Everything Iâve ever experienced has been sculpting my spirit to hold the capacity for the both the blessings and the responsibility to come.
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@deepseed
Everything Iâve ever experienced has been sculpting my spirit to hold the capacity for the both the blessings and the responsibility to come.
âMany people seem to think it foolish, even superstitious, to believe that the world could still change for the better. And it is true that in winter it is sometimes so bitingly cold that one is tempted to say, âWhat do I care if there is a summer; its warmth is no help to me now.â Yes, evil often seems to surpass good. But then, in spite of us, and without our permission, there comes at last an end to the bitter frosts. One morning the wind turns, and there is a thaw. And so I must still have hope.â
â Vincent Van Gogh
âIf I am worth anything later, I am worth something now. For wheat is wheat, even if people think it is a grass in the beginning.âÂ
- Vincent van Gogh
I needed this.
Thank you to all the people who posted this so I ended up seeing it. I really needed this right now. Thank you!
Yeah⊠Not gonna lie⊠I criedâŠ
We need more people like this
Goddamn it stop making me feel human
The therapist I wanna be.
Text in the image:
âIâm a therapist and keep this poster in my waiting room, apparently itâs saved a few lives.â
I donât like the phrase âa cry for help.â I just donât like how it sounds. When somebody says to me, âIâm thinking about suicide. I have a plan: I just need a reason not to do it,â the last thing I see is helplessness.
I think your depression has been beating you up for years. Itâs called you ugly, and stupid, and pathetic, and a failure, for so long that youâve forgotten that itâs wrong. You donât see any good in yourself, and you donât have any hope.
But still here you are: youâve come over to me, banged on my door and said, âHEY! Staying alive is REALLY HARD right now! Just give me something to fight with! I donât care if itâs a stick! Give me a stick and I can stay alive!â
How is that helpless? I think thatâs incredible. Youâre like a marine: trapped for years behind enemy lines. Your gun has been taken away, youâre out of ammo, youâre malnourished, and youâve probably caught some kind of jungle virus thatâs making you hallucinate giant spiders.
And youâre still just going, âGIVE ME A STICK. IâM NOT DYING OUT HERE.â âA cry for helpâ makes it sound like Iâm supposed to take pity on you, but you donât need my pity. This isnât pathetic. This is the will to survive. This is how humans lived long enough to become the dominant species.
With NO hope, running on NOTHING, youâre ready to cut through a hundred miles of hostile jungle with nothing but a stick, if thatâs what it takes to get to safety.
All Iâm doing is handing out sticks.
Youâre the one saying alive.
I legit cried at this. Iâve needed to hear it put this way. Bless this post.
Every time I see this post I stop to read the whole image. It always helps â even on the good days.
Because it wasnât weakness. It wasnât shameful to seek help. It wasnât pathetic to âcry for helpâ. I was looking for a stick, be that from myself or from someone else. I was trying to find a way out. I was trying to heal myself.
this is fuckin incredible.Â
Iâm sorry if I repost to many of these, but if it could be someoneâs âstickâ then itâs worth it
For anyone that needs to read this today.Â
-FemaleWarrior, She/TheyÂ
They also have this one and I think quite a few others but these two I keep on my phone and pull up on my bad days.
Text on second poster:
âWHY ARE YOU SO LAZY?â
But youâre not lazy. Lazy is when you shrug things off because you canât summon up the give-a-damn. When youâre curled up tight in your chair at your desk, alone and grey and desperately wishing that you had your life in order, that you did all those things you had to do, that it didnât feel like breaking rocks just to feed and clothe yourself and get some sleep, thatâs not lazy.
People donât understand. You tell them âItâs hard.â They tell you âNo it isnât, youâre just lazy.â
You start to wonder if theyâre right.
is breaking those rocks easy for everyone else? Are they that much stronger than you?
They donât look like theyâre struggling.
âJust try harder,â they say. But youâre trying. Itâs not working.
Breaking boulders in your path until youâre spent isnât lazy. And you do it day after day after day.
Youâre not lazy. Most people donât have those rocks to break. They donât even know what itâs like to have to break rocks to get things done. They donât understand how hard you have to work, and how hopeless you can feel, when you try and fail to do what they do so easily. Things are harder for you. They really are. And if those people had to deal with your problems, they wouldnât be doing any better.
Youâre not lazy. Youâre not weak. Youâre fighting hard. I guess I just want you to know that I know that.
