Sleepy kitty on a Sunday morning ā¤ļø

ā
hello vonnie
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Mike Driver
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Sade Olutola

PR's Tumblrdome
we're not kids anymore.
NASA
sheepfilms
noise dept.
cherry valley forever
Peter Solarz

⣠Chile in a Photography ā£
Xuebing Du

#extradirty
todays bird
trying on a metaphor
Jules of Nature

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@elisemizzi
Sleepy kitty on a Sunday morning ā¤ļø

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Meet Milo & Marie! š„°
I can't believe I'm saying this but this ep of wcth broke me... too much was happening like elizabeth getting her job back thanks to abigail, the proposal, "take a walk with me", the last kiss i am not okay
@philippagordon since comments wonāt let me post pics
Wait there Iāll just go grab some from the fridgeā¦
3/5: This is an easy read but I suspect it may have suffered at the hands of an over-enthusiastic editor. Given the sheer number of examples
With all this stuff thatās been going on in the world lately and of the last few years, honestly⦠I just dream of the day that we can finally go
And I can go back to working toward my dream of having my own in-house stylist/chef who not only makes food for me, but also does my hair and makeup and gets this shlumpy me of the last two years completely out of existence.
(Iām open to discussing the possibility of pink hair).

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āGrief takes on a persona whose needs are paramount. Grief requires quiet and solitude. Grief demands rest, lots of rest. At the most grief requires a cup of tea given without talk, without advice, without weeping. Grief does not need platitudes - suffering is increased when anger and dismay refutes statements like, āeverything is going to be alright.ā The other misnomer, 'closure,ā is insulting in its banality because it really means, 'shut up and go away.āā
ā Shakleton, Shirley (2010). The Circle Of Silence: A personal testimony before, during and after Balibo. Sydney: Pier 9
Just another one of those āblast from the pastā posts that, on re-reading, you discover have attained a whole new level of depth over the course of the past 2 years, the past 12 months and, for me, especially the last 6 months.
Captain Cookās ship found.
AFP graphics map of north-east US showing the area where the wreck of Captain James Cookās famed vessel the Endeavour is believed to be found, according to Australian researchers on Thursday
by @AFP
I donāt know about you, but I find this HUGE.
āLois & Clark, āIllusions of Grandeurā
I love this scene. The world is much easier to keep living in if you believe in magic.
The distance between Sydney and Perth is longer than the distance between Moscow and Paris
This was some random trivia I was not aware of. No wonder I miss home so much!
(¼) āHeād knock in the rain. Heād knock in the snow. Heād come home late on these dreadful winter nights, and my mother would have his slippers under the radiator and his bathrobe on top. In the 1960ās Fuller Brush was the dominant name in door-to-door sales. It was the milkman, the newspaperman, and the Fuller Brush Man. And my father was a Fuller Brush Man. It was a tough job. Many nights heād come home empty-handed. There were weeks weād have less meat and more potatoes, but he never complained. Thatās one thing he always taught me: āDonāt go too crazy on the material things.ā Maybe knocking on doors wasnāt the best job, but the job did its job. It helped him raise a family. On Fridays heād take me with him while he made deliveries. Those were my favorite days. Iād spend the whole afternoon with Dad. And Friday night was the sabbath, so we both knew thereād be an amazing German-Jewish dinner waiting for us at home. Dad hadnāt gotten married until after the war, so there was a literal generation gap between us. But he encouraged me the best he could. He bought me my first trumpet when I was thirteen. Every time I played a solo, heād take me out for ice cream. In high school I started a little rock band with my friends. It wasnāt Dadās type of music. But heād let us practice in our tiny apartment. Heād help us load equipment. By then he was 65, but heād be carrying drum sets and amplifiers in and out of social halls and sweet sixteen parties. Dad died suddenly of a heart attack when I was a freshman in college. Momās lungs were already filling up with cancer, and two years later sheād be gone too. At the age of twenty-one I was on my own. I never really had time to mourn. I did what my dad would have done. I tried to stay positive. I put one foot in front of the other: I went to college, I went to grad school, I got a job. Then one afternoon I came home from work, and I got a call from my cousin Linda. She said: āAre you sitting down? Because your father is in todayās New York Times.ā Dad had been gone for ten years. It didnāt make any sense. But I ran out to the newspaper stand, and opened up a copy of the Times. And there he was. Staring back at me.ā
Go to @humansofnewyork and read this whole story about Alice Neelās painting of the Fuller Brush Man. Itās beautiful. And at the end of this year, beautiful stories remind us that life is really just about the simple, fundamental things. š

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Mate. This is one the most epic videos Iāve ever seen and makes me want to go work in a pencil factory.
I love stationery!
Look, I get we were all a lot younger in 1998. But Iām rewatching Cold Feet and look how little Hugh Dancy was in Season 2!
H.G. Wells: Do what you will with me Tempus, but I implore you, spare the girl.
Tempus: God, Herb, who writes your dialogue? You sound like The Prisoner of Zenda!
Tempus episodes are THE. BEST.
(Gif from @wlois-clarkw )
Kylieās coming home in time for Christmas!
Itās a Getting-prepared-for-the-Christmas-season Christmas miracle! š
Australian Times before and After Daylight Saving Time.
See! This is yet another reason why I hate daylight savings!

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In reference to my previous post, Schickel goes on to say on pg 261 that:
America is not merely a free country, it is a forgiving oneāespecially when it comes to youthful mistakes.
While I think this was a fair comment back in 2005 when the book was first released, in todayās context of it being perceived as socially acceptable to ruthlessly denigrate people through both mainstream and social media in some misbegotten conception of ācivil justice,ā I donāt believe this still stands as it did 15 years ago.
That said, a small group of people being loud does not necessarily represent the majority, and itās that thought that gives me hope that forgiveness can still exist as a human function.
In later years, Kazan came to feel that audiences learnt to ārespect it moreāthey feel more about itā than they did on its initial release. This, he said in 1990, is because they had grown more conscious of the failure of so many revolutions. āThe notion that a revolution is not people just singing about itā had begun to dawn on them, he thought. His film, he came to think, did realise its largest ambition, which was āa rejection of a certain way of thinking⦠a rejection of over-facile, over-rigid, inhuman ways of saying the world must change.ā
This is taken from pg 247 of Richard Schickelās biography of Elia Kazan, talking about the aftermath of the film, Viva Zapata!, released in 1952. Kazan apparently made this comment in 1990, which is interesting since Iāve been reflecting recently on how far we may or may not have come in the last 30 years, back when preaching tolerance for all humankind was the order of the day. Iām not completely convinced that we havenāt regressed since then, but itās interesting to read that in the decades since Kazan made that film to 1990, he might have thought we had progressed.