If you work out, everything else will too.
Random
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Show & Tell
d e v o n
will byers stan first human second
almost home
Xuebing Du

#extradirty
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Today's Document

roma★
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Product Placement

JBB: An Artblog!

titsay

shark vs the universe
ojovivo

JVL
h

PR's Tumblrdome

@theartofmadeline
seen from Uzbekistan
seen from Canada
seen from Panama
seen from Mexico
seen from United States

seen from Chile

seen from Belgium

seen from Cambodia
seen from T1

seen from Cambodia
seen from Brazil
seen from Mexico
seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from United States

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

seen from Egypt
seen from United States
@ergopropter
If you work out, everything else will too.
Random
Be weird. Your strangeness is your magic
Parker Lewis
Quotes to guide your life
Stolen from Jon Westenberg via Medium (https://medium.com/hi-my-name-is-jon/10-incredible-quotes-to-guide-your-life-617b5bb72d76)
---
1. You have to participate.
“There are no passengers on spaceship earth. We are all crew.” ― Marshall Mcluhan
There’s no free rides. When you’re living on this planet, you can’t just sit down and coast, expecting the rest of humanity to keep its eye on the ball for you. A life spent as a passenger, rather than someone contributing to making the world function, is a life wasted.
I know too many people who don’t want to participate. They think that life is an audience sport, something to be observed and watched from a distance. They’re not the only ones who miss out by not getting involved — some of them are incredibly talented, and I know we’re a little poorer for their lack of interest.
2. Cry. But for the right reasons.
“There are three things we cry for in life: things that are lost, things that are found, and things that are magnificent.” ― Douglas Coupland
This is what it means to be human. To feel overcome with emotion when we have to say goodbye, and when we experience discovery, and when we look out at the world and are suddenly struck by how incredible it is. When we cry for these things, we are truly fucking alive.
And you can’t be too proud to cry. You can’t believe that crying is a sign of weakness, that boys don’t cry, any of that machismo 19th century bullshit. Crying is good. Crying is healthy. Cry for the right reasons.
3. Don’t try to leave yourself behind.
“I think we are well advised to keep on nodding terms with the people we used to be, whether we find them attractive company or not. Otherwise they turn up unannounced and surprise us, come hammering on the mind’s door at 4 A.M.of a bad night and demand to know who deserted them, who betrayed them, who is going to make amends.” ― Joan Didion
You can’t remake yourself, whenever you wish. You can’t completely discardolder versions of yourself like incremental software upgrades. It doesn’t work like that. You can’t learn from that. You need to be able to continually progress, while maintaining a part of who you were. I think there’s a beauty in remembering the clothes we used to wear. The books we used to read. The people we used to care for, and hurt. When you stop remembering, you stop moving.
4. Take care of each other.
“We’re all just walking each other home.” ― Ram Dass
We have to look after each other. We have to make sure we all get to wherever we are going together. It’s so incredibly easy to forget to be human, and we do it all the time. We hurt other people. We betray other people. We ignore other people. But that’s no way to live.
You have to reach out and touch the rest of the world. The other people. The other isolated souls. And you can do this online, you don’t even have to leave the fucking house. Find someone. Walk them home.
5. Dreams are good. But Living is just as important.
“It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.” ― J.K. Rowling
You have to have dreams, they’re what keeps you going when things go completely to shit. They’re what motivates and drives and excites you enough to keep your feet firm and your pace steady.
But there’s a danger, always, in spending too much time dreaming yet forgetting to live in the now. To appreciate the pain and the joy and everything around you.
6. Stop being ashamed of your work.
“Everything that I’ve ever done I can still relate to, and feel connected to it in a way. There’s no part of my life that I look at and go, ‘I don’t recognize that person at all.’” ― Ian Mckaye
Everyone starts out the same way. Shit at what they do. You learn, and you improve, and you make tiny little changes every day to become better. That’s how every artist, writer, founder, scientist, developer and designer built their careers.
So when you look back at the work you did, you can’t feel ashamed of it.Celebrate your connection to it, because it proves your progress, and it shows how fucking hard you worked to get here, now!
7. Let yourself believe.
“Fantasy is escapist, and that is its glory. If a soldier is imprisioned by the enemy, don’t we consider it his duty to escape?. . .If we value the freedom of mind and soul, if we’re partisans of liberty, then it’s our plain duty to escape, and to take as many people with us as we can!” ― J.R.R. Tolkien
Fiction, stories, wonder, awe, the magic of ideas — these still have a place in the world. It’s not all about work, money, economics and STEM. We occasionally need to have our heads in the clouds, at least for a few brief moments every day.
After all, not every idea can come from autobiographies and reports. A lot of great ideas come from pure imagination, and that’s fucking awesome. Don’t discount it. Let yourself believe.
8. Don’t overthink it.
“Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are simple.” ― Dr. Seuss
A lot of the time, you don’t need to stress, worry, analyse and overthink. You need to take it one step at a time and let go of the bigger picture. It’s a lot more complex to attempt to solve everything all at once, when what you really need to be doing is coming up with the simplest answer for the simplest part of the problem.
Sometimes the questions are incredibly complicated. But only because we let them be, only because we don’t learn how to examine those questions at their smallest level.
9. Let the days come and go.
“Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Someblunders and absurdities no doubt crept in; forget them as soon as you can.Tomorrow is a new day. You shall begin it serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson
Some days are shit. Some days are awful. Some days you want to make like James Thurber and hide in a fucking box. But they don’t last forever, and they finish when you shut your eyes and sleep. Your problems won’t go away overnight, but your stress and your pain and your self-hatred — well, they could. You can’t hold onto the bad. You have to let it go, as quickly as we all let go of the good things when we tire of them, or when the excitement of the moment slips away.
10. Think about the consequences.
“The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom.” ― Isaac Asimov
Because we can do things, doesn’t always mean that we should. For me, this quote is up there with Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park — scientists are too concerned with whether they can, they don’t stop to ask if they should. But the same applies in every other walk of life. You need to think about the consequences of your actions, and how you can hurt both yourself and others. You need to examine the reasons you’ve chosen to drop a stone in the water. And try to understand what the ripples will be.
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people.
Eleanor Roosevelt
Listen earnestly to anything your children want to tell you, no matter what. If you don’t listen eagerly to the little stuff when they are little, they won’t tell you the big stuff when they are big, because to them all of it has always been big stuff.
Catherine M. Wallace (via tacophish)
People can change anything they want to, and that means everything in the world
Joe Strummer
There are 3 types of creative projects
1. For the Mind
2. For the Heart
3. For the Stomach
Projects for the mind will stimulate you intellectually, toss you into a field you are unfamiliar with, and let you learn a lot very quickly. Projects for the heart are the types of project that give you another purpose in life, the kind you would die to work on, the type of project you would gladly lose sleep over because you can’t stop thinking about how to make it look and work better. Projects for the stomach keep the company afloat and keeps food on the table.
You should get a good balance, in your lifetime, of all 3 types of projects.
Wise words of Harnish Jani.
Palms sweaty. Heart racing. You know the feeling. Whether it’s five people or fifty, public speaking is a gut-wrenching experience for most of us.Before co-founding Crew, I had a huge fear of speaking in public. Any time I had to present something in front of more than a handful of people, my stomach would turn to knots and my throat would get so tight I wouldn’t be able to speak.The reality is, if you’re planning on presenting pretty much anything in your life (which you most likely will), you’ll need to be able to effectively communicate your ideas in front
For myself, when I need it (which will be often).
Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.
Confucius
Don't worry and fret, faint hearted, The chances have just begun, For the best jobs haven't been started, The best work hasn't been done.
Berton Braley “Opportunity”
"The sky is not the limit, it is only the beginning. Lift off."
Wise words
From a wise friend (Daniel Young) on his birthday:
39 Things I Know To Be True:
1. Learn to write. 2. Learn to draw. Even boxes and arrows can get you pretty far. 3. Throw away what you don’t use. Nature does it too. 4. Don’t say “just”. It’s not very honest. 5. What you experience and what you remember are often very different things. 6. Buy experiences over things. 7. Hacking and coffee can only take you so far. Understanding relationships is generally the better long-term strategy. 8. Knowledge, intelligence, and wisdom are like money, skills, and friends. More is generally better, and you can use one to get the others if you know the right order. 9. Complaining and farting in public have similar effects. People stay away from you. 10. Insights happen when you embrace the unexpected. Unexpected things happen when you leave the familiar. 11. Don’t overthink decisions. Learn to deal with consequences instead. 12. Always ask a question. 13. Perfection is an illusion of quick recovery — a skill built on focus and practice. 14. Respect rhythm. 15. If you’re the smartest person in the room, leave. 16. Abundance of one kind creates scarcity of another. For instance, an abundance of information creates a scarcity of attention. 17. Learn a foreign language. Programming counts. 18. To communicate is to influence. 19. Take care of the people around you. Everything else will take care of itself. 20. If it feels too hard, you’re probably not doing it correctly. 21. Sugar is like Darth Vader. Fake sugar is like Kylo Ren. 22. Good enough is good enough for most things. 23. The difference between success and failure is a matter of timing and iteration. 24. Spend most of the time describing the problem. 25. Find the least expensive way to test. Testing is better than guessing. Guessing is better than doing nothing. 26. Some impossible things are still worth trying to do, like knowing everything. 27. Listening is the foundation to building connection. 28. The most creative solutions come from staying with a problem longer than anyone else is willing to. 29. How you process is more important than what you remember. 30. Don’t try to leave a legacy. Most people don’t care about the names they sit or step on. 31. When we complain about other people, it’s usually about things that we want most from ourselves. 32. Authenticity is more important than originality. 33. Avoid people with precious opinions. 34. There are usually more than two options. 35. No one else can better answer the hardest and most important questions in your life. That’s your job. 36. Cheating is only wrong if the rules are correct. 37. There are only a few things that matter. 38. Do what you say. Say what you do. Then you won’t need to worry about Facebook settings. 39. Make people feel amazing.
Ten days after 9/11, a shocking attack at a Texas mini-mart shattered the lives of two men: the victim and the attacker. In this stunning talk, Anand Giridharadas, author of "The True American," tells the story of what happened next. It's a parable about the two paths an American life can take, and a powerful call for reconciliation.
On forgiveness, open-mindedness, and action.
What kind of adventures produce goodness, rather than build résumés?
<3
Work you did not sell is no better than work you did not do.
Mike Monteiro (IxDA 2015)