i miss being able to take the battery of my phone out and just hold it
is it too much to ask? to be able to hold my phoneās heart in my hand again?
dirt enthusiast
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Discoholic šŖ©

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Claire Keane
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
KIROKAZE

JBB: An Artblog!
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du

oozey mess
todays bird

PR's Tumblrdome
Jules of Nature
styofa doing anything
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almost home
hello vonnie
Keni
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@infinitesong
i miss being able to take the battery of my phone out and just hold it
is it too much to ask? to be able to hold my phoneās heart in my hand again?
Our favourite sailor Voronwƫ
welcome back friends!Ā
āNot all menā I say, āthere is but one who is purely good.ā But which man am I referring to? In Iceland, deep in the woods and the snow, there lives a lad raised by wolves who feasts upon sunbeams and loves all of nature, unburdened by manās sins. Tenderly, he strokes a hungry squirrel, sharing with her the last acorns of the autumn harvest. A tear rolls down his cheek. Who is he
remember to cry for help without guilt-tripping. i know it feels like youāve been abandoned and betrayed, but itās probably not true, and itās not okay to accuse the people around you of something they might not have done.
āi guess none of you like meā could be better phrased asĀ āi feel unloved right nowā
ābut nobody cares anywayā could be better phrased asĀ āi feel insignificant and i need reassuranceā
rather than assuming othersā feelings, give them time to explain them. youāll usually get a much better answer.
This is really important for future predictions, too.Ā āYouāre eventually going to leave meā is impossible for someone else to disprove without just sticking around forever, but no one wants to stick around when theyāre being constantly accused of future abandonment. Giving someone no choice but to either stay with you forever in order to prove you wrong or leave you and prove you right is incredibly emotionally manipulative, whether you mean it to be or not.
āI get scared sometimes because Iām afraid of being alone againā is easier to address and doesnāt leave your partner(s)/friend(s) feeling as though theyāre being preemptively accused of something.Ā Ā
Cats
My girlfriend and I are in a bad spot, as well as a homophobic environment, and Im scared we could be kicked out at anytime. We would have no where to go, so Iām opening back up commissions for extra money. If you know anyone who is looking for commissions or just wanna help out, any penny counts! Even a reblog helps.
I take all three Cashapp, PayPal, and Venmo.
Cashapp: $perisaph
Venmo: @megan-navy
PayPal: paypal.me/megannavy
Here is prices/examples.
My job aināt giving me that many hours, so please if anyone needs anything drawn for them or anything message me!!
Finrod Felagund, King of Nargothrond
Some people were enraged by my curvy Galadriel so I hope they will enjoy this equally much!
The Himba (singular: OmuHimba, plural: OvaHimba) are indigenous peoples with an estimated population of about 50,000 people living in northern Namibia, in the Kunene Region (formerly Kaokoland) and on the other side of the Kunene River in Angola.Ā The OvaHimba are a semi-nomadic, pastoralist people, culturally distinguishable from the Herero people in northern Namibia and southern Angola, and speak OtjiHimba, a variety of Herero, which belongs to the Bantu family within NigerāCongo. The OvaHimba are considered the last (semi-) nomadic people of Namibia.
The Himba often cover themselves with otjize paste, a cosmetic mixture of butterfat and ochre pigment, to cleanse the skin over long periods due to water scarcity and protect themselves from the extremely hot and dry climate of the Kaokoland as well as against mosquito insect bites. The cosmetic mixture, often perfumed with the aromatic resin of the omuzumba shrub, gives their skin and hair plaits a distinctive orange or red-tinge characteristic, as well as texture and style.Ā Otjize is considered foremost a highly desirable aesthetic beauty cosmetic, symbolizing earthās rich red color and blood the essence of life, and is consistent with the OvaHimba ideal of beauty. The OvaHimba are also accustomed to use wood ash for hair cleansing due to water scarcity.
Hairstyle and jewelry play a significant role among the OvaHimba, it indicates age and social status within their community.Ā An infant or child will generally have his head kept shaven of hair or a small crop of hair on his head crown. This soon is sculptured to one braided hair plait extended to the rear of the head for young boys and young girls have two braided hair plaits extended forward towards the face often parallel to their eyes. This style is called ozondato, the form of wear being determined by the oruzo membership (patrilineal descent group). The style remains during preadolescence until reaching puberty.Ā Some young girls, with exception, may also have one braided hair plait extended forwards, which means they are one of a pair of twins.
OvaHimba girl
OvaHimba girl dancing
OvaHimba boy
OvaHimba girl, one of a set of twins!
OvaHimba children, both boys and girls, removing ticks from goats.
From pubescence, boys continue to have one braided hair plait.
A young man wearing a braid known as ondatu. Namibia. Photo by Nigel Pavitt
Once they reach puberty, OvaHimba girls will have many otjize textured hair plaits, some arranged to veil the girlās face.Ā
This girl is going through puberty, a fact made plain by her hairstyle, which has been designed to cover her face and help her avoid male attention. The puffs at the bottom are either goat hair or synthetic.
(In daily practice, the hair plaits are often tied together and held parted back from the face.)Ā
This girlās braids are arranged to reveal her face, indicating that sheās ready to be married.
Women who have been married for about a year, or have had a child, wear an ornate headpiece called the Erembe, sculptured from sheepskin, with many streams of braided hair, coloured and put in shape with otjize paste.Ā
Married women wearing erembe
Unmarried young men continue to wear one braided hair plait extended to the rear of the head. When Himba men marry, they start wearing turbans, which they never take off unless someone in the village dies. After a death, their heads are shaved.Ā Because the turbans are never removed, things can get a little itchy underneath, so men carry pointed arrow-like instruments to scratch it with.
Married OvaHimba men. #s 1 and 3 wear a scratching implement in their turbans.
Widowed men will remove their cap or head-wrap and expose un-braided hair.Ā
Himba widower. The habit of using a head-scratching implement is hard to break.
[Source]
Wow this is the first time Iāve seen a culture where men are required to wear a headdress after marriage.
every single person in this post is absolutely stunning
Nnedi Okoraforās novella trilogy BintiĀ has a Himba main character. Otijze is even a plot point.
since my writing post was received pretty well, i though iād make other, to give some insight on the racism in the film industry and why itās still a big problem now as it was in the past.Ā
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Iām sorry I have abandoned you for so long, hereās Anaire and Earwen, the Queens of the Noldor!
IāM BACK FROM THE DEAD good news is I still have a job, bad news is we donāt know for how longā¦.
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