What's not to love, eh?
ojovivo
macklin celebrini has autism
wallacepolsom

#extradirty
One Nice Bug Per Day

tannertan36
Keni

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
🪼

@theartofmadeline
we're not kids anymore.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Noah Kahan
Cosimo Galluzzi
occasionally subtle

seen from Canada

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@cincoflex
What's not to love, eh?

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Schiermonnikoog , Island - Anke Roder , 2025.
Dutch , b. 1964 -
Encaustic and oil on wood panel , 42.5 x 32.5 cm.
Sharing something to refresh your spirits. Drink it in!
So a recently re-read The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison and had a few thoughts on it.
Still remains a great book and I appreciate the court intrigue over more typical fantasy fare that hares off into battles and journeys and dragons. Everything's got it's place and fans, but this book hits nicely in a 'Cinderella makes good' sort of way. I love Maia and his struggles; I love that his kindness is a refreshing change from his father's demeanor and that he draws in good people by being good to them. Not a lot of books take the time to develop relationships that way.
So naturally I wondered how this story would play out on the big screen.
First problem: race. The Elves are White; the Goblins Black. Addison does a fantastic job in showing that while this world has biases, they're not as endemic as they are in ours. Yes Maia's dad was racist and a number of folks in the story mutter about Maia's heritage, but most don't show any sort of issue with Maia's skin tone. Most of their dislike stems from the facts of his birth and sudden ascension to the throne. More of the politics of the situation. And several characters are described as clearly of mixed heritage, with differing skin tones.
But doing this as a live action movie would force the studio to make tough choices--do you cast only black actors for Goblins? Do you cast someone who isn't and make them wear blackface? How do you handle those of mixed heritage? It's a difficult issue any way you choose to deal with it.
An animated feature could bypass the issue much more easily, but losing the potential of the sets and clothing would break my heart. Addison does such good work in describing the palace rooms and outfits that to lose the details would be painful.
Also--Maia is eighteen at the start of the story. Casting someone who is actually that age would be tough. (to be honest, this read-through I sort of pictured a Josh O'Connor as Maia--gawky and earnest, the way he was in Wake Up Dead Man. He's too old, though.) I'm sure there are young actors out there who could do the part justice but off-hand I can't think of anyone right now.
And The Goblin Emperor is a very 'talky' book. So much is centered on conversations. Not just info-dumps but also character development and plot points are the wheels moving this story along. Filming all of that would be difficult unless you make this a mini-series of multiple episodes, which actually isn't a bad idea. For people who are action-oriented though, it's going to be kind of a slog; after all, Maia spends the majority of his time sitting and listening, which is what emperors do in this world. No swordfights or chases for the most part.
Still, despite all the issues, I would dearly love this book to be filmed. With the right cast (live or animated) and the right script, it's got the potential to be a classic either way.

