i don't do bad sauce passes
wallacepolsom
will byers stan first human second
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
trying on a metaphor
AnasAbdin
Keni

Product Placement

shark vs the universe
Peter Solarz
🪼
cherry valley forever
Cosimo Galluzzi
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature

blake kathryn

titsay
Monterey Bay Aquarium
we're not kids anymore.

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Poland
seen from Malaysia

seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from Belgium
seen from Philippines

seen from Italy

seen from Brazil

seen from Finland
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seen from United States

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seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
@nitors
How amazing it is to find someone who wants to hear about all the things that go on in your head.
Nina LaCour (via quotemadness)
I know that what I am feeling is serious and has the power to destroy me.
— Clarice Lispector, The Passion According To G.H.
“I loved you in a way I wished someone would love me.”
— Mahmdou Darwish (via perrfectly)
Some words stay in your head long after they’re spoken.
Robin Roe // A List of Cages (via qvotable)
“If you give children a vocabulary that’s large enough and complex enough to express their emotions and their ideas, you give them access to complex feelings and emotions in themselves. So that if you talk to a teenager and all they can say about how they feel is BAD, and they haven’t got, you know, a larger vocabulary for lonely, abused, insecure, frightened…I mean there’s this huge panoply which…I remember when my daughter was just telling me that she just felt bad, I bought her a thesaurus. I said, “Look up, is it sort of over lonely, or is it insecure…and look up under lonely, you’ll find two hundred words for lonely. Which one?” But what that does is that it makes you feel that there’s this huge complexity of emotions and there are words for all of them. If you want children to feel less frustrated and less disenfranchised and less unable to even feel comfortable with their own emotions, you’ll have to give them a vocabulary that’s as complicated as their inner lives. And one of the things we see in children is this incredibly reduced capacity for reporting their inner lives to the exterior world. One of the things is just teaching them poems, just teaching them to memorize poems in school, they don’t have to interpret them, if they just internalize the language of the poem, the complexity of the emotion in the poems…” -Jorie Graham, in a conversation