Garden of Fairies☀️🧚🏼♀️
Super excited to drop my first 1/1 edition— Exclusive #NFT artwork on SuperRare 💎 tomorrow at 9am EST - Stay Tuned!

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Kaledo Art

blake kathryn
todays bird
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

pixel skylines
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Jules of Nature
Three Goblin Art

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Kiana Khansmith

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Product Placement

izzy's playlists!

Discoholic 🪩
cherry valley forever

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@spokensanguine
Garden of Fairies☀️🧚🏼♀️
Super excited to drop my first 1/1 edition— Exclusive #NFT artwork on SuperRare 💎 tomorrow at 9am EST - Stay Tuned!
(A) Deal With Self
Only on SuperRare 💎
Butterflies🦋
George Nelson and Charles Eames, Communications Primer, 1953
mountains of ireland
[ID: A painting using warm, muted colors to portray green mountains shaded with orange and brown against a cloudy sky. A brook and waterfall snake through them. End ID]
Mary Oliver, “Dogfish.” Dream Work
Lucy Keating, Dreamology
Cheikh Tall and Cloud Modi by Philip-Daniel Ducasse for WSJ. Magazine , March 2021
there is no need to make everything existential. sometimes there is no deeper meaning. sometimes u just gotta go huh, take a step back and move on. protect your peace and practice acceptance.
One real benefit of reading I rarely hear anybody mention is how much more interesting life becomes when you read a lot. It depends what you’re reading, of course, but most (good) books will teach you something you didn’t already know, and even if you have to give the book back to the library, you get to take that much with you. A lot of people talk about things they wish they’d studied in school–I’ve done it, too–but it’s a nice consolation prize that you can always pick up a book and learn something new. And as that library in your brain collects more volumes, everything around you gains new resonances, new context, and new connections which make your lived experience richer. In quarantine alone I’ve read about religion and politics and history and evolution and computer science and astrophysics without even leaving my house and it’s already a more interesting world.
this is a poem
shoutout to my favorite coping mechanism, isolation
You've heard this refrain before -- giving money to homeless people is not the best way to help them because it might be squandered, or spen
“Researchers gave 50 recently homeless people a lump sum of 7,500 Canadian dollars (nearly $5,700). They followed the cash recipients' life over 12-18 months and compared their outcomes to that of a control group who didn't receive the payment. The preliminary findings, which will be peer-reviewed next year, show that those who received cash were able to find stable housing faster, on average. By comparison, those who didn't receive cash lagged about 12 months behind in securing more permanent housing.
People who received cash were able to access the food they needed to live faster. Nearly 70% did after one month, and maintained greater food security throughout the year. The recipients spent more on food, clothing and rent, while there was a 39% decrease in spending on goods like alcohol, cigarettes or drugs.“
It’s almost like people self medicate to survive intense stress like, idk, not having the cash to live anywhere but outdoors. People who are extremely poor do not want to be poor, we WANT to be safe and have autonomy in our lives but capitalism makes that impossible for some people.
And drug/alcohol abuse, even when prioritized over eating and other necessities, isn’t some kind of alien mindset, it’s very often a matter of not having the resources to actually be safe and fully meet your actual needs so you have to cope somehow with the suffering that deprivation causes.
This is a perfect example of the kind of important study that shouldn’t NEED to be done, but does need to be done so we can once and for all implement policies that actually help people.
i think it’s important that it was a lump sum all at once, instead of little amounts intermittently. If you’re homeless and, say, addicted to alcohol or meth or whatever, and someone gives you $20 a day, for 12 months, what are you gonna do with that? $20 isn’t enough to pay for a place to sleep that night. You can get some food, but you can’t stock up on anything because you have nowhere to put it. You can’t buy a new pair of shoes. You can’t pay for medication. You can’t really save it up because what are you gonna do, walk around with $5000 worth of twenties in your pocket? until they get lost or stolen and you never got anything out of that money? But you can go and get $20 worth of alcohol and maybe the rest of your day will suck a little less.
But if you get that $5000 all at once and then nothing for the rest of the year, that’s enough to get an apartment for a month, and your meds, and food, and clothes, and then well hey you can look for a job (and you have a mailing address, wow!).
if you’re in a shit situation getting dribs and drabs of money can keep you alive but it won’t help you really change your circumstances, but a large lump sum can do that.
eventually you realize you don’t want to die. you just don’t want to live the life you’re living. and slowly you try to create a life you want to live. just gotta start there.