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If you see this on your dashboard, reblog this, NO MATTER WHAT and all your dreams and wishes will come true.
Oh hey! Haven’t seen this in forever! Didn’t reblog it when it came across me before, not gonna skip it this time, I need some good vibes.
I’m paying to force seven thousand strangers to see a photo of my late husband having fun with his dog. Tumblr Blaze is totally worth it. XD
Thank-you to all of my new Internet stranger friends for being so gracious about having my post shoved onto your dashboards. I loved reading all of your kind tags and comments! Both Martin and Bosco have been gone for several years now but for 24 hours, they felt very present in my life. I greatly appreciate this gift. ❤️
Reblog to have your dashboard be visited by the spirit of joy that death can end but not erase.
Thank you to everyone who commented in their tags or messaged me. Indeed, today is “Martin and Bosco Day”. I originally whimsically blazed this photo on 13 July 2022. I never expected Martin and Bosco to travel so far and make so many new friends. The experience has been such a gift for me.
Speaking of book recommendations after I just shared a post of them...one of the ladies I volunteered with had a shit year a few years back, losing her son and other family members. With my sympathy card I sent her a typed list of books on grief and grieving that had helped me after losing Theriac (Joanne Cacciatore's Bearing the Unbearable, Louis LaGrande's Healing Grief, Finding Peace: 101 Ways to Cope with the Death of Your Loved One, and Raymond Moody's Life After Loss are all pretty short, accessible, and offer a board first aid kit. Also, you could do worse than to grab some of Elizabeth Kubler-Ross's lectures.). Apparently it really helped her, and this past weekend she told me she still had the list and passed it on to a relative of hers who lost her husband this year.
Not all of the advice in every book is going to help; there are some aspects of grief I doubt any book can actually help with. But the recommendations are successful, I'd guess, because a) reading can occupy your mind when you're grieving (and you might as well read about grief because you're not going to be distracted from it), b) learning something new helps people feel more in control of their life & environment and can offer a sense of hope, c) even if the recipient never reads any of the books, being given a book list is a way to say "I care about you and want to help" which is a good message to send. From my own grief experience I also think it's especially powerful to hear "I went through something similar to you and this is what helped me" - it's proof there's life on the other side.
Anyway, 2 more book recs for 2 quite different end-of-life outcomes, which I think you should ideally read before any of your loved ones die so you can actually use the information (also, honestly? Very helpful writing research):
Final Journeys and Final Gifts by Maggie Callanan -- a hospice nurse's guide to the kinds of decisions, conflicts, and sometimes puzzling behavior and experiences encountered when a loved one is in palliative care. Journeys is the more broadly practical book (from the 'writing research' perspective, it also offers some great examples of conflict, memorable scenes, and psychology insights); Gifts looks particularly at spiritual experiences at the end of life, including end of life visions (which happen to all kinds of people and can be a good thing to be prepared for regardless of your own spiritual beliefs). If Gifts proves fascinating, a more recent book on the subject of end of life experiences is Death is But a Dream.
I Wasn't Ready to Say Goodbye: Surviving, Coping and Healing After the Sudden Death of a Loved One is for the opposite end of experience, where a loss is abrupt and unexpected. It offers advice, myth-busting, and real-life stories from people who are bereaved through suicide, crime, and accidents. I recommend this for everyone because 1) It could happen to you (speaking as someone it's happened to multiple times) and having some knowledge ahead of time will not make it less painful, but could make it less bewildering, 2) It could happen to your loved ones, friends, and co-workers, and you can be more supportive with some knowledge, 3) Back to writing research: this book's information on myth-busting, how grief affects children at different ages, tips for coping when a loved one's' death is part of a tragedy that brings media attention, and vivid examples of the various ways real people have responded to grief can make you a more accurate writer. And I'll be honest, as someone who's Been There, when I read a book that was clearly written by an author who hasn't Been There and hasn't even tried to figure out what it's like, it's ranges from annoying to offensive to actively painful. [Also, if you want to do better at understanding+ depicting grief, read grief memoirs: Elizabeth McCracken's An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination is about miscarriage but resonated so strongly with my very different grief experiences, so I think it's tapping into something, if not universal, at least very broad; Sonali Deraniyagala's Wave, about the loss of multiple generations of her family in the Boxing Day tsunami, manages to depict events and feelings that verge on the indescribable.]
