Three Goblin Art

Janaina Medeiros
Xuebing Du
No title available
trying on a metaphor
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
h
No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

blake kathryn
Stranger Things
d e v o n
occasionally subtle
we're not kids anymore.
Acquired Stardust
Cosmic Funnies

⁂
seen from India
seen from France
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from Israel

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
@shatana143
Michelle Mckinney
By Jc Telles
I’m going to sing this to my wife on our honeymoon.
I mean.. who isn’t??
rare vent art from a few months ago
When will this end? When will our children be able to live without fear of being criminalized for simply existing?
[ID: Tweet by @/taniel. “When a 6-year old is dragged to court for picking a tulip. Read the North Carolina story: https://journalnow.com/north-carolina-sends-6-year-olds-to-court-why-some-say-its-time-for-change/article_e2a15a82-8383-11eb-91ee-43ce7c88753b.html”
Screenshot of the article linked above that reads, “The 6-year-old dangled his legs above the floor as he sat at the table with his defense attorney, before a North Carolina judge. He was accused of picking a tulip from a yard at his bus stop, his attorney Julie Boyer said, and he was on trial in juvenile court for injury to real property. The boy’s attention span was too short to follow the proceedings, Boyer said, so she handed him crayons and a coloring book.”
Retweet by @/DearDean22. “He was arrested for picking a tulip while he waited for the bus. Someone called the police on a 6 year old Black boy because he picked a flower. The police arrested him. He had to go to court w/ a criminal defense attorney who gave him a coloring book to sit still. We are hated.” End ID.]
Click here for over 1,000 free social justice, mental health, and academic resources. Let’s make education and activism accessible to all.
And people wonder how it’s even POSSIBLE that children have been kidnapped from their parents, by our Government and in the thousands, then confined in Concentration Camps at the border?
It’s easy when you don’t see those children as Human Beings.
This is what we’ve been fighting since this countries inception.
The fight has never been paused, on-hold, or OVER & isn’t LIKELY to be ANY of those things for a LONG time.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B_mjWvBjAdl/?igshid=1qkg69dhl42ee
Wow 😭👏🏼
This is the level of adoration I aspire to.
In many cultures, ethnic groups, and nations around the world, hair is considered a source of power and prestige. African people brought these traditions and beliefs to the Americas and passed them down through the generations.
In my mother’s family (Black Americans from rural South Carolina) the women don’t cut their hair off unless absolutely necessary (i.e damage or routine trimming). Long hair is considered a symbol of beauty and power; my mother often told me that our hair holds our strength and power. Though my mother’s family has been American born for several generations, it is fascinating to see the beliefs and traditions of our African ancestors passed down. We are emotionally and spiritually attached to our hair, cutting it only with the knowledge that we are starting completely clean and removing stagnant energy.
Couple this with the forced removal and covering of our hair from the times of slavery and onward, and you can see why so many Black women and men alike take such pride and care in their natural hair and love to adorn our heads with wigs, weaves, braids, twists, accessories, and sharp designs.
Hair is not just hair in African diaspora cultures, and this is why the appropriation and stigma surrounding our hair is so harmful.