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izzy's playlists!
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Peter Solarz
styofa doing anything
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Cosimo Galluzzi

if i look back, i am lost

romaâ
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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Show & Tell
Xuebing Du

titsay

ellievsbear
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Product Placement

oozey mess
sheepfilms
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seen from South Korea

seen from Brazil

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@afroalchemymana

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[Mask in the Bamileke region]
A man wears a mask with two faces.; From 1945 to 1959, Daniel Broussous was the head doctor of the protestant hospital of Bangwa, set up by the SociĂŠtĂŠ des missions ĂŠvangĂŠliques de Paris (Paris evangelical mission society) in the south of the region Bamileke in 1935. Broussous took many photographs documenting the art, the architecture, the traditions and the daily-life of Bamileke chieftainships.
International Mission Archives
students at the Mushenge Art School - Democratic Republic of the Congo (1972)
To my Black American SpiritualistsâŚ
I wasnât finna post this because it was gon make some of yâall mad but when has that ever stopped me lol. Plus, Spirit sent me confirmation in two different forms soâŚ.
I donât know who needs to hear this but if you are Black American, it is likely that you have very little (if any) genetic Yoruba ancestry, and you might be blocking your blessings by ignoring the varying Bantu/Kongo, as well as Igbo, ancestors, spirits, and customs that make up your genetic and/or spiritual lineage.
This doesnât mean you canât practice a Yoruba based religion, the spirits call who they call, and your Black non-Yoruba spirits may have made a pact with some Yoruba divinities on your behalf so you can get what your need in this life.
BUT ALSO⌠skipping over your Bantu and other West-Central (heavy on the Central đ) African ancestors and running to a Yoruba based system simply because it is easily accessible to you, or is framed as more palatable, is not wise.
Remember, Black Americans are the product of over 50 African ethnic groups. When you look at the history of enslavement, you will see that the Yoruba were some of the last Africans to be enslaved, and were not brought en masse to North America. And even in places where the Yoruba were enslaved in large numbers, other African groups (and their culture/religion) had already been there for decades. This is why when we look at what we consider âBlack American Cultureâ, it is largely Kongo, Igbo, Ewe, Fon, Dahomey, etc. depending on location in the US. There are *some* Yoruba influences, but they tend to be relatively recent and more subtle.
This is not to discourage participation in Yoruba based religion, especially diasporic Lucumi (which isnât as purely Yoruba as folks would have you believe, because historical context), nor would I EVER disrespect the powerful Yoruba cosmology, but simply to encourage folks to think critically and use history as a guide for how they view their spirituality. People disrespect and misunderstand Kongo based religions like Hoodoo and Palo because they are trying to apply the tenets of Yoruba religion to these practices. It doesnât work like that. One of my elders (who herself is an Ifa and Lucumi priest, as well as a Hoodoo Rootdoctor and Palera) makes this VERY clear.
I say all that to say, practice whatever your spirits approve, and whatever you need for elevation, AND also donât be hard headed and disrespectful by ignoring a LARGE portion of your spiritual frame and genetic lineage. Sit at your altar and learn who YOUR people are. You might be surprised.
đ¸ Finding joy in the littlest things đ¸ My Father gave me the most beautiful gift. He blessed me with the descriptor, âEkuma Kuma Likawoâ - in Bakweri, that refers to a person who will grow & flourish in any environment, beautifying everything around them. That means more to me than a bejeweled crown đ¸đž | To all generous jewelers reading this - I am still also accepting bejeweled crowns đđđ #sprayme đľ #iamacceptingseniorroyalroles đ¸ by @blackbeaches https://www.instagram.com/p/B7I7SPclNpL/?igshid=dk3fyld84k7b

