
tannertan36
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Janaina Medeiros
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
DEAR READER

titsay
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Mike Driver
Monterey Bay Aquarium
taylor price
Peter Solarz

No title available

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art

oozey mess

pixel skylines
d e v o n

Discoholic 🪩

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@nikol8
Art by SIXMOREVODKA STUDIO
Couldn’t get these words out my head
Work in progress
Pfeiffer Beach Keyhole Arch Sunset [OC] [2048x2048] IG@cookdog77 - Author: cookdog1117 on reddit
Grand Space Opera: Light Age - Character Design by Alex Negrea
Sade 👄💄
-@BryMarpaints
Art by Surendra Rajawat
Louisiana residents have been deeply affected by the floods that turned their lives upside down. These images come from a photo series called Humans of the Water, put together by Louisiana photographers.
Read their stories.
These photos come from David Morris and Collin Richie.
Families torn apart. Communities torn apart. Loss of land. Loss of businesses. Loss of history. There’s a legacy that lives on. —Shirah Dedman
In 1912, Thomas Miles, Sr., a black business owner in Shreveport, Louisiana, was accused of giving a note to a white woman. In response, a white mob lynched him with impunity, hanging him from a tree and riddling his body with bullets. Fearing for their lives, his wife and son fled to California and even changed the spelling of their last name (from Miles to Myles) to distance themselves from the tragedy.
The Dedman/Myles family had not been back to the South in more than one hundred years. This past January, Shirah Dedman, her mother, Phoebe Dedman, and her aunt Luz Myles returned to Shreveport, seeking answers about their grandfather’s life and death. “Growing up, I had zero want to go to the South,” Shirah Dedman said. “But now I feel like we need to go see where we came from.”
Numerous markers honoring the Confederacy remain in Shreveport today, yet there are no markers paying tribute to the victims of racial terror lynchings. While in Shreveport, the family visited the site where their grandfather was lynched, and participated in a soil collection to commemorate him. This is one of many soil collections EJI is facilitating at lynching sites across this country, as they work to build a lasting and more visible memory of our history of racial injustice.
Click here to hear their story, and explore The Legacy of Lynching at the Brooklyn Museum now through September 3.
Original photography by Rog Walker and Bee Walker for the Equal Justice Initiative) 2017.
Teenage alcoholism is so important to recognise. It is not healthy to be getting absolutely wasted a few times a week and sometimes young adults become alcoholic without realising it. If you are unable to have a fun time without drinking or you feel like you need to drink when others are in an overwhelming way then consider getting help.
No really. Get help. It starts with parties, and then it’s “lol im just sad all the time” and before you know it everything is awful and you’re spiralling out of control. Don’t get sucked in and don’t let tumblr Depression Culture make you think it’s normal.
They look exactly like us. Us (2019) dir. Jordan Peele