noise dept.
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

PR's Tumblrdome
h
almost home
taylor price
No title available

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Cosmic Funnies
Monterey Bay Aquarium
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
wallacepolsom
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kiana Khansmith

pixel skylines
Stranger Things
occasionally subtle
Peter Solarz
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from Iraq

seen from Malaysia

seen from Slovakia

seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from Philippines

seen from Malaysia
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from Japan
@lifeandbrknpromises
âExcUSE me?!â
Iâve literally been laughing at this for the past five minutes
The best part is that this was done deliberately by the dean as a joke. Gotta love it when academics can poke fun at themselves.
I assumed this was either photoshop or a joke and I am DELIGHTED to know itâs the latter
YES >:(
Some days itâs definitely like that.
The beautiful Berriozabaleta fountain, located in a wonderful landscape in Elorrio.
Titles of nobility owned by Spanish king, Felipe VI.
People from America, the Philippines, Hungary, Croatia, Italy, Portugal, Palestine and Israel discovering some dude in Spain calls himself their king:
a lot of young girls need to realize that keeping friendships alive gets so hard after high school/uni and that you have to actively nurture your friendships if you want them to last yes even the friendships of 2 decadesâŚ.. your 20s are so disorienting and trauamtizing no one can afford to take friendships for granted⌠everybody worries about not finding a romantic partner lets start worrying about being friendless by the time you hit 30
hey uh. I didnât learn this lesson. Iâve spent years and years at a time without the kind of friends that interact with you every week, or even every month. Without the kind of friends that you see often and know well. During my 20â˛s and into my 30â˛s I let my friends get to arms length and before i knew it they were all miles away.
Iâve reconnected with some people who have shared the strongest bonds with me, which is good, itâs very good, but those few people all live in different states or countries now, they have kids or intense careers or their time is filled by lots of everyday friends, and so I go months at a time without seeing or talking to friends.
I finally had to schedule weekly phone calls with two or three just so I could maintain SOME kind of friendship.
But it has become a very lonely life.
Donât assume youâll always have friends, or that you can always make new friends. Donât make the mistake of thinking that friendships donât require purposeful effort to maintain. When you day-dream about your best possible future, donât forget to include specifics about your friends being there, and then when you work toward those dreams, make sure some of the work is to keep those friendships active.
Up through the middle of the 20th Century, a lot of women in Western culture spent a lot of time purposefully maintaining those social bonds with their friends (and also just with people in the community).
You know how they did it? Luncheons. Tea parties. Ladiesâ Aid meetings. Book clubs. Bridge clubs. Formal social callsâfifteen minutes or half-an-hour at one house, then on to the next, all afternoon. Garden parties. âThe Ladies Who Lunch.â Now, some of this is class-based; but even working-class women did a scaled-down version of this, usually, in their off-hours.
Men did this too, on a smaller scale; bowling leagues, going to ball games together, playing golf, poker night. Joining something like the Rotary or the Elks or the VFW.
One of the things that got lost over the course of the late 20th Century was this knowledge that social bonds had to be maintained on purpose if they were going to last, and the skills of how to do that. Boomers looked at their parentsâ lives, didnât like them, thought it was so old-fashioned and conservative and empty, and didnât ask if there was an underlying reason for it. (And what other forms âmaintaining positive social bondsâ might take in a modern context.) And so set about either dismantling or neglecting those norms and groups until today, when there are only vestiges left.
And now we look around and weâre so lonely and we donât know why or how to change it, because from Gen Z on down, we didnât have the examples of previous generations showing us what a purposeful social life could look like. So if you happen to be naturally good at making friends, youâre fine; and if youâre not, youâre in trouble.
But these are fixable things. We can create our own versions of things to help support our own (and other peoplesâ) social needs! Itâs not some arcane alchemy! Here are some things you can do:
Schedule regular meetings/phone calls with friends. This can be a simple phone call, or it can be a game night, or just a monthly âeveryone bring chips and dip and weâll hang outâ night.
Find a group that does something you like and join it. Check flyers at the post office, or Meetup.com, or something.
Me when I'm in a group đđŤ