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âA Famous Were-Leopardâ. Percy Amaury Talbot. Internet Archive.
The power of metamorphosis is generally termed Uworraw-Ukponn, corresponding to the Ibo word Ehihi, and is sometimes inherited, sometimes bought. [âŚ] Usually fast runners, and those who move with a peculiar creeping motion, are looked upon as leopard souls[.]
â Percy Amaury Talbot (1923). Life in Southern Nigeria. pp. 88, 106.
Many communities and lineages among Cross River peoples like the Ibibio and among different Igbo groups and beyond have special animals or vegetation that they have bonded with. In many cases, this came with the ability to take the form of the animal, plants, or trees through a projection of the individualâs consciousness which can happen at great distances such as from oneâs home to an entity in the wild. The ability is usually first gotten through medicine and is hereditary. Sometimes these animals may have protected or saved the community before the bond. It is forbidden for members of such lineages to harm or harvest the animals, plants, or trees they have bonded with or allow others to do so because they are considered kin.
African culture in the Americas
In Darrow, Louisiana at the Ashland-Belle Helene Plantation historians and archeologists unearthed Kongo and West-Central African practices inside slave cabins. Enslaved Africans in Louisiana conjured the spirits of Kongo ancestors and water spirits by using sea shells. Other charms were found in several slave cabins, such as silver coins, beads, polished stones, bones, and were made into necklaces or worn in their pockets for protection. These artifacts provided examples of African rituals at Ashland Plantation. Slaveholders tried to stop African practices among their slaves, but enslaved African Americans disguised their rituals by using American materials and applying an African interpretation to them and hiding the charms in their pockets and making them into necklaces concealing these practices from their slaveholders.
In Talbot County, Maryland at the Wye House plantation where Frederick Douglass was enslaved in his youth, Kongo related artifacts were found. Enslaved African Americans created items to ward off evil spirits by creating a Hoodoo bundle near the entrances to chimneys which was believed to be where spirits enter. The Hoodoo bundle contained pieces of iron and a horse shoe. Enslaved African Americans put eyelets on shoes and boots to trap spirits. Archeologists also found small carved wooden faces. The wooden carvings had two faces carved into them on both sides which was interpreted to mean an African American conjurer who was a two-headed doctor. Two-headed doctors in Hoodoo means a person who can see into the future, and has knowledge about spirits and things unknown.
At Levi Jordan Plantation in Brazoria, Texas near the Gulf Coast, researchers suggests the plantation owner Levi Jordan may have transported captive Africans from Cuba back to his plantation in Texas. These captive Africans practiced a Bantu-Kongo religion in Cuba, and researchers excavated Kongo related artifacts at the site. For example, archeologists found in one of the cabins called the "curer's cabin" remains of an nkisi nkondi with iron wedges driven into the figure to activate its spirit. Researchers found a Kongo bilongo which enslaved African Americans created using materials from white porcelain creating a doll figure. In the western section of the cabin they found iron kettles and iron chain fragments. Researchers suggests the western section of the cabin was an altar to the Kongo spirit Zarabanda.
On a plantation in Kentucky called Locust Grove in Jefferson County, archeologists and historians found amulets made by enslaved African Americans that had the Kongo cosmogram engraved onto coins and beads. Blue beads were found among the artifacts, and in African spirituality blue beads attract protection to the wearer. In slave cabins in Kentucky and on other plantations in the American South, archeologists found blue beads and were used by enslaved people for spiritual protection. Enslaved African Americans in Kentucky combined Christian practices with traditional African beliefs.
The word "goofer" in goofer dust has Kongo origins, it comes from the "Kongo word 'Kufwa' which means to die." The mojo bag in Hoodoo has Bantu-Kongo origins. Mojo bags are called "toby" and the word toby derives from the Kongo word tobe. The word mojo also originated from the Kikongo word mooyo. The word mooyo means that natural ingredients have their own indwelling spirit that can be utilized in mojo bags to bring luck and protection. The mojo bag or conjure bag derived from the Bantu-Kongo minkisi. The Nkisi singular, and Minkisi plural, is when a spirit or spirits inhabit an object created by hand from an individual. These objects can be a bag (mojo bag or conjure bag) gourds, shells, and other containers. Various items are placed inside a bag to give it a particular spirit or job to do. Mojo bags and minkisis are filled with graveyard dirt, herbs, roots, and other materials by the spiritual healer called Nganga. The spiritual priests in Central Africa became the rootworkers and Hoodoo doctors in African American communities. In the American South, conjure doctors create mojo bags similar to the Ngangas minkisi bags as both are fed offerings with whiskey.
Other examples of Kongo origins of the mojo bag is found in the story of Gullah Jack. Gullah Jack was an African from Angola who carried a conjure bag (mojo bag) onto a slave ship leaving Zanzibar for the United States. In South Carolina, Gullah Jack used the spiritual knowledge he had with him from Angola and made protective charms for other enslaved people for their spiritual protection.
Other Bantu-Kongo origins in Hoodoo is making a cross mark (Kongo cosmogram) and stand on it and take an oath. This practice is done in Central Africa and in the United States in African American communities. The Kongo cosmogram is also used as a powerful charm of protection when drawn on the ground, the solar emblems or circles at the end and the arrows are not drawn just the cross marks which looks like an X
In March of 2020 the US went into lockdown. COVID19 was announced to be a global pandemic and disabled people, the most vulnerable group through out all of this, have suffered greatly every since. We all heard, and continue to hear, the statements between waves of variants stating âItâs only those with pre-existing conditions who are dying now!â Why has that been okay? Why do people think that it is alright that their disabled brothers, sisters, siblings of the world have still been dying throughout all of this? We are NOT disposable.
PLEASE continue to mask
(Drawing created by me April 2020)
[ID: a digital drawing that is kind of sketchy featuring a crowd of disabled individuals some representing those we have lost. In front are three people. One has a prosthetic leg, one is using crutches, and one is in a wheelchair. Everyone has their right fists raised. Above them it reads the hashtag No Body Is Disposable]
âThere is something dreadfully wrong with an education/socialization process that leaves us ignorant of our past, strangers to our own people, apes of our oppressors, and creatures of habitual shallow thought and trivial values. Therefore, there must be an independent African effort to guarantee that our children and our communities develop the perspectives, purposes, skills and knowledge to function in ways that enhance our survival and development.â
- Asa G. Hilliard -
source

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Sonia Boyce, Big Womenâs Talk, 1984
use, and i cannot stress this enough, thriftbooks
if thriftbooks doesnât have what youâre looking for, especially if youâre looking for it used/cheap, alternatives include betterworldbooks and discoverbooks.
Other tips for cheaper books is checking amazon and scrolling down to the âbuy usedâ or âother sellersâ section and then checking to see if those sellers have storerfonts off of amazon.
There is also a good chance that you might have a local, indie book store that likely also has a used book section! Indiebound might help you find those book stores!
Also, check out your local library, sometimes, they have a for sale section or might have certain times of the year where they do massive used book (dvd, cd, etc) sales to fundraise!
(Itâs also worth checking directly from an authorâs or publisherâs page and seeing if they have other places they sell their books. I know this is about cheaper/used books, since some of yâall arenât built for piracy or the library, but also if you want to dodge supporting amazon AND want to more directly support artists you support, thereâs a good chance they might have alternate ways to buy the books!)
âA Famous Were-Leopardâ. Percy Amaury Talbot. Internet Archive.
The power of metamorphosis is generally termed Uworraw-Ukponn, corresponding to the Ibo word Ehihi, and is sometimes inherited, sometimes bought. [âŚ] Usually fast runners, and those who move with a peculiar creeping motion, are looked upon as leopard souls[.]
â Percy Amaury Talbot (1923). Life in Southern Nigeria. pp. 88, 106.
Many communities and lineages among Cross River peoples like the Ibibio and among different Igbo groups and beyond have special animals or vegetation that they have bonded with. In many cases, this came with the ability to take the form of the animal, plants, or trees through a projection of the individualâs consciousness which can happen at great distances such as from oneâs home to an entity in the wild. The ability is usually first gotten through medicine and is hereditary. Sometimes these animals may have protected or saved the community before the bond. It is forbidden for members of such lineages to harm or harvest the animals, plants, or trees they have bonded with or allow others to do so because they are considered kin.
On Sacred Warriorhood and Unity in Diversity Funtumfunefu Denkyemfunefu Indigenous Akan Adinkra symbol: circles merging two mythical crocodi
Check out my article on Reclaiming + Reconnecting to Black African Indigeneity we are the worldâs first and thus oldest Indigenous peoples. Anti-Blackness attempts to erase us/cause Identity crises in Black people but I am determined fo disrupt this đđž

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
As abangoma we relate to sound, chantings and rhymes to the beating of the drum. Our stories are sad, painful but with everything bad there's good, some are blissful. For those of us who endured pain. The pain of getting sick and having unspeakable illness that no medical doctor could cure, but with strong belief we knew that no matter what it took to get through this new journey which was seen as taboo by many, we would come out as better individuals, also healed. We didn't just heal ourselves but the bloodlines that bind us, the constant sufferings that agonized our families, generational spells and cursed laid centuries before, to heal those who coexist with us categorized as family. Those who came before us and those who will continue after we are gone, family.
âThen give white people some free advice.â âTheyâre all in my books.â RIP Toni Morrison (February 18, 1931 - August 5, 2019)