I'm reblogging this so I can recc these books to my MIL, and read them myself as well. Grateful for the list.
My Take?
Yeah, McConnell's most likely on life support. Given his age, his poor health and the condition in which the first responders found him, I believe he's being kept alive (if you can call such a state 'alive') to get beyond that August 3d deadline for the special election to fill the seat. It benefits the GOP and MAGA to keep Kentucky from having that election.
Which makes me wonder why Thomas Massie is so quiet right now. My understanding is that he'd be running, and given how the current administration has treated Massie, why isn't he all over this? I don't think it's respect for Mitch, and certainly not loyalty to the party. And don't get me wrong--Massie is no damned prize either, given his stances. I'm just curious why we haven't heard him say anything about this bizarre situation.
Any other Kentucky politicians speaking up?
7/12/ UPDATE:
So he's alive. I guess. I mean he looks utterly stoned, he isn't wearing his teeth, and his wife looks like she's propping him up. And isn't the lighting just too perfect for a hospital room? I think the conspiracy theorists will have a field day with the photo, and for a guy in the hospital, his note is pretty verbose.
Make of it what you will, but his career is over.
Truncated text of tweet from MrPitBull, Mar 11, 2026:
She kept finding women in laboratory photographs from the 1800s. Then she read the published papers—and every single woman had vanished. Someone had erased them from history.
Yale University, 1969.
Margaret Rossiter was a graduate student studying the history of science. She was one of very few women in her program.
Every Friday afternoon, students and faculty gathered for beers and informal conversation. One week, Margaret asked a simple question: "Were there ever any women scientists?"
The faculty answered firmly: No.
Someone mentioned Marie Curie. The group dismissed it—her husband Pierre really deserved the credit.
Margaret didn't argue. But she also didn't believe them.
So she started looking.
She found a reference book called "American Men of Science"—essentially a Who's Who of scientific achievement. Despite the title, she was shocked to discover it contained entries about women. Botanists trained at Wellesley. Geologists from Vermont.
There were names. There were credentials. There were careers.
The professors had been wrong.
But Margaret's discovery was just the beginning. Because as she dug deeper into archives across the country, she found something far more disturbing.
Photograph after photograph showed women standing at laboratory benches, working with equipment, listed on research teams.
But when she read the published papers, the award citations, the official histories—those same women had disappeared. Their names were missing. Their contributions erased.
It wasn't random. It was systematic.
Women who designed experiments watched male colleagues publish results without giving them credit. Women whose discoveries were assigned to supervisors. Women listed in acknowledgments instead of as authors. Women passed over for awards that went to male collaborators who contributed far less.
Margaret realized she was witnessing a pattern that stretched across centuries.
Women had always been present in science. The record had simply pushed them aside.
She needed a name for what she was documenting.
In the early 1990s, she found it in the work of Matilda Joslyn Gage—a 19th-century suffragist who had written about this exact phenomenon in 1870.
In 1993, Margaret published a paper formally naming it: The Matilda Effect.
The term captured something that had been hidden in plain sight for generations. Once you knew the term, you saw it everywhere.
Her dissertation became a lifelong mission.
For more than 30 years, Margaret researched and wrote her landmark three-volume series: Women Scientists in America. She examined letters, institutional policies, individual careers. She gathered undeniable evidence that women in science had been consistently under-credited and structurally excluded.
Her work faced resistance. Many dismissed women's history as political rather than academic. Others insisted she was exaggerating.
Margaret didn't argue emotionally. She presented data. Documented cases. Patterns repeated across decades and institutions.
Eventually, the evidence became undeniable.
Her research helped restore recognition to scientists who had been erased:
Rosalind Franklin, whose X-ray work revealed DNA's structure—credit went to Watson and Crick.
Lise Meitner, who explained nuclear fission—omitted from the Nobel Prize.
Nettie Stevens, who discovered sex chromosomes—received little credit.
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, who discovered stars are made of hydrogen—initially dismissed.
And countless others whose names had nearly vanished.
Margaret changed the narrative. Science was no longer just the story of solitary male geniuses. It became a story of collaboration that included women who had been written out.
The Matilda Effect became standard terminology. Scholars used it to examine how credit is assigned, how authors are listed, who receives awards, who gets left out.
HIStory becomes HER story.

