The drunken peasants podcast is what keeps me sane.
noise dept.
$LAYYYTER

Kaledo Art
dirt enthusiast
Today's Document
Xuebing Du

#extradirty

Andulka
Cosmic Funnies

ellievsbear
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Monterey Bay Aquarium
No title available

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
DEAR READER
🪼

JBB: An Artblog!
wallacepolsom
almost home
seen from Singapore
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seen from United States
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@mollyravenn
The drunken peasants podcast is what keeps me sane.
I found this on Facebook and had to share 💜
hey taylorswift I did a thing
this is literally what I do every time I hear this song fyi lol
I wanna go back to New York City ❤️💚
I miss being sid vicious for 70s day at school. My nancy is clearly the prettiest ❤️
me: home alone yes time to fuck shit up and be rebellious
me: uses computer without headphones
"Konnichiwa Clarice-chan."
this might be my favorite gif
the sheer amount of editing they had to do for this picture blows my skull
When you flip bats upside down they become exceptionally sassy dancers [x].
i freakin love bats
Baby bats❤️
Just realized I haven’t posted any of my newer stuff. Grey alien mask commission casted out of #smoothon Ecoflex 30. Pics are before and after paint which was done with Silc Pig.
we’ve taught girls to romanticise nearly everything a boy does. when i was younger i thought it was cute that boys chased the girl even after she said no. i loved it when after a girl moved away from a kiss, the guy would pull her back and force it on. i thought a guy saying ‘i won’t take a no for an answer’ was passionate and romantic. we’re literally always teaching girls to romanticise abusive traits.
REAL FUCKING TALK
Photographer Walter Sachels was terrified of death, so much so he refused to see his mother after she passed away. Upon entering his 70s, Schels finally decided to overcome his fear through a bold, bizarre project – photographing individuals before and directly after their death.
Schels and his partner Beat Lakotta began approaching potential individuals at hospices in Berlin and Hamburg. The pair were on constant alert, at times running out in the middle of the night to shoot before the undertaker would come.
Though emotionally draining, Schels recognized that the series became an important epitaph to people before they actually died. With family and friends unable to cope with the looming truth, terminally ill patients often feel completely isolated.
“It’s so good you’re doing this”, Schels quoted a dying man to The Guardian, “No one else is listening to me, no one wants to hear or know what it’s really like.”
Schels is no longer terrified of death and now sees avoidance of the issue as a serious problem in contemporary society, people unable to be truly present for loved ones when they need them most. Life Before Death is an attempt to confront our worst fears and perhaps, to see those nearing the end in a more human light. For the individual stories behind each of the portraits click here.