âOh honey, let me tell you. I have felt anger and pain yet chose to remain deeply soft and syrupy sweet with myself. I have experienced loss and heartache yet chose to leave generous space open for love and incredible heart-opening, regenerative full-body intimacy. I have felt unmotivated and powerless yet chose to train myself to surrender and trust the process and diving timing. I have learned to feel all my emotions with no need to explain myself instead of numbing out and draining my body of essential hydration. I chose not to live in my wishes and daydreams but to make what was around me just as wonderful and beauty-filled. Loss and pain teach as well. They remind us how to not sink, but to float. And when we are ready, we stop floating and start swimming with ease. Consider not comparing yourself or thinking that someone has it easier than you because you have no idea what new uncomfortable thing they decided to choose instead of giving in to old behaviour and familiar patterns. As this year comes to a closure, I want you to know that if you are experiencing heartache, pain, or some other discomfort, it is human. It means that your body is alive, pulsating, magical, and capable. And where ever you are in life right now is just fine.â
â
India Ameâye, Author
***The emotional body is our water system. When we neglect or numb our authentic emotions, we drain our bodies of essential hydration (light, clarity, and energy including multiple orgasmic potential).Â
if you havenât been told this today:
âą you are loved.
âą iâm sorry for what happened to you.
âą you deserve better.
âą itâs not your fault.
âą better things are coming your way.
âą you will get what you want someday.
âą you are so worthy.
âą iâm so proud of you!
âą you deserve to take up space.
âą your feelings are valid.
From Tennessee Lookout:
MASON, Tenn. â The Tennessee Comptroller issued an unusual appeal last week to residents of this small, majority Black town, which occupies fewer than two square miles in rural west Tennessee.
âIn my opinion, itâs time for Mason to relinquish its charter,â Comptroller Jason Mumpower wrote in a letter mailed to each one of Masonâs 1,337 property owners.
Mumpower urged local residents to âencourage your local officials to do whatâs necessary to allow Mason to thrive. There is no time to waste.â
State comptrollers, responsible for financial oversight of local government, typically communicate directly with elected local leaders and not their constituents. âWe have not issued a letter to citizens like this before,â Comptroller spokesman John Dunn said, noting it is âunprecedented for us to publicly call for a town charter to be relinquished.â
But the Comptrollerâs unprecedented public callout comes at an unprecedented time not only for Mason, but for the state. Mason, located in the southeastern corner of Tipton County, now finds itself with some of the most coveted real estate in Tennessee.
Itâs one of the nearest towns to the massive new site to be built for Blue Oval City, a key component in Ford Motor Coâs multibillion-dollar pivot to electric vehicle manufacturing.
Mumpowerâs letter has infuriated Masonâs part-time elected officials, who insist they have no intention of ceding their townâs 153-year-old charter â which would subsume the largely African-American, majority Democratic community under the governance of Tipton County, which is predominantly white and Republican.
âThis is our home. We were born and raised here. The majority of the town is homegrown people that live here,â Vice Mayor Virginia Rivers said. âHe is trying to conquer and divide us. Itâs akin to a hostile take-over and itâs not hard to figure out why here, why now.â
Town leaders are accusing Mumpower and other state officials of big-footing a long-ignored, largely Black community now that major investment is heading its way.
Mason is 60% Black and includes descendants of men, women and children enslaved in the area before Emancipation. For more than a century the town was led by White elected officials.
That changed in 2016, when fraud and mismanagement allegations led to the resignations of nearly all City Hall officials, all of whom were White. Masonâs current mayor, vice mayor and five of its six alderman are Black.
âItâs because of the Black people that are in office,â said Rivers, who first became Vice Mayor in 2021.
âAnd itâs because of all the places in the world, Blue Oval could have selected, they selected here. Thereâs no way Mason wonât prosper and grow. And now they want to take it away from us.â
Read more
The Comptrollerâs office:
Yet again like in the past. New day, new Jim Crow-esque tactics, perfectly timed takeovers. This Black American town needs to be promptly saved without handing a damn thing over. The town elected mostly Black officials back in 2015. Theyâve been trying to pay off the debt from when the town was previously ran by mostly white officials. Literally playing catch-up.Â
This ainât nothing but a glimpse of what it looks like before eventually uprooting and displacing Black people off the land they have resided on since forever and where their ancestors labored said land as property in chattel slavery and the move into Jim Crow. Â
Thereâs a change.org petition to sign and share to get the word out there.
This person suggested to put Ford in the hot seat by sending a letter like this. Others are suggested to call their office.Â
This is the CEO of Fordâs twitter.
Something gotta give.Â
This shit should be on the news. But as usual, they make it known after the deed is done or not at all and you end up finding out years later.Â
Updated 26 March 2022: Theyâre being forced to back off. KEEP UP THE PRESSURE!!
More sources here, here, and here. Far from being forced to give up their charter, the town is now poised to be removed from state financial oversight.
KEEP YOUR EYES ON MASON!!!
TODAY IS THE DAY YOUR FAITH GETS RESTORED IN EVERYTHING THAT YOU ARE MANIFESTING FOR YOURSELF.
TODAY IS THE DAY YOU GET BACK INTO THE STATE OF KNOWING THAT WHAT YOU WANT IS ALREADY YOURS.
Listen đ§ïž !.
British Petroleum hired PR professionals to blame climate change on individuals rather than oil giants. The oil giants are the real culprits.
British Petroleum, the second largest non-state owned oil company in the world, with 18,700 gas and service stations worldwide, hired the public relations professionals Ogilvy & Mather to promote the slant that climate change is not the fault of an oil giant, but that of individuals.
Itâs here that British Petroleum, or BP, first promoted and soon successfully popularized the term âcarbon footprint" in the early aughts. The company unveiled its âcarbon footprint calculatorâ in 2004 so one could assess how their normal daily life â going to work, buying food, and (gasp) traveling â is largely responsible for heating the globe.
BP wants you to accept responsibility for the globally disrupted climate. Just like beverage industrialists wanted people to feel bad about the amassing pollution created by their plastics and cans, or more sinisterly, tobacco companies blamed smokers for becoming addicted to addictive carcinogenic products. Weâve seen this manipulative playbook before, and BP played it well.
Link to entire thread which is filled with sources and text resources:
Black Is King/Black Is Q(ueer)ing A Thread on queerness in the African tradition. https://t.co/kRAqBHX3S5
Many Africans have been told that Queerness isnât indigenous to African. This rhetoric has led to several homophobic and transphobic laws an
I want to be clear that these posts are not perpetuating the false idea that precolonial Africa was a Utopian paradise without issues of class or hierarchy. Precolonial African traditions of gender & sexual variance still had its issues. I also want to be clear that certain African peoples, both pre and post colonialism, do not have the same language for gender as Western or other societies do-for ex: the Yoruba people.
Here is a wonderful thread addressing these topics in addition to confirming the presence of people in precolonial Africa who were not what we consider cisheterosexual-filled with book recommendations, full PDFs and various text resources
We have asserted that precolonial African traditions of gender/sexual variance are not ideal/utopicâthat they still involve labor divisions,
The European gender binary reinforces sexual dualism based on genitals. In Ifi Amadiumeâs seminal work, we get a glimpse into how a society
Enough of us do not even realize how much of a post-colonial white-supremic world we still live in. Things like racism, the gender binary, homophobia are all concepts and inventions of the european influence on us globally.
Too many times I have read about a pre-colonial culture (the fact that I even have to say pre colonial đ) where I read that certain things were or were not common practice until Europeans arrived and forced their culture on everybody and then used Christianity to justify it while they were enslaving, raping, kidnapping, and committing genocide. And there are actual poc who canât see pass the eurocentricity of literaly EVERYTHING because itâs what we were raised to think and believe and were never exposed to anything that would suggest otherwise.
Always reblog and remember: gender fluidity and homosexuality is not "crap made by the left" they have always been here, but christianity and colonialism set them as bad and wrong, they did their brainwashing so good that made A LOT of people believe and enforce their bigotry.
Link to entire thread which is filled with sources and text resources:
Black Is King/Black Is Q(ueer)ing A Thread on queerness in the African tradition. https://t.co/kRAqBHX3S5
Many Africans have been told that Queerness isnât indigenous to African. This rhetoric has led to several homophobic and transphobic laws an
I want to be clear that these posts are not perpetuating the false idea that precolonial Africa was a Utopian paradise without issues of class or hierarchy. Precolonial African traditions of gender & sexual variance still had its issues. I also want to be clear that certain African peoples, both pre and post colonialism, do not have the same language for gender as Western or other societies do-for ex: the Yoruba people.
Here is a wonderful thread addressing these topics in addition to confirming the presence of people in precolonial Africa who were not what we consider cisheterosexual-filled with book recommendations, full PDFs and various text resources
We have asserted that precolonial African traditions of gender/sexual variance are not ideal/utopicâthat they still involve labor divisions,
The European gender binary reinforces sexual dualism based on genitals. In Ifi Amadiumeâs seminal work, we get a glimpse into how a society
El negro Matapacos (black cop killer)Â was a symbol of fight and hope in the social protests we had last year. He was a stray who marched with the people and defended them from authorities.Â
He is Chileâs most beloved protest dog.
