dirt enthusiast
trying on a metaphor

tannertan36
Show & Tell

Andulka
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
No title available

Product Placement
almost home
NASA
Not today Justin
occasionally subtle
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Three Goblin Art
styofa doing anything
One Nice Bug Per Day
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Janaina Medeiros

JVL
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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@mercurially
From /RainForest/Vines/1001/ on Geocities.
Cameron Bailey (American, b. 1990, New York, NY, USA)
Daybreak, 2025,
📷 Jerry LoFaro
Outside of Hanksville, Utah
Jed the Wolfdog in The Thing (1982)
nicandsav
nicole_coenen
Does anyone know what brand of pants the green ones are
@kronkk looks like dovetail workwear "maven". i have some of their stuff it's good quality.
Isaac Newton, in his famous aphorism—which actually originated with Bernard of Chartres—"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants," expressed the mode by which the thought of men was shaped into the major concepts of Western civilization. Men created written history and benefited from the transmittal of knowledge from one generation to the other, so that each great thinker could stand “on the shoulders of giants,” thereby advancing thought over that of previous generations with maximum efficiency. Women were denied knowledge of their history, and thus each woman had to argue as though no woman before her had ever thought or written. Women had to use their energy to reinvent the wheel, over and over again, generation after generation. Men argued with the giants that preceded them; women argued against the oppressive weight of millennia of patriarchal thought, which denied them authority, even humanity, and when they had to argue they argued with the "great men" of the past, deprived of the empowerment, strength and knowledge women of the past could have offered them. Since they could not ground their argument in the work of women before them, thinking women of each generation had to waste their time, energy and talent on constructing their argument anew. Yet, they never abandoned the effort. Generation after generation, in the face of recurrent discontinuities, women thought their way around and out from under patriarchal thought.
-Gerda Lerner, The Creation of Feminist Consciousness
Mary Oliver, from “Work, Sometimes”, New and Selected Poems, Volume Two
from inside a cave in the Ozarks in totality
l Joshua Kwekel l Ozark National Forest
The weather's changin' by Rodolphe Tavernaro
Phyllis Shafer, Magical Moment at Fallen Leaf Lake, gouache on paper, 17.5 x 22.5 inches.
Age old question, fellas
holy shit is this gorgeous.