i don't do bad sauce passes

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Xuebing Du
d e v o n

pixel skylines
dirt enthusiast
No title available
NASA

if i look back, i am lost
AnasAbdin
taylor price

JVL

JBB: An Artblog!
ojovivo
Game of Thrones Daily
cherry valley forever

shark vs the universe

PR's Tumblrdome
we're not kids anymore.

Love Begins
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany

seen from Türkiye
seen from Singapore

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Belarus

seen from France

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Canada

seen from France

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@its-3am-again
i say this in all seriousness, a great way to resist the broad cultural shift of devaluing curiosity and critical thinking is to play my favorite game, Hey What Is That Thing
you play it while walking around with friends and if you see something and don't know what it is or wonder why its there, you stop and point and say Hey What Is That Thing. and everyone speculates about it. googling it is allowed but preferably after spending several minutes guessing or asking a passerby about it
weird structures, ambiguous signs, unfamiliar car modifications, anything that you can't immediately understand its function. eight times out of ten, someone in the group actually knows, and now you know!
a few examples from me and my friends the past few weeks: "why is there a piece of plywood sticking out of that pond in a way that looks intentional?" (its a ramp so squirrels that fall in to the pond can climb out) • "my boss keeps insisting i take a vacation of nine days or more, thats so specific" (you work at a bank, banks make employees take vacation in long chunks so if youre stealing or committing fraud, itll be more obvious) • "why does this brick wall have random wooden blocks in it" (theres actually several reasons why this could be but we asked and it was so you could nail stuff to the wall) • "most of these old factories we drive past have tinted windows, was that just for style?" (fun fact the factory owners realized that blue light keeps people awake, much like screen light does now, so they tinted the windows blue to keep workers alert and make them work longer hours)
been playing this game for a long time and ive learned (and taught) a fuckton about zoning laws, local history, utilities (did you know you can just go to your local water treatment plant and ask for a tour and if they have a spare intern theyll just give you a tour!!!) and a whole lot of fun trivia. and now suddenly you're paying more attention when youre walking around, thinking about the reasons behind every design choice in the place you live that used to just be background noise. and it fuckin rules.
Grace is one of the most classic things to fall from
That and the monkey barrrsssss
You're right but don't say it like that
this too shall pass but the fuck was that for
As you get older, your body doesn't work the same as when you were young.
For instance, now my feet smell and my nose runs.
Started catching up on Gokurakugai and Tao is an instant fave (again).
@adarklana