I like dates. I like healthy communication. I like room to grow. I like quality time. I like reassurance. I like reciprocated energy.
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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hello vonnie
taylor price

Origami Around
sheepfilms

shark vs the universe
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
noise dept.
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Kiana Khansmith
macklin celebrini has autism
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
🪼

blake kathryn

titsay
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
wallacepolsom
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@drunkblushx
I like dates. I like healthy communication. I like room to grow. I like quality time. I like reassurance. I like reciprocated energy.
(pats lap) oh no! its empty! if only.. a cute boy could come and sit here...
The American Ballet Theatre is debuting its first same-sex pas de deux tonight, performed by Calvin Royal III and João Menegussi. A snippet of the performance has been circulating on TikTok (above), and it’s so beautiful, I was moved to tears. I tried to capture the tenderness of these thirty seconds in charcoal and pencil as best as I could. (Below.)
men with calm voices. it’s like a tight hug that feels like everything will be okay. i love that.
having to come to terms with the fact that love is not an everlasting performance in which you attempt to retain the attention of your significant other but rather a release of control and putting faith into them and trusting them to choose to stay with you no matter what you have to offer
to love and be loved is to rest
LOVE IS THE WHOLE POINT. OF IT ALL
knowing I can trust u is a turn on.
miss Lalisa.
everything you are is everything i love about you
archive mb for @peoplehood !! 🫂🌱🥭
love IS supposed to hurt but not in a toxic or abusive way but because love and grief go hand in hand
when you love someone you notice their absence and feel it so much it hurts. when you grieve for someone you notice their absence and feel it so much it hurts. to grieve is to have loved, and to love is to grieve.
another life
what are your thoughts on the the fact that the world is ending and you are inevitably moving towards death?
Who the fuck cares, everything moves to an inevitable end but our feeble earthling minds probably couldn't tell where that ending would be!! What, you think the Earth gets rid of us and that's the end? bitch that's the START! When all of the stars fade out and coalesce into supermassive black holes??? is that the end? NO, they sit there for 500 septillion years, lifeless, but maybe at one point they reach their very own point of convergence and something akin to another big bang happens, or maybe not, maybe life can prosper under conditions we could never even comprehend, not life like ours but life in the solidified singularities of many quadrillion dead stars.
IM NOT CRYING YOU’RE CRYING SHUT THE FUCK UP
[transcription:
Have you ever wondered about like cave paintings? Like, “What were they doing? These don’t… look very good,” -chuckles- In fact, almost every cave painting has Spaghetti Lines, which are webs of lines drawn over-top images, which you can see here.
-picture changes to a grayscale image of a deer standing in tall grass-
And here’s an example of natural Spaghetti Lines in nature, but we’ll get to that in a second.
-picture changes to a photo paleolithic drawing of a mammoth. Alongside the photo is a tracing of the drawing, to clarify the lines-
The second weird thing is like sometimes animals are given extra body parts, like here the mammoth has two trunks. And here, there’s a drawing of an antelope or a deer, it looks like, that seems to have two heads.
For a long time, people would assume like maybe the Spaghetti Lines were just some kind of paleolithic graffiti, and maybe the animals were these kind of religious creatures that they had mythologized. But then, in 1993, a German scholar went into this cave in southern France, and it changed everything.
Unlike the other caves he had been to, this one was very poorly funded, so it had no artificial lights, and he had to be guided in by a local farmer, with nothing but a flickering lantern to guide his way. Here is how he described the experience.
He said, “M. Lapeyre finished his story and wanted to move on. I encouraged him to remain and to slowly swing his lantern back and forth a few feet from the cave wall. As he moved the light, I saw the colors of the tectiform begin to shift. When the lamp arced to the left, the blacks faded, the browns became red and the red intensified. When the light moved to the right, the pattern reversed, creating a shifting color scheme. Moreover, the engraved lines under and around the tectiform became animated. Suddenly, the head of one creature stood out clearly. It lived for a second, then faded as another appeared. The spaghetti lines were no longer a confused two-dimensional pattern. Rather, they became a forest or a bramble patch that concealed and then revealed the animals within. By firelight, a secret of the cave painters was exposed. In the space of a few moments, I saw cuts and dissolves, change and movement. Form appeared and disappeared. Colors shifted and changed. In short, I was watching a movie.”
Understood this way, the antelope with two heads, under the dance of the firelight, is an antelope going from grazing to checking for predators. And the mammoth with two or three trunks becomes a mammoth in motion, swinging his trunk.
There’s something beautiful to me about knowing that hundreds of thousands of years ago, ancient humans descended into the depths to watch movies.
/end transcription]
I heard about this recently and about lost my fucking mind. I am begging someone to actually film the effect so we can see it for ourselves!
@lucithefer
@theopeninvite on Instagram