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  • cowinatrenchcoat:

    tgirl-thucydides:

    image

    It’s so, SO important to share success stories like this. I know an actual JPL engineer who doesn’t believe in climate change because, “you never hear about acid rain anymore.”

    He thinks climate change can be lumped in with acid rain and the ozone layer of “things that were overblown and not really important because no one talks about it anymore.”

    It didn’t even occur to him that we actively fixed the problem. Here’s the EPA page on acid rainfall.

    From the page:


    image
    image

    It’s also important to talk about success stories tonfuel hope that we can overcome current and future conservation and environmental issues.

    (via disaster-j)

    • 11 months ago
    • 141698 notes
  • wordybee:

    “There are three things you must ask yourself before you say anything…”

    (via bethanyactually)

    • 1 year ago
    • 107155 notes
  • everybodywantstorueltheworld-de:

    kukoyi-deactivated20210512:

    tartrazeen:

    imanwithoutbowie-deactivated202:

    Continue✨ Keep going✨

    Thank you, lady 🤗

    The Nigerian accent. God. She reminds me of home…

    Always grateful when this makes the rounds

    (via 23-tiny-wishes)

    • 1 year ago
    • 303812 notes
  • simpledontmeanpeachy:

    accessibletweets:

    Source (no longer available): https://twitter.com/Breznican/status/866862355040292864

    [Image ID:
    a twitter thread of 31+ tweets spanning 10 images, dated 22nd May 2017.

    Image 1: a tweet by Dr. Paul (@/DrPnygard) that reads
    On this day in 1967, a show featuring a kindly man in a cardigan & blue sneakers debute- [tweet cuts off]. Included is a photo of Mr Rogers, a white American man with bushy dark eyebrows and greying straight hair, looking over his shoulder while seated obscured by a colourful red object.

    This tweet is replied to by Anthony Breznican (@/Breznican) who’s 31-tweets-long thread begins by saying
    50 years … I have a story to tell about this man.


    Image 2: A lot of people are sharing this quote after the heartbreak in Manchester. It’s also the 50th anniversary of Mr Roger’s Neighborhood. 1/

    The tweet includes a black-and-white photo of Mr Rogers smiling to camera with the following quote added:
    “When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me, ‘Look for the helpers.- You will always find people who are helping.’”
    -Mr Rogers

    Fred Rogers was from Pittsburgh, my hometown, and my generation grew up loving this man, who taught us to be kind above all. 2/


    Image 3: Fred Rogers was the real thing. That gentle soul? It was no act. 3/

    As I got older, I lost touch with the show, which kept running through 2001. But in college, one day, I rediscovered it… 4/

    I was having a hard time. The future seemed dark. I was struggling, lonely, dealing with a lot of broken pieces and not adjusting well. 5/

    I went to Pitt and devoted everything I had to the school paper, hoping that would propel me into some kind of worthwhile future. 6/


    Image 4: It was easy to feel hopeless. One span was especially bad. Walking out of the dorm, I heard familiar music: 🎶 Won’t you be my neighbor… 7/

    The TV was playing in an empty common room. Mr Rogers was there, asking me what I do with the mad I feel. (l had lots to spare. still do) 8/

    It feels silly to say - it felt silly then - but I stood mesmerized. His show felt like a cool hand on a hot head. I left feeling better. 9/

    Days later, I get in the elevator at the paper to ride down to the lobby. The doors open. Mr Rogers is standing there. For real. 10/


    Image 5: I can’t believe it. I get in and he nods at me. I do back. I think he could sense a geek-out coming. But I kept it together. 11/

    Almost. 12/

    The doors open, he lets me go out first. I go, but turn around. “Mr Rogers… I don’t mean to bother you. But I wanted to say thanks! 13/

    He smiles, but this has to happen to him every 10 feet. ‘Did you grow up as one of my neighbors? I felt like crying. Yeah. I was. 14/


    Image 6: Opens his arms, lifting his satchel for a hug. “It’s good to see you again neighbor: I got to hug Mr Rogers, y'all! 15/

