do you see his antenna?????
hope this helps
happy to help 👍

if i look back, i am lost
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Today's Document
Noah Kahan
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Andulka

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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will byers stan first human second
Monterey Bay Aquarium
hello vonnie
taylor price

Origami Around
sheepfilms

shark vs the universe
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
noise dept.
No title available

Kiana Khansmith

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@siren-eklipso
do you see his antenna?????
hope this helps
happy to help 👍
Sitcom, Comedy, Parody, Adventure, Musical, FantasyA musical comedy adventure featuring a knight on a quest for love who helps a childish ki
All the episodes of Galavant are on the Internet Archive!
@paradoxspaceheater
So every year, my aquarium does a captive lobster hatchery project (hence all the loblings). The reason we’re doing it is because in the wild, loblings only have a 1 in 25,000 chance of surviving their larval phase. They’re plankton as babies and everything eats them. Additionally, as the Gulf of Maine warms, they are having even lower survival rates because the blooms of copepods they feed on as babies are happening earlier in the year, and they’re missing it.
Obviously, the goal of this experiment is to grow the lobsters until they’re big enough to settle to the seabed and then release them, because they have a much higher likelihood of surviving to adulthood when they’re able to hide. Ideally, captive lobster hatcheries can boost the wild population and keep things stable, so we don’t have a major crash in a decade or two.
The first year we tried this was pretty bad. We had a lot of eggs, but very few babies. It turned out that the CO2 levels in the building spiked as more guests visited throughout the summer, and that settled into the water and threw off the pH and caused a chemical reaction that prevented a lot of the eggs from hatching. I think we ended up releasing three baby lobsters (which is still better than their wild survival rate but not great).
The second year was a little better. We added a de-gasser to the aquarium and got a ton of larval lobsters, but right as they were settling to the bottom we had a disease outbreak that killed most of them. We ended up releasing four babies at the end of the season.
But this year? Oh boy. We have so many lobsters that we had to release the first round early (usually we wait till September or October so guests can see them). We just released a total of FIVE HUNDRED AND TWENTY FIVE baby lobsters, and we still have over a hundred who haven’t settled to the bottom yet. I genuinely don’t even have words to explain how cool this is. OVER FIVE HUNDRED. We just added hundreds of lobsters to the wild population that wouldn’t have been there otherwise.
Conservation is so fucken sick
Anti-Gravity Workstation (with Standing Option): The human body was not designed to spend 8 hours a day sitting with our hands on a mouse an
this is sooo cool. I've been sadly eyeing the $5000 antigrav work station setups for yeeears and this guy made one out of a lawn chair and a projector
I was ten years old when my fingers first scraped across a computer keyboard. It was a faded Apple IIe with a monochrome CRT and a floppy…
another variation
Incredible book alert for you all, since I know how many of my friends and followers are also neurodivergent. I've been requesting that our local library buy more ADHD and autism-friendly cookbooks aimed at adults, in an effort to find one that might help me with fixing my extremely broken relationship with food. And for a while it was a bit demoralizing because a lot of them are more recipe-focused, so I'd read them and go "Wow, this book is aimed at people like me and I can't eat any of this stuff, I must be even more broken than I thought"
Enter "How to Eat Well for Adults With ADHD" by Rebecca King.
I am about to sound like a sponsored ad, but this book is absolutely incredible. It's written by a nutritionist with ADHD, and does include some recipes, but they only make up a part of the third section of the book. The rest of it is focused on practical, broadly applicable advice for neurodivergent folks (and frankly, other disabled people) on unlearning internalized ableism around food, how to best organize your kitchen and meal plan (and what to do when meal plans fail), the connections between food and dopamine and how best to use food for stimulation in a healthy way, how hyperfocus and time blindness can get in the way of eating well, how to make sure you're eating enough while on stimulants, the fact that many ADHD people also have ARFID (and the book even emphasizes that ARFID is an eating disorder, not just "picky eating"!!), and takes the strong stance that we should do away with the idea of "picky eaters" altogether in favor of a more compassionate stance on people's complicated relationships with food and eating.
It is strongly anti-diet culture while still emphasizing that good nutrition is important. It has extremely specific tips that make my ADHD heart sing a little, like how best to store specific vegetables so they last the maximum amount of time in your fridge (since we are all very good at forgetting they are there) and what tools can make doing the dishes more manageable. And perhaps most importantly, as someone with severe sensory sensitivities and some very real trauma from having them ignored as a kid and being shamed for them, it made me cry a little bit with how understanding and compassionate it is.
Anyway. I am going to buy a copy of my own immediately, and I cannot recommend it enough. If you, like me, are trying to unfuck your eating habits and neat someone to hold your hand a little in the process -- while still making you feel like an adult, and still offering actionable tips along the way -- this book could be a lifesaver.
(And for those of you who use Instagram, the author has an account that's equally helpful and affirming over there, too, that I followed immediately, @/adhd.nutritionist)
My pillow that I wove! Hashtag my pillow!
"NO JIM CROW" 2026
Quilted tapestry
I started this piece in May, after the overturning of the Voting Rights Act by the Supreme Court. Shortly after I started this piece, a 16 year old girl named Juliana Nzita was found hanging from a tree. After that, a Black families beloved pet dog was killed by police while responding to a noise complaint. After that, one year old Kohen Wiley was shot and killed by police after his mother shoplifted a box of diapers. Then on Juneteenth, a Black woman named Tonea Miller was found hanging in a tree. This is not mentioning the countless other Black people that have been killed or disappeared in this country in the 4 weeks I worked on this piece, this is not mentioning the countless human beings who have lost their lives due to racism before I started this piece, this isn't mentioning the Black Americans whose deaths were not reported or did not make the news or the timeline. My grandparents were teenagers when the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were both passed, not even a full generation has passed since men like Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X, and Fred Hampton were assassinated and murdered for daring to call for an end to segregation and systematic racism. It's not enough to just accept the horrors, there is something that every one of us can do to help, because Black people deserve to grow old safely.
SCROLL BACK UP THIS IS A QUILT
picklesbaseball
i think the reason why a lot of modern art doesn’t sway me is since we don’t have much of a mainstream collective artistic movement it is harder for art to have significance through deviation or adherence to norms. so it can become stuck in this weird dichotomy where it is either inaccessibly referential or disconnected from societal meanings and kind of inane.
I feel like tumblr should really know about The Daily Tism:
Sorry but it's not complete without...
crazy how there are only 2 hours of doing things every day before you keel over and die. if this werent normal id be worried
btw I’ve found these stretches from the WAK blog very helpful when knitting a lot:
Plus make sure to take breaks regularly - and stop if anything starts to hurt!
especially with gift knitting I know it can be tempting to push through it for a deadline, but it’s really not worth causing long term injury. (And anyone knit-worthy should be understanding of that, imho.) Stay well :)
Also good for artists drawing with pencils/on a tablet/with a pen!
Also good for writers
And good for gamers too!