Listening to this song is like… how I imagine the dopamine rush from shooting heroin feels
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EXPECTATIONS
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
NASA
Today's Document

pixel skylines

shark vs the universe

tannertan36
Xuebing Du

JVL

bliss lane
taylor price

oozey mess
Misplaced Lens Cap
RMH
Mike Driver

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@eunizejoy
Listening to this song is like… how I imagine the dopamine rush from shooting heroin feels
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The Full Moon above the coast of Tunisia by NASA Johnson https://flic.kr/p/2o1wzjB
trying out different socmed sites and i still go back to tumblr
I identify with this on an alarming level
I love that age when little girls get really weird and mystical and savage
Like nine through eleven years old, those are some weird years for us
When I was 9-10 I read The Egypt Game and The Headless Cupid, taught myself hieroglyphics, and decided to practice witchcraft
The past three years, my son has come home telling me about the girls he knows, who are: 1. possessed by a demon controlled by a button at the back of her neck, 2. haunted by a dead aunt, and 3. converse regularly with the dead.
I used to talk to bees by running in circles of their dance patterns
this is my new favourite post omg ♡♡♡
girlhood in it’s natural unbridled state is magical
never forget the mysticism of girlhood
When I was that age, I started hiding part of my supper so later that night I could put food on the wood pile for the monsters. I was worried they were hungry.
When I was that age, my friends and I would talk to ghosts at recess and pick herbs and do spells in each other’s backyards.
We built a brick falling trap and crafted weapons in order to hunt the bear our father told us was in the woods. I’m sure he told us to keep us out of there, but that sure backfired. We went out and howled to the wolf pack we were sure was in there, too. We dug up bones and made potions out of mud and dried weeds and planned to run away from home and live in the trees that grew in the park nearby.
My best friend and I would go back out behind her family’s property and find animal bones and weird shaped twigs and seeds and plants and cast spells and do blood rituals and we definitely summoned some kind of demon from hell
Me and a childhood friend learned and passed notes in hieroglyphics during class. At recess, we would build faerie houses at the bases of trees out of bark, moss, acorn tops, ect and leave them offerings of bread and milk in tiny playcups and saucers
I read a lot of non-fiction books on witchcraft from the library, then drew a bunch of protective and binding sigils and taped them to my closet door. Dad asked me what they were for; “To trap the monsters so I can make deals with them”, I replied. “What sort of deals, sweetie?” asked Dad, who knew me well.
“If they don’t scare me, I’ll tell them which of the neighbor kids are easy to scare.”
When I was eight I got into my mom’s old college english textbooks and read the entire greek literature and mythology textbook. For some reason I got some heavy paper and mullberries from the tree in the yard and did a drawing of Icarus with the mullberry juice. Then I rolled it up into a scroll, punched a hole in my bedroom wall down in the corner behind my bed, and stuffed it inside the drywall. Not sure why, but I firmly believed doing so would help me sleep well.
It’s probably still in there. I had to spackle the hole shut a couple years later when my parents found it.
To be a woman is to be magical
I was writing the runic alphabet without knowing it was the runic alphabet just cos my friend used it to write in my slumbook and I thought she invented it. So it sorta became our secret writing and we’d write ‘secret messages’ to each other using that. It was years later that I saw it in LoTR and was so baffled to know that it was kinda a legit writing system. I just thought she invented it but actually it was an ancient writing system.
My child is autistic. He doesn’t do well with change. Even little things that would be meaningless to most people.
For example, his hairbrush was getting old and worn. He had chewed the end of it. The cats had chewed some bristles. It was dirty and dusty. But I didn’t say anything. Because it’s his hairbrush.
Finally, he said he thinks it’s time for a new brush. Ok, I say, we’ll put it on the shopping list, and get one next time we’re in town.
So we go to town and we go to the store. There are many hairbrushes to choose from. He picks one and they even have it in his favorite color. We buy it, take it home, and remove the packaging.
I go to put it on the shelf where the old hairbrush is. Can we throw out the old one, I ask.
That’s when he stops. That’s when he freezes and gets a momentary look of panic on his face. Throw out the old one? That hadn’t occurred to him.
Because here’s the thing. Hair brushing is a part of his morning routine. And not just hair brushing, but hair brushing with that particular brush. To most people, the act of hair brushing is the routine, but not the brush itself. The objects are interchangeable. But not to my child. Not to someone with autism. The brush itself is just as important as the act of brushing.
So I take a breath. I put the old brush down. Think about it, I say. Let me know tomorrow what you want to do with this brush.
He decides. He realizes keeping an old hairbrush is not necessary. But it’s still important to him. So he asks if I can cut off one bristle. To keep. As a memory of the old hairbrush.
I don’t laugh. I don’t tell him it’s silly. I respect his need. I cut off the bristle. He puts it in his treasure box, along side some smooth rocks, beads, sparkly decals, a Santa Claus charm from a classmate, a few other things meaningful to him.
He throws the old hairbrush away himself. He is able to move on, and accept the change.
when you are alone at night and there is nobody so you feel like nobody you can always look up and remember the stars will never abandon you
oh my goddd. I thought it was great from the beginning but it only gets better
Is that…, josh peck…
If I don’t see this somewhere on my tl every Friday, I’m gonna be very upset
oh… she can sing
Why didn’t she release this version originally??
because she was 13 and had no control over it and now shes in her 20s lol
in the late nite
my brain @ 4am: pplease.. . no more,..le t me sleepp
me, clicking on another RIP vine compilation:
I firmly believe that there’s a “right” time to read a certain book. It’s okay if you’re interested in a book and it sits on your shelf for years. Maybe it didn’t call out to you when you wanted something to read because it was waiting for the right time to mean the most to you. Not saying this is always the case, but this has happened enough to recognize the magic.
my mantra
“At 19, I read a sentence that re-terraformed my head: “The level of matter in the universe has been constant since the Big Bang.” In all the aeons we have lost nothing, we have gained nothing - not a speck, not a grain, not a breath. The universe is simply a sealed, twisting kaleidoscope that has reordered itself a trillion trillion trillion times over. Each baby, then, is a unique collision - a cocktail, a remix - of all that has come before: made from molecules of Napoleon and stardust and comets and whale tooth; colloidal mercury and Cleopatra’s breath: and with the same darkness that is between the stars between, and inside, our own atoms. When you know this, you suddenly see the crowded top deck of the bus, in the rain, as a miracle: this collection of people is by way of a starburst constellation. Families are bright, irregular-shaped nebulae. Finding a person you love is like galaxies colliding. We are all peculiar, unrepeatable, perambulating micro-universes - we have never been before and we will never be again. Oh God, the sheer exuberant, unlikely face of our existences. The honour of being alive. They will never be able to make you again. Don’t you dare waste a second of it thinking something better will happen when it ends. Don’t you dare.”
— Caitlin Moran