    I pull it together. We’re walking out and I mention liking Johnny Costa (he was the piano player on the show.) We made more small talk. 16/

    As he went out the door, I said (in a kind of rambling gush) that I’d stumbled on the show again recently, when I really needed it. 17/

    So I just said, “Thanks for that.” Mr Rogers nodded. He paused. He undid his scarf. He motioned to the window, & sat down on the ledge. 18/


    Image 7: This is what set Mr Rogers apart. No one else would’ve done this. He goes, “Do you want to tell me what was upsetting you? 19/

    So I sat. I told him my grandfather had just died He was one of the few good things I had. I felt adrift. Brokenhearted. 20/

    I like to think I didn’t go on and on, but pretty soon he was telling me about his grandfather & a boat the old man bought him as a kid. 21/

    Mr Rogers asked how long ago Pap had died. It was a couple months. His grandfather was obviously gone decades. 22/


    Image 8: He still wished the old man was here. Wished he still had the boat. You’ll never stop missing the people you love, Mr Rogers said. 23/

    The grandfather gave Mr Rogers the row boat as reward for something. I forget what. Grades, or graduation. Something important. 24/

    He didn’t have either now, but he had that work ethic, that knowledge that the old man encouraged with his gift. 25/

    “Those things never go away,” Mr. Rogers said. I’m sure my eyes looked like stewed tomatoes. 26/


    Image 9: Finally, I said thank you. And apologized if I made him late for an appointment. “Sometimes you’re right where you need to be,” he said. 27/

    Mr Rogers was there for me then. So here’s this story, on the 50th anniversary of his show, for anyone who needs him now 28/

    I never saw him again. But that “helper” quote? That’s authentic. That is who he was. For real. 29/


    Image 10: When Mr. Rogers died in 2003, I sat at my computer with tears in my eyes. But I wasn’t crying over the death of a celebrity 30/

    I was mourning the loss of a neighbor. 31/end

    /end ID]

    ‘You’ve made this day a special day, by just your being you. There’s no person in the whole world like you, and I like you just the way you are.’

    I remember hearing that, as a little kid, and not being able to believe it. And he kept saying it anyway.

    Decades later, after much of my own therapy to undo the learning that led to a pre-school kid not believing that she was lovable just the way she was, I was watching an episode. I don’t remember what prompted me to seek it out, but I do remember bursting into tears when I heard that again.

    Because it felt a little easier to believe. And because I realized, as an adult, how important it was to hear that as a kid. Repeatedly. Even if I couldn’t believe it. As a kid, I couldn’t trust that he meant it. As an adult, it was so clear that he did. And I was so grateful that he had planned those seeds. They took awhile to germinate, and still need constant tending. And I’m so grateful that was modeled somewhere for me.

    He was such a treasure.

    (via 23-tiny-wishes)

    • 2 years ago
    • 233799 notes
  • tkingfisher:

    neolithicsheep:

    plum-soup:

    elodieunderglass:

    incremental-revolution:

    itsdetachable:

    ct-7567:

    disasterscenario:

    curioscurio:

    elodieunderglass:

    I grow our own vegetables. Many hybrid and heirloom varieties are bred for flavor rather than for commercial appeal and travel. There are entire species on the allotment that you can’t easily buy in stores because of this - like salsify, a root vegetable that tastes of fish and shellfish. Our neighbours happily take it to make vegan latkes of alarming similarity to fishcakes. You cannot sell it in stores because - despite looking like a white parsnip - it turns brown when you pick it if you scrape/bruise/cut the white root in any way, or damage the delicate little hairs, for some reason, it BLEEDS RED and is very upsetting to look at.

    There are whole classes of foods like this. Foods that just don’t ship well or look good on supermarket shelves. Forbidden fruits. Vegetables that bleed and taste like meat. Sorry about this

    image

    This website is one of my fav places to find interesting heirloom stuff! I ordered a bunch of seeds to try growing next year I’m really excited about! 

    https://www.rareseeds.com/

    @angelsaxis

    I’ve gotten and plants seeds from that site, Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, and they grow fantastically well for me.

