RMH
todays bird

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
occasionally subtle

⁂

@theartofmadeline
will byers stan first human second

izzy's playlists!
One Nice Bug Per Day
hello vonnie
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Product Placement
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Discoholic 🪩

Andulka
macklin celebrini has autism
almost home

if i look back, i am lost
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from Italy
@thesadisticprincess
“Pay attention when people react with anger of hostility to your boundaries. You have found the edge where their respect for you ends.”
— Unknown
“Pay attention when people react with anger of hostility to your boundaries. You have found the edge where their respect for you ends.”
— Unknown
“Consider how hard it is to change yourself and you'll understand what little chance you have in trying to change others”
— unknown ( via @scholasticbabe )
saint nihiljea by pyramiddhead
not to sound like a commie or anything but I hate how it costs money to be alive
Pierrot le fou (1965), dir. Jean-Luc Godard
i want to meet her
i need to meet her
I love how yokai range from “You smiled at me a little bit so now I will kill you with my razor-sharp hair.” to “Hey man, heard you were feeling down on yourself again so I thought I’d drop by and do a funny little dance.”
humpty dumpty
Modesty
Antonio Corradini
1752
“Medusa lost her beauty—or rather, it was taken from her. Beauty is always something you can lose. Women’s beauty is seen as something separate from us, something we owe but never own: We are its stewards, not its beneficiaries. We tend it like a garden where we do not live. Oh, but ugliness—ugliness is always yours. Almost everyone has some innate kernel of grotesquerie; even fashion models (I’ve heard) tend to look a bit strange and froggish in person, having been gifted with naturally level faces that pool light luminously instead of breaking it into shards. And everyone has the ability to mine their ugliness, to emphasize and magnify it, to distort even those parts of themselves that fall within acceptable bounds. Where beauty is narrow and constrained, ugliness is an entire galaxy, a myriad of sparkling paths that lurch crazily away from the ideal. There are so few ways to look perfect, but there are thousands of ways to look monstrous, surprising, upsetting, outlandish, or odd. Thousands of stories to tell in dozens of languages: the languages of strong features or weak chins, the languages of garish makeup and weird haircuts and startling clothes, fat and bony and hairy languages, the languages of any kind of beauty that’s not white. Nose languages, eyebrow languages, piercing and tattoo languages, languages of blemish and birthmark and scar. When you give up trying to declare yourself acceptable, there are so many new things to say.”
— What If We Cultivated Our Ugliness?, Jess Zimmerman (via xshayarsha)
70′s “Conversation Pit” Furniture From How to Decorate Your Home Without Going Broke, Barty Phillips, 1974.
Dissing Eminem’s daughter on a track is the rap equivalent of killing John Wick’s dog