DEAR READER
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Discoholic 🪩
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NASA
Sade Olutola
Misplaced Lens Cap
Stranger Things
Three Goblin Art

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Product Placement
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
YOU ARE THE REASON
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Claire Keane
occasionally subtle
h

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.

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@myankov
This blog will make you feel at peace
RADEKS JZX100
Photos by Michael Carroll
@sloppyclock
Very good
best ever
got my final back
This used to be my outgoing VM message. :)
Team A-BO-MOON あ~ぼ~ムーン
…”if I had to give up the style, I would quit drifting.”
あ~ぼ~ムーン Akinobu Satsukawa saying SHAKOTAN til the grave!
Throwing it.
www.throttlefordays.com
It is an unusual school in an unusual location and is run by an unusual teacher.
Rajesh Kumar is a shopkeeper by profession but spends hours every morning teaching around 80 children from the poorest of the poor in India’s capital.
The 43-year-old visited the construction of the Delhi transit station a few years ago and was disturbed by the sight of many children playing at the site instead of attending school.
When he questioned the parents working at the sites they all said there were no schools in the vicinity and no one cared.
Consequently, his open-air class room was born - between pillars and beneath the tracks of the Delhi transit system, known as the Metro.
Every few minutes a train passes above, the children unperturbed by its sounds.
There are no chairs or tables and the children sit on rolls of polystyrene foam placed on the rubble.
Three rectangular patches of wall are painted black and used as a blackboard.
Anonymous donors have contributed cardigans, books, shoes and stationery for the children, as their parents cannot afford them.
One unnamed individual sends a bag full of biscuits and fruit juice for the pupils every day - another incentive for the children to turn up for their studies.
This is awesome
so inspiring
Wow. This gives me hope.
FT-1 Concept
The Stig on google street maps by Loch Ness, Scotland.
Unfortunately, he’s since been blurred out, probably to avoid any copyright conflicts