    I’m really looking forward to next season

    Baker Creek Heirloom has good seeds but bad politics. They were going to host Cliven Bundy of the Occupation of Malheur National Wildlife Reserve who’s also pro the Capitol Riots and has made a lot of racist nastiness, although backlash made them cancel their guest list (which included other racist folks)

    Good sources of heirloom seeds:

    Meet the Farmers
    Each of the varieties offered through Truelove Seeds was grown by small-scale urban or rural farmers committed to sustainable agriculture, f
    Truelove Seeds
    Rare Non-GMO Heirloom Seeds | Alliance of Native Seedkeepers
    Alliance of Native Seedkeepers is North Americas Top Native American Source for rare heirloom Non-GMO vegetable, flower and herb garden seed
    AllianceofNativeSeed
    Our Story
    Native Seeds/SEARCH (NS/S) is a nonprofit seed conservation organization based in Tucson, Arizona. Our mission is to conserve and promote th
    Native-Seeds-Search

    ^^^

    Highly recommend Native Seed/Search and Truelove. Baker Creek has an amazingly large catalog and has some very cool and rare stuff, but they are also Mennonites and as you might expect, they do have terrible politics as listed above, although they do some decent work preserving heirloom seeds from threatened communities.

    An organization that does really interesting work preserving seed from threatened communities (and larger companies like baker creek often piggyback off of some of the work done by orgs like this and NS/S) is the Experimental Farm Network. They are very explicit about their (left-leaning) political views and you don’t have to worry about them being Problematic. They have lots of interesting and rare varieties and species you really cannot find anywhere else.

    Threatened Communities
    An important part of our mission involves preserving and sharing seeds from communities under threat, and attempting, wherever possible, to
    Experimental Farm Network Seed Store
    image

    If you are looking for a wider selection of heirloom seed varieties, these two companies are very good resources as well, and carry many of the same things as Baker Creek. Afaik they are not expressly political beyond their general mission to preserve heirloom seeds (although southern exposure does a good job of preserving some very traditional african-American heirlooms from the Southeast US in particular).

    Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, Saving the Past for the Future
    Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, Saving the Past for the Future
    Southern Exposure Seed Exchange
    Seed Savers Exchange Heirloom Seeds
    Heirloom seeds from Seed Savers Exchange. Buy rare, organic seeds and support our nonprofit mission to preserve garden diversity. Free catal
    seedsavers.org

    Omg I hadn’t heard of the Experimental Farm Network and I am delighted! I am also completely thrilled to see people other than me remember that Baker Creek is a bunch of lying fash. They claimed they did not know about Cliven Bundy AFTER VISITING HIM IN JAIL. He was literally in jail for his anti-social bullshit when they first talked to him about the watermelons he and his mentor stole from Indigenous people and made their name on. They also take seeds from Indigenous communities globally and profit from them without sharing those profits with the communities they took the seeds from.

    …I am blocked by them on Twitter after publicizing the Cliven Bundy crap, full disclosure, I have an actual feud with these people and their unethical practices.

    I was trying to get signal in the goddamn Himalayas to argue with them about Bundy. *grumble*

    I also second Native Seed/SEARCH as a great org doing great work. Some of their stuff is so desert-adapted it won’t grow for me, but I’ve had great luck with some of their bean varieties.

    Reposting to have this info for later!

    (via bethanyactually)

    • 2 years ago
    • 84752 notes
  • best-of-reblogs:

    lionowlonao3:

    lucyheartfiliaxxnatsudragneel:

    not-a-recommended-url:

    tinage-dreams:

    furry-boss-monster:

    home-stuck-in-desert-bluffs:

    smore-692:

    itscarororo:

    haywood-you-stop-that:

    icexxxtea:

    pinkifingers:

    rick-sanchez:

    camiekahle:

    THIS IS THE BEST THING I HAVE EVER SEEN

    I’VE BEEN TRYING TO FIND THIS FOR SEVEN YEARS

    DO YOU UNDERSTAND HOW HARD IT IS TO ?????

