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JVL
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styofa doing anything
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
AnasAbdin

izzy's playlists!
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almost home
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Andulka

PR's Tumblrdome
ojovivo
dirt enthusiast

titsay
Today's Document
i don't do bad sauce passes
YOU ARE THE REASON

if i look back, i am lost
RMH
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@piccolomu
Cabin Life | Source © | AOI
Polish sculptor Malgorzata Chodakowska creates exquisitely beautiful and dynamic sculptures of bronze and wood that each feature water flowing from their limbs, waists, hair, or clothing. One figure features water flowing up from her shoulder blades like angel’s wings:
Watch this video to see Chodakowska’s beautiful and energetic water fountain sculptures in motion:
[via WHUDAT and My Modern Met]
By Thiago Braz | Instagram | Tumblr
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
#00ffbb
(Via TwistedLyricsRecords)
Laughing
If there’s a thing where I noticed a big cultural difference between me and him is what we laugh about. Norwegians are much less politically correct than we are in Italy. They laugh about everything. And while I can understand that that can be a good thing so as to put everyone on the same level, sometimes I really don’t get it :P
For example, every time we listen to Jan Egeland by Ylvis and the sentence “he breaks down just like a homo” comes up, I cringe. He laughs a lot. I felt embarassed when I made my gay best friend listen to it and apologized. He laughs like it’s the best line of the entire song. For me it kind of ruins the song. He giggles a lot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yn-oemgzlEU
I also notice it when we watch movies or TV shows. Even when we read something together. As an Italian exercise we started reading a comic with Rat-man and I kept laughing my guts out and he would stare at me with blank eyes and face.
So yes, we laugh at very different things and sometimes the reason why the other person laughs is lost on us. But the important thing is that we find things that make us both laugh. Together :)
My boyfriend got the measles. Despite the vaccines. Probably thanks to some child whose parents thought it would be fun not to vaccinate them. But getting the measles (or anything else) for a person with cerebral palsy is not a joke. I’m just going home from his second day in the hospital, in isolation in the infectious diseases ward in a foreign country.
Vaccinate your children and/or yourselves, please. Spare people the pain of having to worry the disabled (and not only) people they love would die or have severe consequences.
For example he hasn’t been able to eat for five days and counting because he can’t swallow. He had 39.6 C of temperature for five days. His body is so weak from fighting the virus that his legs are even more spastic and he can’t feel them or feel them burn after the slightest movement.
Vaccinate. Do it for people like him. And for people like me who can just sit there in the hospital for hours and wait hoping that things will turn out great.
Didn’t even know…..
Jesus…..Rip
All beautiful people, and yet we heard nothing about it
A little context on what they were fleeing from:
Eritrea is one of the most repressive countries on earth, regularly referred to as Africa’s North Korea. Reporters Without Borders ranks it 179th among 179 countries when it comes to freedom of expression, lower than North Korea itself.
Barely anyone is allowed a mobile phone. You need a permit to host a dinner party. A permit to travel to an adjacent village. Writing down a song or poem on a piece of paper could see you jailed for producing anti-government propaganda. Even reporters for state-run outlets live in constant fear of arrest. The UN, in a report last year, concluded the population is kept in “a permanent state of anxiety”.
Extra-judicial killings, torture, enforced disappearances and arbitrary arrest are commonplace. There are at least 10,000 political prisoners in jail to silence political dissent (x)
There is mandatory indefinite military conscription from ages 18 through to 55 (in a country where life expectancy is 61) where 1 in 20 of the population currently serve. The regime keeps the state on a war footing so it can conscript citizens into a form of forced labour, spending more time building homes for officials and officers than defending the country. There is also systematic sexual abuse of women in the military and pregnancies are banned.
One soldier complained about lack of vacation time and was jailed for two years, where he got one meal a day and one shower a month. He said “Hell is better” than Eritrea (x). Prisoners are regularly and systematically beaten, bound and tortured.
It accounts for less than 0.1 per cent of its continent’s people, yet last year there were more Eritreans arriving in Europe than from any other nation apart from refugees escaping war-torn Syria. Every month about 5,000 people flee the repressive nation.
source / source / source / source
by many_makers
make me choose: urban or rural
Strawberry Rhubarb Pie | Hungry Rabbit