Well HE seems nice.
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
sheepfilms

@theartofmadeline
Not today Justin

oozey mess

Janaina Medeiros

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AnasAbdin
wallacepolsom

PR's Tumblrdome
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Today's Document
Mike Driver
DEAR READER
Xuebing Du
dirt enthusiast
NASA
YOU ARE THE REASON
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United States

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

seen from Italy
seen from Argentina

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 Malaysia
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@thissamisgam
Well HE seems nice.
Bi-donna you moved me
it’s still hot out. time to romanticize the bleak mid-winter
nothing will ever love you or hunger for you like winter
This video was filmed inside the Arctic Circle, just between the Canada-Alaska-Russia border. This phenomenon can only be observed once a year, for 36 seconds. The moon appears and disappears. Immediately afterward, there is a 5-second total solar eclipse.
This phenomenon only occurs at perigee - the point where the moon is closest to the earth.
Wow!
Reblogging! Fascinating!
Amazing. M
Humanity is not worthy of such magnificence!
Bouncy Moo Deng!
Heather Ihn Martin
I genuinely love the onion
*throws dart* transgender operations on *spins wheel* illegal aliens *consults ouija board* in prison
Hannah Neeleman, known to her nine million followers as Ballerina Farm, milks cows, gives birth without pain relief and breastfeeds at beaut
Reading this hurt my heart. Especially this part:
The bedroom is also where she had her children, with the exception of Henry and Martha, who were born in a hospital (a fact that did not escape some of her followers). “After that I was, like, I’m ready to go back home,” she says. “I just love having them at home. It’s so quiet.” She also gave birth to them without pain relief. None at all? She shakes her head. Why? “I don’t know, I just have never loved taking it.” She stops herself. “Except with Martha — I was two weeks overdue and she was 10lb and Daniel wasn’t with me … ” She lowers her voice. Daniel is currently out of the room taking a phone call. “So I got an epidural. And it was an amazing experience.” Where was Daniel that day? “It was shipping day [for the meat boxes] and he was manning the crew.” But the epidural was kind of great? She pauses — and smiles. “It was kinda great.”
I want to ask her about birth control, but we are surrounded by so many of her children and Daniel is back in the room now too. Do you — I pause and look at her fixedly — plan pregnancies? “No,” Daniel says. “When he says no,” Neeleman responds gently, “it’s very much a matter of prayer for me. I’m, like, ‘God, is it time to bring another one to the Earth?’ And I’ve never been told no.”
“But for whatever reason it’s exactly nine months [after a baby] that she’s ready for the next one,” he says.
I can’t, it seems, get an answer out of Neeleman without her being corrected, interrupted or answered for by either her husband or a child. Usually I am doing battle with steely Hollywood publicists; today I am up against an army of toddlers who all want their mum and a husband who thinks he knows better.
“I saw her and I was ready to go,” he says. “Sign me up. I was thinking, ‘Let’s get married.’ But she wouldn’t go on a date with me for six months.” One day she mentioned to Daniel that she was getting the five-hour flight from Salt Lake City to New York, back to Juilliard. She didn’t realise his dad owned the airline. “So Daniel was, like, ‘I’m on that same flight!’ ” she says. “I remember checking in and them saying, ‘You’re 5A and you’re 5B.’ I just thought, no way, that’s crazy!” Daniel smiles: “I made a call.” He had pulled strings at JetBlue. And so began their first date. “Back then I thought we should date for a year [before marriage],” she continues. “So I could finish school and whatever. And Daniel was, like, ‘It’s not going to work, we’ve got to get married now.’ ” After a month they were engaged. Two months after that they were married, moving into an apartment Daniel rented on the Upper West Side. And three months after that she was pregnant, the first Juilliard undergraduate to be expecting “in modern history”.
My entire body just clenched like a fucking fist.
A little over a decade ago, I watched an environmental documentary where one of the interviewers said that whatever a new building development was called – like ‘Oak Grove’ – that's what they destroyed to build it. That comment has stuck in my mind ever since.
That's all I can think of when I hear ‘Ballerina Farm’.
my parents trying to figure out what to get me for christmas