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10 Strangers Who Chose Kindness When Nobody Was Watching—And Changed A Life Anyway
Compassion reblog!
Nope
I don't think we ought to retaliate if Trump is assassinated by Iran. The president cannot mandate revenge. Much as he deludes himself into thinking he's beloved by all Americans, and much as he tries to behave as if his word is law, he cannot order retaliatory bombardment of another country.
For one point, acts of war require congressional approval. For another, while he's Commander-in-Chief, Trump has no authority to demand such an action either before or after his death. (And it certainly isn't in writing anywhere, I'm sure.)
Somewhere down in his festering soul he's probably thrilled that he's so important that an entire country wants him dead. Little does he seem to realize Iran isn't the only one, however. The power void and chaos that would/will happen after his death would/will give Russia and China the opportunity to start muscling in--China will most certainly move to claim Taiwan, and I could see Putin pushing along various coasts.
While I look forward to the weeks of Crab Raves here, I'm a realist and I know we are in for rough times once this bastard croaks.
I spent the afternoon arranging our books by size and color (and it’s so satisfying and looks amazing) and my partner came home and stared in shock at the bookcase and then said “i’m a librarian, you can’t do this.”
him: you split up all the song of ice and fire books
me: yeah i know, they’re all primary colors, it’s perfect
him: [self-destructs]
You’re a monster
As a former bookstore employee, this hurts my soul. I mean, sure it looks nice, but how do you find anything?
it has occurred me during this process that apparently not everyone thinks about books by what color they are? like, literally when i’m looking for a book, i picture it in my mind. i have a very…tactile experience with the books i read and idk! i thought everyone did that lol.
my partner was like “how will i find [this book] for instance” and i replied “easy, it’s purple” and he looked at me like i was a witch.
OP your brain is neat and I love you for it you funky little color-coded cupcake. But you’re still a monster.
This actually is interesting in terms of information-seeking behavior, which is a thing librarians think about a lot and often actually study (some library jobs require you to publish, and academic librarians, for instance, will often use the students at the college they work at to study how they search for information in order to figure out how to best provide them services).
When you go for an MLS (Master’s of Library Science, which is a thing, and which is usually required for “professional-level” library work [which is also a weird and contentious concept that I won’t go into here]), one of the things you study is the organization of information. This deals with how to determine what a book or other material is “about"—a concept we tongue-in-cheek call “aboutness"—and how to convey that to a potential user of the item and make it easy for them to find. Things like keywords and subject headings, do I put this book about how often wild birds attack aerial drones in with books about birds or with books about technology, if its a fictional novel do I put fantasy in it’s own section or mix it in with all of the other fiction, so on and so on.
OP is organizing books by how they would look for them. OP’s partner is thinking in terms of aboutness. This is a system that works for OP because it’s their personal library: they know basically what books they own and they only own books that are relevant to them, and if they know what the book looks like, that can be a quick way to find it.
In a library that assumes the public (or people who do not own that particular collection of books) are using the collection, that doesn’t work. Books are often re-issued in multiple covers, or re-bound in new covers when they get worn out, and if the user doesn’t know what the book looks like or is expecting a different cover, they’re lost. That’s why non-personal libraries used standardized cataloging systems like the Dewey Decimal System or Library of Congress System to organize a book by what it’s “about”, and then put books about the same or similar topics together, marked with labels and signage so a person unfamiliar with the book or collection can find their way to it.
Basically, OP’s system works for their own personal library, because it’s best suited to how the primary user—OP themselves—looks for books. OP’s librarian partner is coming from a background of thinking in terms of a public-facing collection, where aboutness is the key criteria and communicating it to a user unfamiliar with the collection is the priority.
And also, OP is a monster.
@official-library-posts
official library post
*siiiiiigh*
This lightly touches on an issue I had working with school libraries; namely, SETS. Easy to shelve fiction when they're all written by the same author (Laura Ingalls Wilder, Rick Riordan) but when it's something like graphic novels, or some ongoing nonfiction series like Draw 50 ____, the books by Dewey aren't going to be next to each other, and YET the covers clearly convey they are a SET.
I shelved them as sets. Easier to find, easier to re-shelve. The head of library services grumbled a little but she agreed that the goal was for the kid to check a book out, and anything that made locating the book easier mitigated the 'correct' shelving order.
SAME.
My Take?
Yeah, McConnell's most likely on life support. Given his age, his poor health and the condition in which the first responders found him, I believe he's being kept alive (if you can call such a state 'alive') to get beyond that August 3d deadline for the special election to fill the seat. It benefits the GOP and MAGA to keep Kentucky from having that election.
Which makes me wonder why Thomas Massie is so quiet right now. My understanding is that he'd be running, and given how the current administration has treated Massie, why isn't he all over this? I don't think it's respect for Mitch, and certainly not loyalty to the party. And don't get me wrong--Massie is no damned prize either, given his stances. I'm just curious why we haven't heard him say anything about this bizarre situation.
Any other Kentucky politicians speaking up?
7/12/ UPDATE:
So he's alive. I guess. I mean he looks utterly stoned, he isn't wearing his teeth, and his wife looks like she's propping him up. And isn't the lighting just too perfect for a hospital room? I think the conspiracy theorists will have a field day with the photo, and for a guy in the hospital, his note is pretty verbose.
Make of it what you will, but his career is over.

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The funeral
So it went well. Odd to say about what's usually a sad and somber event but the outpouring of love and support from the attendees did a lot to keep us all afloat. I was delighted at how many of my FIL's colleagues and former staff came, along with his caregiver of the last year.
I was not impressed by the priest, who was both young and new to the church. it was clear that he not only did not know my FIL personally, but that he also didn't bother talking with us, the family beforehand to learn anything about him. Father Vu needs more instruction on Pastoral care, methinks, but that will come with time, I suppose.
SO proud of hubby's eulogy, which teared us all up, and my BIL's support for my MIL all through the service. It's comforting to see family pull together. Since I'm not Catholic, I had no idea you also go to the cemetery to see the actual burial, huh. As the backhoe starting filling in the dirt I told hubby that our 5 year old grandson would love this part, and hubby chuckled in agreement.
So it's done, and a good man is now at rest. I will miss him terribly for the rest of my days, but he'll also be a part of who I am from now on.