    image

    That last fatal scream tho

    THE TERROR IN HIS SCREAM OH GOSH

    image

    i’m crying

    WAAA-

    I will always reblog this on the off chance some other poor soul has been searching for it

    IT’S BACK

    HOYL SHIT ITS B A CK

    IT’S BACK?? ON MY DASH?

    re-blogging again xD

    what was that we were just saying about still having posts circulating from ridiculous numbers of years ago? 😂

    image

    (via 23-tiny-wishes)

    • 3 years ago
    • 3103255 notes
  • vrepit-salt:

    priscaren:

    image
    🌵 Mochilas y Bolsos de la artesania wayuu 100% originales 🌵
    ➤ 🌵 Bienvenidos a la tienda online de mochilas colombianas 🌵 Te contamos la historia, tradición y cultura que hay detrás de estas mochilas w
    t.co

    https://t.co/tQNM37KsB0

    Tienda de artesanias Wayúu
    Tienda de artesanias Wayúu, Artesanias Colombianas, Bolsos Wayúu, Mochilas Wayúu, Venta de Mochilas Wayúu, Pulseras Wayúu, Tobilleras Wayúu,
    Tu Tienda Wayúu

    This is my tribe. Many of us in our home countries live off selling handmade goods, especially the mochilas. Weaving is an important Wayuú tradition. Every pattern and assortment of colors tells a unique story, and it’s important to our cultural identity. And right now with the crises in Venezuela and Colombia, a lot of us are struggling financially. Please always purchase directly from indigenous communities!

    (via bethanyactually)

    • 3 years ago
    • 111830 notes
  • transjon:

    eroticcannibal:

    lmaonade:

    lmaonade:

    i am not joking we need to force teach cooking in schools. like. it is an essential thing for survival. do you know how easy it is to make things if you know even the bare bones shit about how cooking works. we need to teach teenagers how far you can take an onion and some other veggies it’’s sad that people grow up not knowing how to prepare literally anything. and i’m not talking about oh this home ed class taught me how to make chicken nuggets at home i’m talking about learning the balancing of sweetness and acidity and saltiness and bitterness and shit like that and techniques and oil temperatures and how meats cook. it needs to be taught because it’s literally not even that difficult and it matters so much

    i truly believe that knowing how to cook is a basic survival concept and the fact that so many people can’t even make simple dishes is depressing as hell this is the sorta thing that should be taught at a young age. being able to take the ingredients you have around your home and turn them into a meal is like, essential and will make life so much better. you don’t need to be a high end chef you just need to understand some things that can be easily taught… but then again maybe the education system is playing a roll against this and ultimately they want you to grow up to rely on mcdonalds for dinner. i don’t know. please learn how to cook for yourself if you’re able. i’m not asking you to hunt for specific ingredients to make some expensive youtuber’s “best” recipe but if you know the basics of cooking you can do a lot with cheap canned ingredients. cooking can be affordable i promise you just need to learn how to make do with what you can get

    Can anyone point me towards resources that teach those basics cus I would LOVE to teach my child this stuff but i dont know how to cook

    not comprehensive but heres some:

    internet shaquille’s basics but especially:

    • making rice
    • making scrambled eggs
    • making oatmeal
    • levels of cooking meat
    • using & storing vegetables with recipes in the description (this one has a bit of Sassiness directed at people who dont like vegetables but the content is solid)

    food safety + a recipe to demonstrate

    how to learn to cook (just a list of subtopics, no actual tips)

    • cooking techniques playlist
    • how to cut x

    basics with babish s1 & 2, but particularly:

    • freezer meals,
    • weeknight meals,
    • kitchen tools (although the specific suggestions are pretty expensive even with the lower end scale items the basic categories are solid, and you can evaluate what items you will realistcially need - eg. if you dont need to read temp for steaks etc the temp reader will not be relevant) &
    • kitchen care (mid-high advanced home cooking)

    basic knife skills

    picking the right pan for each recipe

    j. kenji lopez-alt’s tips and tricks playlist

    egg recipes

    a little more complicated, involved, and longer than any of the rest of these but good breakdown of flavor & how and why to use the basic seasoning/flavor profiles

    and then recipe channels representing various cuisines:

    • j. kenji lopez-alt (various)
    • marion’s kitchen (southeast & east asian, western/asian fusion)
    • maangchi (korean)
    • future neighbor (mostly korean)
    • the western supermarket playlist of chinese cooking demystified (more recipes available but these are accessible if you dont have “specialty” ingredients)
    • family recipes playlist by made with lau (chinese)
    • not another cooking show (various)
    • cooking with boris (bear with me here i know he does it exaggeratedly humorously but a lot of them are actually solid and beginner cook friendly. mostly slavic/russian)
    • you suck at cooking (also falls into the intentionally humorous category but most of the recipes are pretty solid anyway)
    • how to cook that (baking, also does debunking videos of viral cooking hacks - breaks down the reasons the hacks dont work, pretty important to understand those basics imo)
    • internet shaquille (various)
    • babish culinary universe (various)
    • i REFUSE to recommended joshua weissman because he is fucking insufferable but if you want you can try if you can deal with it, the techniques/recipes seem fine for the most part

    again definitely not a comprehensive list but it touches on most of the basics

    (via lastbluetardis)

    • 4 years ago
    • 214321 notes
  • adulthoodisokay:

    worldheritagepostorginization:

    artemislocheia:

    5sos-smut-world:

    thejamesboyle:

    caluummhood:

    HOLY SHIT, IT WAS THE ORIGINAL ONE

    MAKE A WISH

    the first post ever on tumblr

    I WAS EXPECTING IT TO BE A REMAKE OF SOME SORT HOLY FUCK

    WHO THE FUCK KEEPS BRINGING THIS BACK

    World Heritage Post

    like actually though. i’m in AWE of the notecount.

    (via swanismycaptain)

    • 4 years ago
    • 6510597 notes
  • feanor-the-dragon:
“ hurtlittleboy:
“ bama-5sos:
“ copperbadge:
“ drgaellon:
“ racethewind10:
“ rowsdower-saves-us:
“ your-uncle-dave:
“ tinyfloatingwhales:
“ kikithegirl:
“ uriesays:
“ clatterbane:
“ haydengise:
“ ultrafacts:
“ groovypirate:
“...

    feanor-the-dragon:

    hurtlittleboy:

    bama-5sos:

    copperbadge:

    drgaellon:

    racethewind10:

    rowsdower-saves-us:

    your-uncle-dave:

    tinyfloatingwhales:

    kikithegirl:

    uriesays:

    clatterbane:

    haydengise:

    ultrafacts:

    groovypirate:

    bee-the-gatekeeper:

    chauvinistsushi:

    bebinn:

    hellkatsally:

    ultrafacts:

    Source 

    These dudes are fucking legit.  They don’t just show up one day in court, either, they actually make friends with the kids and let them know they have a support system and that there are people in the world who care about them and will always have their back.  And less important, but also cool, is that the few times a couple of them have come into my cafe, they’ve been super friendly and polite and when I told one of the guys that I noticed his Bikers Against Child Abuse patch and wanted him to know how awesome I thought he was because of it, he got kind of shy and blushed and said, “The kids are the awesome ones, we just let them know they’re allowed to be brave.”

    The source is long, but so, so good. These men and women are available in 36 states, 24 hours a day to stand guard at home, in court, at school, even if the child has a nightmare. Many of them are survivors of childhood abuse as well, and know what it’s like to feel scared and alone.

    In court that day, the judge asked the boy, “Are you afraid?” No, the boy said.

    Pipes says the judge seemed surprised, and asked, “Why not?”

    The boy glanced at Pipes and the other bikers sitting in the front row, two more standing on each side of the courtroom door, and told the judge, “Because my friends are scarier than he is.”

    Actual tears.. hnngh

    Show me more of people like this, world. I give up on humans too easily.

    where do i sign up for this,i want to be in this gang

    image
    image

    This is fucking amazing. It may be out of character for me to say this but rock on

    Bikers Against Child Abuse was founded in 1995 by a Native American child psychologist whose ride name is Chief, when he came across a young boy who had been subjected to extreme abuse and was too afraid to leave his house. He called the boy to reach out to him, but the only thing that seemed to interest the child was Chief’s bike. Soon, some 20 bikers went to the boy’s neighborhood and were able to draw him out of his house for the first time in weeks.

    Chief’s thesis was that a child who has been abused by an adult can benefit psychologically from the presence of even more intimidating adults that they know are on their side. “When we tell a child they don’t have to be afraid, they believe us,” Arizona biker Pipes told azcentral.com. “When we tell them we will be there for them, they believe us.”
    ( Article)

    More about BACA, from their site

    My parents are a part of this organization and they are metal af


    They go on runs to protect the child if they feel even the slightest threatened no matter where. If the child needs them to go on vacation with them, they do. Bikers come from across the nation to watch over and take shifts for these kids. And the best part is once you’re adopted into this family as a BACA kid, you’re always one. Even when you’re 40 and the perp gets released from jail, they’ll come meet with you and find your best options for avoiding the person and maintaining the life you’ve built for yourself. Once a BACA child, always a BACA child. In Florida, there’s 100% rate for identifying the perp based on the child’s testimony. Why? Because BACA stands with the child and supports the child so they feel comfortable enough to point out their attacker.


    What’s better than a badass biker gang being on your side???

    NATIVE AMERICAN CHILD PSYCHOLOGIST WHO IS A BIKER AND NAMED HIMSELF CHIEF HELL YES I’M HERE FOR THAT AND BIKERS BEING BAD ASS TO PROTECT KIDS. HELL YEAH.

    it’s back! I will always reblog BACA

    Damn good people.

    I know they wouldn’t consider themselves such, but these people are freaking heroes and the world is a better place because of them. 

    Hey folks, it talks about this in the article but its not mentioned in this post, BACA is a 501 © (3) charity that depends in part on donations to help pay for stuff like gas for their bikes. If you want to help, consider donating. 

    @copperbadge You like posting about heroes, Sam. Seems like this would be up your alley.

    I love these folks! I’ve reblogged them before but it’s wonderful to see the donation information has been added. 

    Always reblog. Keep doing what you’re doing y'all.

    Guys? This post changed my life. I saw this post. Forever ago. And thought it was only in america… and wished desperately that they could help me. But then I saw it again, during a bad episode, and checked their site. They aren’t just in the USA

    They’re in Canada as well and probably other countries. I met and talked with a native guy who runs the place near me. His name is Shaman. I got in, and I’m considered a BACA child now. Despite being 17, turning 18 when I talked to them. They spent time with me when my abuser was over, they gave me therapy resources. They give you something called a ‘level 1′ where they go to your house with as many bikers as they can, i shit you not a solid 20-40 bikers came from even out of province, and met me. I got to choose my biker name and I got a vest with patches on it and my name on it. They all hugged a Teddybear before giving it to me, and told me if I ever felt the BACA bear was running out of love, to give them a call and they’d refill it for me, and then I got a ride on one of their bikes. Just a day or so ago I went to an annual party with them and they we ate food one of them cooked and had a lot of laughs. 

    I’ve never felt as loved as I did being a part of the BACA family. They also gave me dog tags with the names, and phone numbers of my 2 workers.  So I can call them whenever I feel scared. 

    BACA is an absolutely wonderful group that will do everything in it’s power to help any child whos been abused. 

    And it doesn’t end when you’re 18 either. As long as you get in contact/get your level 1 before you’re 18? you’re ALWAYS a BACA kid. I’m 18 now and they still invite me to parties, ask me if I’m okay, and are there for me. They’re still trying to find me resources for therapy. 

    BACA has changed my fucking life. 

    I hope you all can read this, and reblog it knowing from someone who fucking been with them, that they are absolutely amazing. 

    If I ever don’t reblog this, it’s because I am physically being restrained against my will.

    (via ultrafacts)

    • 4 years ago
    • 1317722 notes
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