JBB: An Artblog!
NASA

Love Begins

oozey mess
Xuebing Du
cherry valley forever
todays bird
we're not kids anymore.

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

No title available
Stranger Things

⁂

shark vs the universe
🪼
$LAYYYTER
seen from Ukraine
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands

seen from Türkiye
seen from Spain

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Australia

seen from United States
@darkdreadwolf
No to Low Stress College Study Strategy
I started using this study method my 2nd month of college, when I realized that it was better for study-life balance and my emotional wellbeing. It makes me feel productive and alert all day, and gives me plenty of free time to pursue hobbies, clubs, and personal interests. It sounds kind of hardcore at first, but it’s seriously wonderful if you give it a try! Here’s the game plan:
After the first few days of the semester, I sit down with all of the syllabi from all of my classes and write down every single assignment for the rest of the semester into my planner. Include exams, readings, lab report due dates, worksheets, essays, etc. Everything.
Every weekend, I set aside however much time I need to knock out every single assignment for the upcoming week that is possible to do in advance. I do my textbook readings, textbook practice problems, my humanities readings, short essays or write-ups to accompany those humanities readings, etc.
Even though I’m doing more work, I generally spend the same amount of time in the library as my friends who only do their work for Monday over the weekend. This is because if you don’t commit to doing a large number of assignments, you tend to spend a lot more time on minor assignments than is truly necessary - do I really need to spend 3 hours on this 1-page essay for my English class if it’s only graded on a 10 point scale? Couldn’t I finish this in 1 hour and then devote more time to the rest of the readings I need to do for that class this week?
I still have enough time to sleep in, have long lunch breaks, go the gym, go to parties in the evening, etc.
You can do this, no matter your workload. I am a pre-med science major taking 20 credits (max course load) a semester, with two labs, and I can get it done. My roommate is an English major with heavy novel reading assignments and she can get it done. (Disclaimer: this mostly applies to undergraduates.)
Research papers and midterm exam studying generally get their own day separate from homework assignments. I like writing essays in 1 or 2 sittings, but if you like to spread it out just break up the essay into manageable pieces and do it over multiple weekends, or do the pieces between classes (see next bullet point).
After blasting through most of my assignments over the weekend, during the week I generally only have to do busy-work that is assigned at the end of classes and continue studying for midterms that week. I easily finish these assignments in the breaks between classes during the day.
With this strategy, I always complete all of my homework well before dinnertime, and often have days when I don’t have any assignments to do. I use this free time for club meetings, hanging out with friends, going to the gym, marathoning Netflix, pursuing hobbies, working a job, whatever.
I also use this extra time to be able to study for exams much more effectively - when you don’t have busywork assignments floating in the back of your mind, it is much easier to focus. You will study more productively and effectively, and with much less stress. Exams are worth way more of your grade than the homework assignments you blast through each weekend, so it’s best to be able to focus exclusively on them Monday - Friday.
The best part about this strategy is that your workload is heavy on Sunday and sometimes Saturday, but you get to relax Monday - Friday. You basically have a 5 day weekend every week, assuming you enjoy going to class.
If anyone also uses this method, I’d love to hear from you or hear your variants/study suggestions! If anyone tries out this method for 1 or 2 weeks and finds that it works for them, I’d love to hear about it! If you try it and hate it with a fiery burning passion and loathe me for even suggesting it, I’d love to hear about it!
I believe in you!<3 No matter what study method you choose to use, just do your best and exceed your own expectations.
did u like it ?
ok so my previous post got deleted anyway here it is again
Paralyzed - Big Time Rush
Hey loves, I was just recently asked, “what poses are good for sleeping wrong and waking up with a sore neck/shoulders?” So I made this little guide for those times when you “slept wrong” and wake up a little sore:
1. Neck Rolls! Very simple, but super effective. Begin by doing some side stretching here, and then tilt your head side to side, side stretching through your neck. When doing this, focus on bringing your ear down towards your shoulder, but not letting your shoulder rise up towards your ear. To intensify, walk your opposite fingertips away from you. Then roll your neck side to side, clockwise and counter clockwise.
2. Seated twist You can sit with the legs crossed, in lotus, or any comfortable variation as long as the hips are level. Focus on twisting through the upper back and shoulder blades. Let your gaze turn with the twist to twist into your cervical spine and neck too! You can close the eyes if turning the head strains them. Use your arm behind your back as a support to prop your spine up straight and tall as you twist and use the hand on your knee to increase the twist.
3. Yogi Mudra/The Seal of Yoga One of my favorite shoulder openers (and it’s said to relieve headaches). Keep your hips stacked over the knees and interlace your fingers–or grab a strap–at the base of your spine. As you begin to pull the shoulders together, lift the hips up and come onto the crown of your head. Roll the arms side to side, up and down, whatever feels good, really working into the shoulders. For sensitive knees, this can be done from standing too!
4. Thread the Needle This is such a great shoulder opening and twist! From tabletop, extend one arm up into the air and then sweep it underneath of you, threading it under the other. Come down all the way onto the shoulder and the cheek, and then you can raise your opposite arm in the air for more opening, leave it on the floor for support, or bind it behind the back for even more opening! Try to keep the hips stacked over the knees and level.
5. Rabbit Pose This pose targets the space right between your shoulderblades and can feel so good when your back is tight. From child’s pose, sweep the arms behind you and grab onto the heels or ankles, come onto the crown of the head as you begin to lift the hips into the air–trying to get them stacked over the knees. Focus on pulling the heels with the hands as you lift the hips high.
6. Puppy pose/Anahatasana
This pose is like a baby down dog, and down dog or dolphin can be substituted in its place for similar benefits. Here we keep the hips stacked over the knees and we begin to walk the hands forward and drop the chest. Keep the arms straight and actively press into the floor through the palms to really strengthen and stretch into the shoulders. You can roll up a towel or blanket for your forehead to rest on.
7. Upward facing dog Up dog is a great pose for opening and expanding the chest and the upper back/shoulders. Focus on sliding the shoulder blades down the back and away from the neck/ears. Pull the chest and collarbones forward through the arms and really expand there. You can stay here or twist by looking over each shoulder side to side, getting deeper into the shoulders.
8. “Rag Doll” This is one of my favorite poses to do of all time because it’s so relaxing and comforting. Fold forward, bending the knees deeply enough so your belly can rest on the thighs–but keep the hips lifted so gravity can continue to lengthen the spine and the legs don’t have to work so hard. Interlace your fingers behind the back of your head, letting the weight of the elbows and hands cause the neck to release even more, becoming heavier and more relaxed. You can stay still or rock side to side and back and forth with the head and torso.
Hope this helps all of you who are waking up feeling sore!
SEASON 1
1x01 - Limbic Resonance 1x02 - I Am Also A We 1x03 - Smart Money’s On The Skinny Bitch 1x04 - What’s Going On? 1x05 - Art Is Like Religion 1x06 - Demons 1x07 - WWN Double-D? 1x08 - We Will All Be Judged By The Courage Of Our Hearts 1x09 - Death Doesn’t Let You Say Goodbye 1x10 - What Is Human? 1x11 - Just Turn The Wheel And The Future Changes 1x12 - I Can’t Leave Her
Kai Wheeler (Tumblr, Youtube, Website)
4 Body Weight Burn Exercises
[Don’t delete the links please]
A better quality of Roman Holiday. Video here.
do you remember the taste of my lips?
Let me take your heart Love you in the dark, No one has to see I, I want more, I want more I, I want more, I want more
Vitae Benefaria, Inquisitor.
Images of the Villarrica volcano in southern Chile. It erupted early this morning.
Credit: ARIEL MARINKOVIC/AFP/Getty Images
The Western Approach.
Places in Dragon Age: Inquisition - The Western Approach
The desolate badlands known as the Western Approach are as massive as they are barren. Bordered to the west by steppes and crawling with monsters, the Approach is a place from which few explorers return and most avoid. The Grey Warden fortress Adamant sits on the edge of a great chasm on the Approach’s southern reaches, and is one of the few remaining signs that the greatest battles of the second Blight were fought here.
Lavellan: *meets abelas* “oh yes finally an elf versed in the old ways hello friend i-“ Abelas: “Go fuck yourself” Lavellan: