Small Carpenter Bee (Ceratina bifida), female, family Apidae, Mount Carmel, Israel
photograph by Gideon Pisanty

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@discouragedtaco-blog
Small Carpenter Bee (Ceratina bifida), female, family Apidae, Mount Carmel, Israel
photograph by Gideon Pisanty
w a t c h m e
The Washington Bee, Washington DC, July 26, 1902
Dress Fabric
c.1770
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Happy birthday to Dorothea Tanning, who created these surreal costume designs for the ballet, “The Night Shadow.“
”Lanova,“ 1945, by Dorothea Tanning © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
”Weaver,“ 1945, by Dorothea Tanning © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
”Tompkins,“ 1945, by Dorothea Tanning © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
”Design for Balanchine Ballet ‘The Night Shadow,’“ 1945, by Dorothea Tanning © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Some dogs are doggos, some are puppers, and others may even be pupperinos. There are corgos and clouds, fluffers and floofs, woofers and boofers. The chunky ones are thicc, and the thin ones are long bois. When they stick out their tongues, they’re doing a mlem, a blep, a blop. They bork. They boof. Once in a while they do each other a frighten. And whether they’re 10/10 or 12/10, they’re all h*ckin’ good boys and girls.
Are you picking up what I’m putting down? If not, you’re probably not fluent in DoggoLingo, a language trend that’s been gaining steam on the Internet in the past few years. The language most often accompanies a picture or a video of a dog and has spread to all major forms of social media. It might even change the way we talk out loud to our beloved canines.
Dogs Are Doggos: An Internet Language Built Around Love For The Puppers
Illustration: Chelsea Beck/NPR
Editor’s note: In honor of National Dog Day, we’re resurfacing this deep dive into DoggoLingo
The Song of the Vowels, 1967, Joan Miro
“I graduated more than one thousand kids from elementary school. I’d still be teaching but my eyes went bad. It’s such an important time in a child’s life. It’s when they learn speech, grammar, and how to pay attention. It’s when the tree gets its roots. If you’re taught wrong in elementary school, you’ll be trying to catch that train for the rest of your life.” (St. Petersburg, Russia)
“I came here to meet a girl that I know from the Internet. She’s coming all the way from Belarus. It’s nothing sexual. Just a friendship. Her name is Olga. We’ve known each other for seven years but this is the first time we’re meeting in person. She’s supported me through a lot of hard times. I get bullied a lot. People at my school often call me names and try to start fights with me. They send love letters to other guys in my name. Olga has comforted me a lot. She checks in with me throughout the day. She says things like: ‘You don’t deserve it.’ And ‘Don’t pay attention to them.’ Her messages have really helped me get through the last few years– even if they were just words on the Internet.”
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
“I cut my hair the other day. It used to be down to my waist. It’s a personal experiment. I’m trying to prove to myself that I can have short hair and still be feminine. It can be hard when I step out on the street and all the other women have long hair. I think a lot of people see short hair, and form an idea that I hate men, or that I only think about business. But I still feel feminine inside. I guess I want to prove that feeling has nothing to do with the type of attention I’m getting.”
(Moscow, Russia)
When you love someone, the best thing you can offer is your presence. How can you love if you are not there?
Thich Nhat Hanh (via fuckyeahyoga)
A reader asked me if I’d draw a bee for a tattoo.
(reader on Twitter asked for Society6 link. Here.)