im always saying this
Monterey Bay Aquarium
ojovivo

Janaina Medeiros
$LAYYYTER
Cosmic Funnies

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Andulka
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

No title available
almost home

Product Placement
todays bird
hello vonnie
DEAR READER
h
🪼
Peter Solarz
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
AnasAbdin
wallacepolsom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from Libya
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Poland
seen from Germany
seen from Romania

seen from United States
@knucklescum
im always saying this
Kennedy Space Center , FL (1975)
Source: Flickr/Thomas Hawk
“And yet, Eomer, I say to you that she loves you more truly than me, for you she loves and knows; but in me she loves only a shadow and a thought: a hope of glory and great deeds, and lands far from the fields of Rohan. - Aragorn to Eomer, of Eowyn
I adore this quote because it reminds us all not to undervalue the love we have for our family members, and the love they have for us.
The "love" we have for idols and celebrities is shallow and fleeting. We may love what they represent, but we don't actually know them.
Our parents and siblings, spouses/partners and children, are likely the people who know us best and/or longest, and they have dealt with us at our worst. We tend to behave pretty shittily towards the people closest to us because of how secure we are in the relationship. But often, these people love us anyway and I think that's pretty incredible.
Seasonal Affective Disorder is just emotional scurvy, all my core wounds are reopening and they won't be fixed until the big lemon in the sky comes back
Ribs
i have a few more unconstructive things to add to the conversation and then i'll leave
’kill them with kindness” WRONG. Rohirrim‼️🐴 🛡 ⚔️ 🐴⚔️🛡🐴🐴⚔️🛡🛡⚔️🐴⚔️⚔️⚔️🐴🛡🛡🐴🐴⚔️🐴🐴🐴⚔️🛡🛡⚔️🐴🐴🐴⚔️🛡🐴⚔️🛡🛡⚔️🐴
spent the day watching and reading interviews with Sam Lake in the hopes that his eccentric genius would inspire me to study for my essay due in 3 days
aragorn + active listening head tilt
i find it so sad as an anthropology student that people only really care about forensic anthropology??? i'm in love with people and you want me to talk about their remains??? no!!!
OMG SAMEEEEE. However, I would like to develop my opinion.
Coming from Mexico where archaeology and later on cultural anthropology, have settled down the foundations of the "State" and employing the Mesoamerican cultures as the "root of 'our' identity as mexicans", just to built a story of victors against the foreign enemy while historycally forgetting and putting in disadvantage their indigenous communities.
The Mexican State sells the idea of these 'great and advanced civilizations' by proffiting of the economical gains the archaeological record offer in tourist attractions, but keep turning its head from the demands of the actual "descendants". Being in Tumblr, in contact with what a lot of usamericans posts, it still schocks me when I see things like the mayas magically disappeared, when they're right there.
Yes, the archaeological and physical remains are important, but these artifacts have been employed to encapsulate the indigenous communities in the past and looking over them.
HOWEVER
What the general public omits when they think about forensic anthropology is that this branch does not just worry about any remains.
When you live in a context where thanks to forensic anthropology can help identify some else's loved one, your perspective changes about it.
Because these are not any remains, those are *humans* remains. Someone's brother, someone's Mother, someone's sibling's or loved-one's. Someone with a biography, with joys, fears and regrets.
Because I love people. And I deeply hate when people just talk about them as piles of bones and flesh, and rip away their humanity. Finding a person can also mean for a family to have a body to grief and say goodbye to or a way to obtain justice.
My rant, is not directed towards OP (my apologies if I made you felt like it was) but to express my frustration towards the collective poor image people have about what anthropology is and its potentials.
Because people go like 'ooh bones' but is not a matter of the bones themselves. The *anthropo* part in anthropology stands for human being and they do not stop being one after death.
So, in conclusion. I find horrifying when people care more about the ancient dead people more than the people in the present. But when studying the dead, they should never be taken out their humanity and, the living can also and its study could offer peace towards their living peers.
Sorry for doing this so long, for any part that doesn't make sense, or for any grammar o spell mistake (my first lenguaje is spanish as i am mexican and it's late in the night, I wanted to sleep but my adhd braid said: raaaant.)
@moony-studies you totally hit the nail on the head, I couldn't agree more! Everything I type up in response sounds dumb so I'll keep it simple - anthropology without consideration of the lives that existed within your findings just isn't anthropology!
“you should be at the club” i should be by the sea. i should be in the mountains. i should be awestruck and rendered speechless by the majesty of the natural world. if you even care
i find it so sad as an anthropology student that people only really care about forensic anthropology??? i'm in love with people and you want me to talk about their remains??? no!!!
“he’s a red flag” “she’s a green flag” I’m a white flag. I give up bitch
Me at the slightest obstacle because existing alone is exhausting enough
when you watch the two towers and you get to the part where sam says “there’s some good in this world mr. frodo, and it’s worth fighting for” and you feel that rush of hope and you’re just like. you’re right sam. there is. there really is.