there is no greater mystery than What Was That Deleted Video In My Youtube Playlist
Me when my saved edits get deleted and I’m sad but I don’t even know which one until I wanna watch it and I can’t find it :/

gracie abrams
🪼
YOU ARE THE REASON
Keni

@theartofmadeline
art blog(derogatory)
EXPECTATIONS
d e v o n
occasionally subtle

No title available
NASA
RMH

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document

titsay
sheepfilms

Kiana Khansmith
Stranger Things
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Mike Driver
seen from Sweden
seen from Italy

seen from Ukraine
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Switzerland

seen from Vietnam
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Austria

seen from Malaysia

seen from India

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Algeria
@ghiblicxts
there is no greater mystery than What Was That Deleted Video In My Youtube Playlist
Me when my saved edits get deleted and I’m sad but I don’t even know which one until I wanna watch it and I can’t find it :/
Night Rain at Omiya - Kawase Hasui 1930
Japanese 1983-1957
i just think that it would’ve been neat if percy and annabeth had met luke in tartarus & realized that the gods had thrown him there because they considered him too much of a threat to ever be allowed near elysium where he could be reborn
no but it really would’ve made more sense for luke to be the one they found down there instead of bob/ieptus. like, bob is cool as a callback to that short story, but 1) he doesn’t make any sense if you haven’t read the short story and 2) he’s just ... not a well-written character & most things he does are based on plot contrivances. like, apparently he can hear people calling for help from tartarus, which no one else can? he somehow knows exactly where damasen is, despite having no memories of tartarus? and he had literally no problem with helping percy out and literally dying for him even after finding out that percy had wiped his memory and practically brainwashed him? make it make sense.
i know we all like to assume that luke went to elysium because he was the hero in the end, but when have the gods ever been merciful? when has hades ever been merciful? it makes sense that he would put luke (the one who lead the revolution against olympus) in the same place as kronos (the one that luke brought back from the dead to achieve his goal).
i just ... think it could’ve been nice (but terrible) to see luke and annabeth reunite. to see percy and luke be the “foes bear arms to the doors of death.” it would’ve been ten times as heartbreaking for luke to be the one leading them through tartarus, and for luke to be the one they had to leave behind.
mark of Athena, Rick riordan // the song of achilles, madeline miller // strangers, the kinks // margaret atwood, from power politics: poems // mary oliver, from west wind // lover, Taylor Swift // willow, Taylor Swift // the louvre, lorde // art by burdge
kiddos
this is so fucking funny
You ever get bored, go to Netflix but decide you’re not ready for that kind of commitment rn so you end up watching Youtube instead?
pride and prejudice, jane austen // água viva, clarice lispector // the song of achilles, madeline miller // the left hand of darkness, ursula k. le guin // anurag prakash ray // the lightning thief, rick riordan // farah mustafa
oh this made me miserable
Some of my favourite books (pdfs) you can get for free from MetPublications:
Art and Anatomy in Renaissance Italy: Images from a Scientific Revolution The Art of Medicine in Ancient Egypt Dangerous Beauty: Medusa in Classical Art Cochineal Red: The Art History of a Color Herbs for the Mediaeval Household for Cooking, Healing and Divers Uses Sweet Herbs and Sundry Flowers: Medieval Gardens and the Gardens of The Cloisters The Pietà in French Late Gothic Sculpture The Eighteenth-Century Woman
And here’s where you can go through all 569 available, if you so choose.
Source
All I want from life is this room
i am obsessed with this man
I am deceased
We have love and made love before But not like this.
— Elizabeth Sargent, from “We Poets”
Your shoes piled up with mine, and the heat comes on, makes a simple noise, a dog-yawn. People have done this before, but not us.
— Ada Limón, from “During the Impossible Age of Everyone”
I loved you in the morning, our kisses deep and warm, your hair upon the pillow like a sleepy golden storm, yes many loved before us, I know that we are not new
— Leonard Cohen, from “Hey, That’s No Way to Say Goodbye”
“All lovers believe they are inventing love.”
— Anne Carson, from Eros the Bittersweet
do you ever think about that myth where you’re connected to the people you’re destined to meet through an invisible thread of fate. i wonder how the threads changed after long distance communications were invented. like maybe i would never be able to meet you guys irl, but our fates are kinda intertwined still.
so women are supposed to grin and bear the books, the comics, the movies, the plays, the tv shows, the stories, the sci-fi, the translated ancient poems, the fucking millennia of men writing about their self inserts torturing women and it being declared as High Art by other men, we’re supposed to read it in our free time, study it in classrooms, include their styles in our own writing, accept their cultural influence as natural, watch it in the cinema, write about it, talk about it, accept it, aspire it, but men can’t tolerate three seconds of female wish fulfilment of a woman snapping the wrist of a creep without feeling personally kicked in the balls.
This reminds me of something I observed in college while I was doing my honors thesis on women in modern horror films. I watched a LOT of horror during that time as part of my research, and sometimes that was done with my family around.
And my dad and brothers? Were deeply disturbed by the movie Jennifer’s Body. I was flabbergasted. It’s not scary! It’s not even that gory. But they were horrified by it. These men who grew up on 70s slashers were legitimately shook by 90 minutes of Megan Fox eating a few teenage boys, mostly off-screen.
Similarly, my all-male reading panel for my thesis? Were so disturbed by my synopsis of the film Teeth that they couldn’t even talk about it. One of them said he couldn’t look at his wife for a week after reading it.
Again, grown-ass men who study and teach media for a living. Who definitely watch and enjoy horror movies. One of whom was a huge Tarantino buff. We watched and read worse in his intro to mass media class! But one movie about a girl whose vag could bite was enough to haunt him.
Then of course you have things like the Gone Girl backlash–men yelling that Amy Dunne is evil and women clamoring to assure everyone that they know she is not someone to emulate–the backlash against Carol Danvers, and, more recently, the griping from MRAs against the upcoming film Hustlers, which is about strippers scamming their Wall Street clients.
My conclusion? Most men–at least most straight, cisgender men, who are both my sample population and most of the ones whining that Carol is a “villain”–are perfectly fine with, and desensitized to, media where men do violence to women (horror movies), or men do violence to men (horror and action movies). They’re even sort of fine when women do violence to women (“ooooo cat fight!”).
But they get intensely uncomfortable when women are depicted doing any kind of violence to men, especially in films that tilt the balance of power to the other side of the m/f gender binary beyond a single moment or scene.
So woman as flesh-eating monster with men as her preferred cuisine? Woman who responds to unwanted sexual contact by biting it off? Woman who frames her cheating husband for murder? Woman whose response to harassment–behavior that many of the loudest whiners know is both creepy and reflective of their own thoughts/actions–is to break something?
Too scary. Unacceptable. Disturbing. These men hate being presented with the idea, even in fiction, that their position of power is socially constructed, that it could easily be flipped the other way. It terrifies them.
In feeling that terror, they experience a tiny modicum of what living, existing, moving, being perceived as a woman in the world is like.
And they flinch every time.
Here have a newspaper comic from 1993