1. 18:58 14th Mar 2020

    Notes: 26627

    Reblogged from theweirdwideweb

    aumonique:

    Kilo Kish — Existential Crisis Hour!

    (Source: aumonique)

     
  2. 23:27 20th Feb 2020

    Notes: 99

    Reblogged from clawmarks

    image: Download

    clawmarks:
“The four seasons. Lithograph from Strasbourg illustré ou Panorama pittoresque, historique et statistique de Strasbourg et de ses environs - Frédéric Piton - 1855 - via Internet Archive
”

    clawmarks:

    The four seasons. Lithograph from Strasbourg illustré ou Panorama pittoresque, historique et statistique de Strasbourg et de ses environs - Frédéric Piton - 1855 - via Internet Archive

     
  3. 19:32 12th Oct 2019

    Notes: 396

    Reblogged from japaneseaesthetics

    image: Download

    japaneseaesthetics:
“Meiji period (19th-century).
”

    japaneseaesthetics:

    Meiji period (19th-century). 

     
  4. 16:18 17th Apr 2019

    Notes: 261

    Reblogged from scientificphilosopher

    scientificphilosopher:

    “Humans diverged from the apes about as long ago as African and Asian elephants did from each other, and they are genetically about as close or distant. Yet we freely call both of those species “elephants” while obsessing over the specific point at which our own lineage moved from being an ape to being human. We even have special words for this process, such as hominization and anthropogenesis. That there was ever such a point in time is a widespread illusion, like trying to find the precise wavelength in the light spectrum at which orange turns into red. Our desire for sharp divisions is at odds with evolution’s habit of making extremely smooth transitions.”

    –Frans de Waal, Mama’s Last Hug

     
  5. 16:41 24th Jan 2019

    Notes: 40274

    Reblogged from theweirdwideweb

    ratak-monodosico:

    Neurotic Symptoms, 1947. Illustrated by Boris Artzybasheff

     
  6. 14:44 21st Dec 2018

    Notes: 205

    Reblogged from apoemaday

    Loose Woman

    apoemaday:

    by Sandra Cisneros

    They say I’m a beast.
    And feast on it. When all along
    I thought that’s what a woman was.

    They say I’m a bitch.
    Or witch. I’ve claimed
    the same and never winced.

    They say I’m a macha, hell on wheels,
    viva-la-vulva, fire and brimstone,
    man-hating, devastating,
    boogey-woman lesbian.
    Not necessarily,
    but I like the compliment.

    The mob arrives with stones and sticks
    to maim and lame and do me in.
    All the same, when I open my mouth,
    they wobble like gin.

    Diamonds and pearls
    tumble from my tongue.
    Or toads and serpents.
    Depending on the mood I’m in.

    I like the itch I provoke.
    The rustle of rumor
    like crinoline.

    I am the woman of myth and bullshit.
    (True. I authored some of it.)
    I built my little house of ill repute.
    Brick by brick. Labored,
    loved and masoned it.

    I live like so.
    Heart as sail, ballast, rudder, bow.
    Rowdy. Indulgent to excess.
    My sin and success—
    I think of me to gluttony.

    By all accounts I am
    a danger to society.
    I’m Pancha Villa.

    I break laws,
    upset the natural order,
    anguish the Pope and make fathers cry.
    I am beyond the jaw of law.
    I’m la desperada, most-wanted public enemy.
    My happy picture grinning from the wall.

    I strike terror among the men.
    I can’t be bothered what they think.
    !Que se vayan a la ching chang chong!
    For this, the cross, the Calvary.
    In other words, I’m anarchy.

    I’m an aim-well,
    shoot-sharp,
    sharp-tongued,
    sharp-thinking,
    fast-speaking,
    foot-loose,
    loose-tongued,
    let-loose,
    woman-on-the-loose
    loose woman.
    Beware, honey.

    I’m Bitch. Beast. Macha.
    !Wachale!

    Ping! Ping! Ping!
    I break things.

     
  7. 15:54 13th Sep 2018

    Notes: 236

    Reblogged from thewriterkb

    blunt-science:

    In a new edition of Bertrand Russell’s 1932 essay, In Praise of Idleness, Australian humourist Bradley Trevor Greive has reimagined some of his finest aphorisms for a good life.

    (The Guardian)

     
  8. 00:11 5th Sep 2018

    Notes: 28744

    Reblogged from honneeb

    image: Download

    237yrs:
“ Tomi Ungerer, from the Underground Sketchbook (1964).
”

    237yrs:

    Tomi Ungerer, from the Underground Sketchbook (1964).

     
  9. 23:14 6th Aug 2018

    Notes: 327054

    Reblogged from green-grrrl-deactivated20200604

    image: Download

    thebibliosphere:
“ thecuriousviolet:
“ breelandwalker:
“ nineprotons:
““Got the morbs” should be a thing.
”
Victorian slang is AMAZING, and select phrases really need to make a comeback.
“Bitch the pot” - Pour the tea (HOW RELEVANT IS THIS!?)
“Bang...

    thebibliosphere:

    thecuriousviolet:

    breelandwalker:

    nineprotons:

    “Got the morbs” should be a thing.

    Victorian slang is AMAZING, and select phrases really need to make a comeback.

    “Bitch the pot” - Pour the tea (HOW RELEVANT IS THIS!?)

    “Bang up the elephant” - Absolutely perfect; super stylish

    “Well, that’s shot the bale” - Something that has missed the mark entirely

    “Church-bell” - A woman prone to gossip

    “Chuckaboo” - A dear friend, a bosom chum

    “Beer and skittles” - A great time (see also: Irish Gaelic “craic”)

    “Butter on bacon” - Something overdone or too extravagant

    “Cupid’s kettle drums” - Breasts, particularly large ones

    “Gigglemug” - A cheerful smiling face

    All of these??? Make me smile??? They’re so weird and wonderful I love them??? Especially bitch the pot because that’s something I could totally hear myself saying…that and chuckaboo

    I worked in a Victorian tea house in my youth and I’m telling you, you haven’t lived till you hear a the 98 year old lady (this was some 15 years ago) utter the words “bitch the pot” because it was what they used to say when the tea house first opened and it just sort of stuck through all the generations.

     
  10. 22:49

    Notes: 600

    Reblogged from nprfreshair

    There are a lot of different ways to love people, and a lot of different ways to structure a relationship. One of the few conclusions I may have reached from writing this book is that when we say ‘relationship’ or ‘marriage’ we all think we’re talking about the same thing. But I think there are a lot of different deals out there.
    — Tim Kreider on writing his new essay collection I Wrote This Book Because I Love You about his many unconventional relationships.
    (via nprfreshair)