  Here are some murals honoring him from different cities across the country
they even made a statue
and the government via the police pigs have tried destroying murals, symbols, even that giant matapacos statue THREE TIMES but his spirit carries on.Â
GOOD BOYđ„șâ€ïž
The realest
what if it was placed in your heart because itâs your destiny? what if you can have everything youâve ever wanted? what if everything is actually always working out for you? what if youâre triggered because you need to heal? what if itâs all about you? what if it all really does begin and end in your mind? what if it gets to be easy? what if youâre supposed to live in peace? what if youâre here to experience joy? what if youâre perfectly crafted? what if you just need to forget your story? what if you just need to remember your power? what if you woke up in the middle of it? what if you chose to fantasize instead of catastrophize?
I will never not reblog Elephants đ„șđđ„°
Researchers have used Easter Island Moai replicas to show how they might have been âwalkedâ to where they are displayed.
VIDEO
Finally. People need to realize aliens arenât the answer for everything (when they use it to erase poc civilizations and how smart they were)
(via TumbleOn)
Whatâs really wild is that the native people literally told the Europeans âthey walkedâ when asked how the statues were moved. The Europeans were like âlol these backwards heathens and their fairy tales guess itâs gonna always be a mystery!â
Maori told Europeans that kiore were native rats and no one believed them until DNA tests proved it
And the Iroquois told Europeans that squirels showed them how to tap maple syrup and no one believed them until they caught it on video
Oral history from various First Nations tribes in the Pacific Northwest contained stories about a massive earthquake/tsunami hitting the coast, but no one listened to them until scientists discovered physical evidence of quakes from the Cascadia fault line.
Roopkund Lake AKA âSkeleton Lakeâ in the Himalayas in India is eerie because it was discovered with hundreds of skeletal remains and for the life of them researchers couldnât figure out what it was that killed them. For decades the âmysteryâ went unsolved.
Until they finally payed closer attention to local songs and legend that all essentially said âYah the Goddess Nanda Devi got mad and sent huge heave stones down to kill themâ. That was consistent with huge contusions found all on their neck and shoulders and the weather patterns of the area, which are prone to huge & inevitably deadly goddamn hailstones. https://www.facebook.com/atlasobscura/videos/10154065247212728/
Literally these legends were past down for over a thousand years and it still took researched 50 to âfigure outâ the âmysteryâ. đ
Adding to this, the Inuit communities in Nunavut KNEW where both the wrecks of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror were literally the entire time but Europeans/white people didnât even bother consulting them about either ship until likeâŠlast year.Â
âInuit traditional knowledge was critical to the discovery of both ships, she pointed out, offering the Canadian government a powerful demonstration of what can be achieved when Inuit voices are included in the process.
In contrast, the tragic fate of the 129 men on the Franklin expedition hints at the high cost of marginalising those who best know the area and its history.
âIf Inuit had been consulted 200 years ago and asked for their traditional knowledge â this is our backyard â those two wrecks would have been found, lives would have been saved. Iâm confident of that,â she said. âBut they believed their civilization was superior and that was their undoing.â
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/16/inuit-canada-britain-shipwreck-hms-terror-nunavut
âOh yeah, I heard a lot of stories about Terror, the ships, but I guess Parks Canada donât listen to people,â Kogvik said. âThey just ignore Inuit stories about the Terror ship.â
Schimnowski said the crew had also heard stories about people on the land seeing the silhouette of a masted ship at sunset.
âThe community knew about this for many, many years. Itâs hard for people to stop and actually listen ⊠especially people from the South.â
 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/sammy-kogvik-hms-terror-franklin-1.3763653
Indigenous Australians have had stories about giant kangaroos and wombats for thousands of years, and European settlers just kinda assumed they were myths. Cut to more recently when evidence of megafauna was discovered, giant versions of Australian animals that died out 41 000 years ago.
Similarly, scientists have been stumped about how native Palm trees got to a valley in the middle of Australia, and it wasnât until a few years ago that someone did DNA testing and concluded that seeds had been carried there from the north around 30 000 years ago⊠aaand someone pointed out that Indigenous people have had stories about gods from the north carrying the seeds to a valley in the central desert.
oh man let me tell you about Indigenous Australian myths - the framework they use (with multi-generational checking thatâs unique on the planet, meaning thereâs no drifting or mutation of the story, seriously they are hardcore about maintaining integrity) means that we literally have multiple first-hand accounts of life and the ecosystem before the end of the last ice age
itâs literally the oldest accurate oral history of the world. Â
Now consider this: most people consider the start of recorded history to be with  the Sumerians and the Early Dynastic period of the Egyptians.  So around 3500 BCE, or five and a half thousand years ago These highly accurate Aboriginal oral histories originate from twenty thousand years ago at least
Ainât it amazing what white people consider history and what they donât?
I always said disservice is done to oral traditions and myth when you take them literally. Ancient people were not stupid.