amsterdam, source unknown

#extradirty

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@theartofmadeline
KIROKAZE
sheepfilms

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
almost home
Cosimo Galluzzi
styofa doing anything
art blog(derogatory)
ojovivo
h
RMH

roma★
No title available
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
occasionally subtle
Stranger Things
noise dept.
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Netherlands

seen from Italy

seen from Egypt

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Romania
@spiritofmoss
amsterdam, source unknown
pie pngs ♡
Keeping a Long-Term Sigil
1. Create your sigil. It may be a good idea to use something sturdy that will last a while like cardstock or cardboard. If you know how, you can also use metal, wood or embroidery.
2. Charge Regularly – Because you aren’t activating it in the usual way (like burning or tearing), it helps to recharge it periodically. Try:
• Placing it under the full moon.
• Meditating with it in your hands.
• Tracing over it while repeating your intention.
• Keeping it near objects that amplify its purpose (e.g., a protection sigil near black tourmaline).
3. Placement Matters – Keep it somewhere that aligns with its purpose:
• Protection Sigil → Near your front door, on a keychain, or inside your shoe.
• Confidence Sigil → On your mirror, inside your journal, or on jewelry.
• Creativity Sigil → On your desk, sketchbook, or instrument.
By keeping the sigil charged but unactivated, it acts as an ongoing energy source rather than a one-time spell. Think of it like a talisman that holds power without needing to be “used up.”
Easy zero waste tip no. 2: Get a 5 gallon bucket.
Every year for Thanksgiving, I use my bucket to brine my turkey.
Whenever it rains, my bucket collects a bit of the rainwater outside, letting me see how many inches fell, and giving me a little extra water for my bushes that are partially obscured by the rooftop.
It sits in my shower while I'm waiting for the water to heat up, and I use that water around the house (watering plants, for a bain marie, for the humidifier if needed, etc).
Upside down, it's an easy stepstool.
When I harvest lemons from my tree, I use the bucket to toss them, without getting bruised.
If I need to bring a cat to the vet, the bucket is a fantastic means of catching the bastards. They love bucket. It's like a box, but round. They cannot resist its charms.
Genuinely, before I got a glass container, the bucket was my first kombucha container.
It was also my first compost bin, with an airtight lid, so I could bring my compost to the local community garden.
I've grown potatoes in it, it makes it very easy to harvest- you just dump them on the ground, no digging necessary.
Get a bucket. It'll last you forever, and it has even more uses than I've listed here. Yes, they're mostly plastic- but plastic has its uses, and this is one of them. Join the cult of the bucket.
silly teapots
Love, shine a light.
Super fucked up that I can’t be a master-level expert in knitting AND woodworking AND silversmithing AND embroidery AND soap making AND spinning AND -
“Who would ever want to be immortal? Can you imagine the loneliness, knowing that there’s no one else like you, cursed to outlive -” shut up!! Some of us have shit to do and aren’t cowards!!
you cannot buy the revolution. you cannot make the revolution. you can only be the revolution. it is in your spirit, or it is nowhere.
ursula k. le guin
source