Blugirl Fall 2004
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
wallacepolsom
No title available
Game of Thrones Daily
Show & Tell
Stranger Things
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Acquired Stardust

Kiana Khansmith
occasionally subtle
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Love Begins
Today's Document
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
noise dept.

shark vs the universe

titsay
No title available

ellievsbear
seen from Algeria

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

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seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
@existential-anxieties
Blugirl Fall 2004
Tracy Thomason - Circumventing Her Violets, 2024 - Oil and marble dust on linen
not only am i a sexual pervert but i enjoy various wicked poisons
A member of the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) smokes a cigarette after a day's training at a camp in Northern Lebanon.
(Photo credit: Maher Attar/Sygma)
Gertrude Abercrombie
Flight, 1946
Michael Bramman - "Ladies in Waiting" (Club International 1975)
tin gao by ana takahashi
Ayşen Kaptanoğlu (Turkish-Dutch, 1985) - Painting of a Sour Smelling Hell (2023)
Celeste Dupuy-Spencer (American, 1973-2026) - Don't Lose Your Lover (2018)
Richard Hescox
Yi Liu (Chinese, 1996) - Dancing with the Forest VI (2024)
Jamie Anderson/Glennon Doyle Melton, Love Warrior
Grief and love are interconnected
Chōu Ōta - Women Observing Stars (ink and color on paper, 1936)
“I learned about it almost by accident. We had received an assignment in school to fill out a family tree. I came home, a bit baffled by the assignment (fill in some names? that’s it?), and became more baffled still when, after asking my parents for help, it turned out that most of those branches on the family tree were going to have to remain blank. I implored my parents to try to remember. I became desperate, begging them to just make up some names. (I was about to receive a lesson in ethics and family history all at once.) As delicately as they could, my parents told me my mother’s parents were orphaned when they were young. That my mom’s aunt, who helped raise her, was not actually her aunt, but a member of the makeshift family that formed in the Beirut orphanage where my grandparents met and grew up. I remember asking what happened and being told that there had been fighting in a country called Turkey, where my grandparents were born (yet another revelation: they weren’t even from Beirut!). That bad things had happened and many people died but my grandparents survived. That they were little when they were found and rescued and taken to Beirut. I thought about my grandpa. My always smiling, cuddly dede, who only had one eye and whom I loved more than anything. Who wore a beret, snuck me candy bars, and sang funny songs to me while the bombs fell that time we visited Beirut. It all suddenly became too much. I just wanted to finish my assignment. I asked for just enough information to include in a note for my teacher. And so, I scrawled on the bottom of that half-empty family tree, “I couldn’t fill in all the names because of the Armenian genocide. One million people died but my grandparents survived. You can ask my parents.””
— Sylvia Alajaji, The Day I Discovered My Grandparents Survived a Genocide (via katherinemansfields)
Rainer Maria Rilke in a letter to Lou Andreas-Salomé, published in Rilke and Andreas-Salomé: A Love Story in Letters
In 1917 representatives of the small Armenian community of New York organized a unique action in one of the city streets, trying to attract public attention to help the Armenians in need. Girls in the images of Mother Armenia and orphans raised a poster with the following note: “We mourn for our 1,000,000 lost, You can help the 1,500,000 surviving”.
The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation