consonant clusters probably taste so good
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Xuebing Du

Andulka

Discoholic 🪩

★
AnasAbdin
ojovivo

Monterey Bay Aquarium

tannertan36

if i look back, i am lost

blake kathryn
YOU ARE THE REASON

#extradirty

macklin celebrini has autism
trying on a metaphor

shark vs the universe
occasionally subtle

seen from United States

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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Saudi Arabia
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seen from Philippines

seen from Brazil
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@circletofcircles
consonant clusters probably taste so good

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kills me when people say the LLMs are trained on all human knowledge
They literally are?
Sultan poisoned by rotten grape. His eldest son succeeds and bans grape production. Vinyard owners support a rival claimant, the new sultan's younger brother. War of Grapes begins. Both brothers are killed.
Need some fables AESOP

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the art of the deal: kill everybody
this one negotiating trick always gets results: kill everybody
how to make friends and influence people: kill everybody
Being prime minister of the uk has a higher regret rate than being trans
So the solution is to ban prime ministers
Amazing
Full interview here
I'm playing correspondence chess with my brother and don't feel like making a move tonight but wanted to make sure I did it tomorrow, so I wrote "move against brother" in my TODO list before realizing that sounds kind of insane.
#AncientPrinceProblems

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I usually tell my students that “close reading” means looking at what is actually on the page, reading the text itself, rather than some idea “behind the text.” It means noticing things in the writing, things in the writing that stand out. To give you some idea of what this means, I’ve made up a list of five sorts of things that a close reading might typically notice: (1) unusual vocabulary, words that surprise either because they are unfamiliar or because they seem to belong to a different context; (2) words that seem unnecessarily repeated, as if the word keeps insisting on being written; (3) images or metaphors, especially ones that are used repeatedly and are somewhat surprising given the context; (4) what is in italics or parentheses; and (5) footnotes that seem too long. This list is far from complete—in fact, no complete list is possible—but the list is meant to begin to give you an idea of what sorts of things we notice when we’re doing close reading.
What all five of my examples have in common is that they are minor elements in the text; they are not main ideas. In fact, your usual practice of reading which focuses on main ideas would dismiss them all as marginal or trivial. Another thing they have in common is that, although they are minor, they are nonetheless conspicuous, eye-catching: they are either surprising or repeated, set off from the text or too long. Close reading pays attention to elements in the text which, although marginal, are nonetheless emphatic, prominent—elements in the text which ought to be quietly subordinate to the main idea, but which textually call attention to themselves.
Most of you have been educated to ignore such elements. You have been taught to seek out and identify the main ideas, dismissing the trivial as you go. This has had to be trained into you: read to a young child sometime, you will notice she has the annoying habit of interrupting the flow of the story to draw attention to some minor thing. Close reading resembles the interruptions of that child. It is a method of undoing the training that keeps us to the straight and narrow path of main ideas. It is a way of learning not to disregard those features of the text that attract our attention, but are not principal ideas.
Jane Gallop, “The Ethics of Close Reading: Close Encounters,” Journal of Curriculum Theorizing, Vol.16, No.3 (Fall 2000), pg.7-8 (x)
labyrinthine affirmations:
labyrinths confuse and disorient you
labyrinths imprison those who can't solve them
labyrinths are not just physical
labyrinths can be social conditions
labyrinths can be incorrect ways of thinking
labyrinths can be states of suffering
I can be a labyrinth
every labyrinth has a heart
at the heart of every labyrinth, there must be a minotaur
friend whos always planning everything: hey guys lets do something this week!! when are you all available?
friend whos always available: i can do whenever
friend whos constantly busy: im sorry i have work and then school and then the labyrinth and then more work :( i can do tuesday at 3:00 am for five minutes tho
friend with the randomly generated sleep schedule: (no response)
friend who went missing in the woods behind their house 12 years ago and hasn't been heard from since: (no response)
friend whos really into genshin impact: does anyone want to play genshin impact
Northern Fires, Sunset - William H. Hays , 2026.
American , b. 1956 -
Colour reduction linocut print , 9 x 12 in.

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Legends and superstitions of the sea and of sailors, 1885
controversial stance but i do wish i could live forever. i certainly live like i'm going to live forever. i take my time. realistically however my lifespan is dreadfully limited and there are things i've "been meaning to do" that i will never get around to. the Emoji Movie came out almost 10 years ago. in all that time on any random day i could've decided to sit down and watch it, and i did not. how many more decades will slip by like this? conceivably, it could be all the decades i have left. watching the Emoji Movie would not be, after all, a crucial use of my time. much better things to do. i could easily postpone it over and over and over until my final breath where it may not even register to me that i never did watch the Emoji Movie. no great loss, certainly; and yet i find myself intrigued by Patrick Stewart's involvement