
oozey mess
Today's Document
DEAR READER
h

No title available
occasionally subtle
Jules of Nature

shark vs the universe
i don't do bad sauce passes
wallacepolsom
almost home
YOU ARE THE REASON
todays bird

pixel skylines
Monterey Bay Aquarium
noise dept.

if i look back, i am lost

@theartofmadeline
Sweet Seals For You, Always
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
seen from Singapore
seen from Türkiye

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

seen from Switzerland
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Romania

seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
@trevorthetoad
B.C. Woman Organizes Care Packages To Fight The Northern Food Crisis
Nobody should have to pay $28 for a head of lettuce anywhere — let alone in Canada.
That’s the belief that drives Jennifer Gwilliam, who spends her days organizing food care packages for people she’s never met. But she’s not even sending aid to a Third World country; she’s sending it to Canada’s remote north.
The high prices of groceries in Nunavut, for example —$47 for a box of laundry detergent or $105 for a case of water— have drawn increasing outcry from Canadians over the last few years.
"It was just shocking to see the prices they were paying for a head of cabbage or a flat of water," Gwilliam told The Huffington Post B.C. "I was just appalled. It’s hard enough to make ends meet down here, let alone with those sort of prices. So I wanted to do something."
After doing some digging, Gwilliam came across the Facebook group Feeding My Family, designed to raise awareness about the northern crisis and advocate for change. But she wanted to turn outrage into action, so she started her own Facebook group, Helping Our Northern Neighbours, last summer.
Gwilliam’s group matches people who want to donate packages of food and other necessities with those in the north who need it most.
People can either donate one box once, or choose to sponsor a family, meaning they regularly send care packages. There are no restrictions on what people can give, although many cater their boxes to the family they’ve been matched with.
[…]
There are over 400 names on Gwilliam’s list of people seeking assistance; just under half have received help in some way so far. She said many of donors (from across Canada) are living paycheque to paycheque themselves, but that doesn’t stop them from giving back. And everyone seems truly grateful for the help.
Candy Ivalutanar, who lives in Repulse Bay, Nunavut with her husband and two daughters under 10, said she cried the first time she received a care package.
"I told my husband, ‘I thought I wasn’t going to get anything. I thought nobody would want to ever help us.’ It touched me so much," Ivalutanar told HuffPost B.C. She frequently tells her sponsor, who has sent a few boxes already, that she loves her.
"I love her for helping me so much," she said. "Even if it’s just a little, I don’t care — that’s a lot for me."
Continue Reading.
THIS IS IMPORTANT THIS IS SO IMPORTANT PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINKS AND DONATE IF YOU CAN OR WOW IF YOU ARE ABLE TO WHY NOT SPONSOR A FAMILY??
PLEASE THERE ARE BABIES WITH EMPTY BELLIES IN OUR DISTANT BACK YARD PLS HELP THEM
Hardcore s'moreing 🍢🔥#SmoreLayersSmoreFun (à Casa de Fitz )
Hi, gorgeous! 💕👸💜🐕🐾 #k8andk9 #minusk8 #bestfriend #prettyprince
Lol so hey I guess I've been on tumblr for four years
Battery-powered Christmas lights AKA travel-proof lights, so obviously I'm wearing them everywhere #festive #sarceeplazaselfies 🎄🎅💚❤️🎄
But I guess ultimately what scares me about marriage is where do you find this person? You know a lot of times, most successful relationships, people meet through work, school, mutual friends. But what’s most interesting to me is when people just meet in life, just randomly. You know, I have a friend, he got married, I asked him like “Hey, uh, where’d you meet your wife?” He was like “I was leaving Bed, Bath & Beyond. I was looking for my car - I drive a gray Prius. I saw a different gray Prius, I thought it was mine, I walked up to it, I realized I had the wrong car, but I bumped into Carol, we started talking, that was that”. That’s unbelievable. Think about all the random factors that had to come together to make this one moment possible - this one moment that changed these two people’s entire lives: First off, this guy has to live in this particular town. Then he has to get a gray Prius. Then he has to need to go to Bed, Bath & Beyond. Then he has to go to that particular Bed, Bath & Beyond. Then there has to be another guy who also lives in town, also drives a gray Prius, also needs to go to Bed, Bath & Beyond, also goes to that particular Bed, Bath & Beyond at around the same time. Then they have to both park somewhat near each other, my friend has to leave before the other guy leaves, see the wrong Prius, think it’s his, walk up to it. Then the woman, Carol, needs to be near the wrong gray Prius for a million other random reasons. They bump into each other, they start talking, their entire lives are changed. That’s the most amazing and terrifying thing about life. It is, cause the amazing thing is that at any moment, any one of us can have that moment that totally changes our lives. You could be leaving the show tonight, bump into someone… it could change your life. You don’t know, that could happen. The terrifying thing is… what if we’re all supposed to be at Bed Bath & Beyond right now?
Aziz Ansari, Buried Alive
curlers and timbits / yyc / i.m. ruzz
Working on this stupid essay.
Said every college student, when asked what they are doing that night (via alexkingstons)
Half a Heart- One Direction
xweevee:
Canada’s rainbow money
Maple syrup scented rainbow money
The Sweet Far Thing #forever