CRASHING | 1.04

titsay
Today's Document
Sade Olutola
Cosimo Galluzzi

Product Placement
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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JVL

@theartofmadeline
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

izzy's playlists!

if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell
i don't do bad sauce passes
Misplaced Lens Cap
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Three Goblin Art
noise dept.

blake kathryn

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@ephemeralandimaginary
CRASHING | 1.04
I was working on a history paper today and found a book from 1826 that seemed promising (though dull) for my topic, on an English Catholic family’s experience moving to France.
And it ended up not really being suitable for my purposes, as it goes. But part of the book is actually devoted to Kenelm, the author’s oldest son…and man, his dad loved him.
Kenelm seems to have had a fairly typical upbringing for a young English gentleman, although he is a bit slow to read. At twelve he’s sent to board at Stoneyhurst College—often the big step towards independence in a boy’s life, as he’ll most likely only see his parents sporadically from now on, and then leave for university.
When he’s sixteen, however, his father moves the whole family to France, so Kenelm gets pulled out of school to be with them again. Shortly after the move, his dad notices that he seems depressed. Kenelm confides in him that he’s been suffering from “scruples” for the last eighteen months—most likely what we’d now call an anxiety disorder.
And his dad is pissed—at the school, because apparently Kenelm had been seeking help there and received none, despite obviously struggling with mental health issues. So his dad takes it seriously. He sets him up to be counseled by a priest—there were no therapists back then—and doesn’t send him away to be boarded again, instead teaching him at home himself.
And his mental health does improve. His dad describes him as well-liked, gentle, pious, kind and eager to please others; at twenty he’s thinking about a career in diplomacy or going into the military—which his dad thinks he is not particularly suited for, considering his favorite pastimes are drawing and reading. He’s excited about his family’s upcoming move to Italy, and he’s been busy learning Italian and teaching it to his siblings.
Henry Kenelm Beste dies of typhus at twenty years, four months, and twenty-five days. That’s how his dad records it. That’s why his dad is telling this story. It’s not an extraordinary story—Kenelm’s story struck me because he sounds so…ordinary, like so many kids today. And he was so, so loved. His dad tried hard to help him compassionately with his mental health at a time where our current knowledge and support systems didn’t exist. You can feel how badly he wanted his son to be remembered and loved, to impress how dearly beloved he was to the people who knew him in life.
I hope he’d be glad to know someone is still thinking of Kenelm over 200 years later.
Anyway, that’s why I’m crying today.
“Thoughts on one of the hardest things: banishing the imagined bad faith reader from your writing process” by Melissa Febos on Twitter is hitting really hard today.
This.
hey. cry or don’t. there is a 12.2 puppy-to-demon ratio. got it?
hey. dont cry. 1 million puppies on earth ok?
Hey. Cry. 82 thousand devils are real. Suffer?
LIES ABOUT SEA CREATURES from ‘Bright Dead Things’ by Ada Limón
[text description:
(all caps) Lies about sea creatures
I lied about the whales. Fantastical blue
water-dwellers, big, slow moaners of the coastal.
I never saw them. Not once that whole frozen year.
Sure, I saw the raw white gannets hit the waves
so hard it could have been a showy blow hole.
But I knew it wasn't. Sometimes you just want
something so hard you have to lie about it, so you can hold it in your mouth for a minute,
how real hunger has a real taste. Someone once
told me gannets, those voracious sea birds
of the the North Atlantic chill, go blind from the height
and speed of their dives. But that, too, is a lie.
Gannets never go blind and they certainly never die. /end description]
No Ordinary Love, Salmon Toor. Details. Special Exhibit, Baltimore Museum of Art, 7.30.2022
people by rae kolarova
les tilleuls \ bleue \ noémie \ nap \ de l’art de garder des secrets \ après la pluie \ elles suivent le pollen gris \ bleues \ l’espèce fabulatrice \ refle-xion
kofi
Julia Soboleva
DIG A DOUBLE GRAVE
This is awesome!!!
Carta abierta a un docente:
A usted, que claramente dijo en clase que no le importaba la vida de sus alumnos por fuera de su materia, le pregunto ¿qué es ser un profesor? ¿Imponer trabajos con poco tiempo para su realización y humillar a un estudiante cuando le dice que si pueden llegar a una nueva fecha como acuerdo? ¿Qué es lo que realmente le importa, que aprendamos sobre el tema que nos propone o que hagamos hasta lo imposible por entregar a tiempo el trabajo? No sé quién normalizó el trasnocharse, el no comer para cumplir. Pero señor, prefiero decirle con toda honestidad que no alcanzo a cumplir el plazo propuesto que comprometer mi salud mental y física por un informe más que usted leerá superficialmente para proceder a colocar una nota.
Un día, solo un día más bastaba, pero mis razones son subjetivas y no fueron suficientes, porque las únicas razones subjetivas que importan son las de usted (como mencionó también en medio de clase).
Ironía es que la clase es una materia pedagógica, donde aprendemos nosotros a enseñar. Lo que usted nos está enseñando es lo mismo que ha hecho daño a todos los estudiantes de la historia; que no importan, que su vida por fuera del aula debe estar en función de la escuela, que son vasijas insignificantes que deben cumplir plazos a pesar de lo que sea que les esté pasando, si aprenden o no, porque es mayor prioridad evaluar que enseñar.
Que esto quede como una reflexión sobre el oficio.
Sorry, I’m weak.
But is a clever ad for an interesting website, so here is a screen in case you don’t want to fall in the clickbait
From the shell The song of the sea Neither quiet nor calm Searching for love again
SONG OF THE SEA (2014) dir. Tomm Moore | fave films watched in 2021
the official tumblr twitter account just kungpowpenis'd elon on twitter