my biggest desire: to be seen
my biggest fear: to be seen

Discoholic 🪩
wallacepolsom
Sweet Seals For You, Always
taylor price
DEAR READER
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Kiana Khansmith
Today's Document

tannertan36
Jules of Nature
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Misplaced Lens Cap

if i look back, i am lost
Keni
noise dept.
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane

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★

ellievsbear

seen from Malaysia

seen from China

seen from T1

seen from Ireland

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from Trinidad & Tobago
seen from Malaysia

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

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Germany
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seen from United States
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seen from Mexico
@nect-ari-ne
my biggest desire: to be seen
my biggest fear: to be seen
Its almost offensive when you see someone spreading Israeli propaganda for free like brother you know they're literally giving out soooooooooo much money to spread that shit and youre publicly declaring yourself as irredeemable and not worth talking with for zero us dollars?
Les Femmes Palestiniennes (1974, Jocelyne Saab)
youtube (eng subs). vimeo (spanish subs) / runtime: 10mins
rupture by kate kretz, 2018 (crowdsourced grey hair from people who have experienced profound loss hand embroidered on cotton)
Lets go All Over The Fucking Place with mama
Tamagotchi beadwork, Anna Pederson
it’s friday i’m in love
fell in love today because of the way he blinked while seeing someone he missed. fell in love today because of how you cut your eyes to me when you’ve told a joke in a crowed room, looking to see if i laugh, too. fell in love today because she was talking on the phone and said hang on, mom, there are roses here, let me take a picture of them and send them to you.
lovely is not how you look, it’s something you do. he makes room for her in the circle without her asking him to. she gives me her raincoat even if it means she gets soaked. we walk home together after a long night and you wait to make sure i get safely inside.
i will never be tired of this. i will never be done writing poetry about it. i am so enamored with humanity’s softness.
“I hope there is something beautiful on the horizon that’s just as impatient as I am. Something so eager, it wants to meet me halfway.”
— Rudy Francisco, “Horizon”
I opened the window, knelt on the fire escape. I was the prey & hawk. This was finally myself swallowing those small, common parts of me. Tearing all of that away into strips, my breast open to the bone. I saw myself torn apart, tearing & tearing at the beautiful face, the throat beneath my claw. My grieving face red with being exactly what I knew myself to be.
— Rachel Eliza Griffiths, from “Hunger,” Seeing the Body
Del Monte Foods shuttered its Modesto and Hughson cannery plants in April.
‘While bats can only sense the outer shapes and textures of their targets, dolphins can peer inside theirs. If a dolphin echolocates on you, it will perceive your lungs and your skeleton. It can likely sense shrapnel in war veterans and fetuses in pregnant women. It can pick out the air-filled swim bladders that allow fish, their main prey, to control their buoyancy.
It can almost certainly tell different species apart based on the shape of those air bladders. And it can tell if a fish has something weird inside it, like a metal hook. In Hawaii, false killer whales often pluck tuna off fishing lines, and “they’ll know where the hook is inside that fish,” Aude Pacini, who studies these animals, tells me. “They can ‘see’ things that you and I would never consider unless we had an X-ray machine or an MRI scanner.”
This penetrating perception is so unusual that scientists have barely begun to consider its implications. The beaked whales, for example, are odontocetes that look dolphin-esque on the outside—but on the inside, their skulls bear a strange assortment of crests, ridges, and bumps, many of which are only found in males.
Pavel Gol’din has suggested that these structures might be the equivalent of deer antlers—showy ornaments that are used to attract mates. Such ornaments would normally protrude from the body in a visible and conspicuous way, but that’s unnecessary for animals that are living medical scanners.’
-Ed Yong, An Immense World
Cetacean echolocation is one of those things that boggles your mind once you really start to think about the implications. They can see each others' hearts beating fast with fear or excitement. They can see if another dolphin is healthy, or pregnant; how the fetus is doing; if they have ingested debris. Their echolocation is also incredibly precise: a bottlenose dolphin could discriminate between cilinders differing in wall thickness by just 0.23 mm (0.009 inch) from 8 meters away!! And they certainly notice when something is off.
I'm not sure if I ever shared this story before here, but in Curacao, when I was allowed to assist in a guest interaction programme, there was suddenly consternation in the pool behind us. A guest had entered the water and the dolphins were going crazy, paying no heed to the trainers anymore. The lead trainer that was with me gave the dolphins to me to watch over while she went to help. When she came back she told me what had happened. The guest that had caused so much uproar had left the water again and was asked if he had done anything to upset the dolphins. He hadn't, and he couldn't imagine what was wrong... until he mentioned he had a pacemaker. The younger dolphins in the pool had never seen someone with a pacemaker before and apparently it rocked their world.
It was such a wild experience, and offered such a cool insight into how dolphins experience their world. I'll never forget it.
On social media, popular opinion is being formed, measured, and manipulated all at once, and every signal the platforms produce — a trending song, a backlash, a talking point, the feeling that “everybody” is suddenly talking about the same thing — can now be fabricated by unseen actors with hidden agendas. We’ve locked ourselves in the stupidest possible version of Plato’s cave, where what looks like the spontaneous consensus of the hive mind is often just shadows on the wall, put there by marketers, political operatives, foreign-influence campaigns, or anyone else with a few hundred bucks and something to sell. “Everybody is doing this now,” Lim says. “And if you’re not, you’re behind.”
Lane Brown, The Feed Is Fake