Teachers and professors that accept late assignments and allow you to retake exams deserve nothing but the best in the world.
Educators that actually care about you succeeding no matter how many times you fail at first are a godsend
NASA

ellievsbear

#extradirty
I'd rather be in outer space šø
Monterey Bay Aquarium

@theartofmadeline
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Sweet Seals For You, Always

romaā
Xuebing Du

oozey mess
Acquired Stardust
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć

PR's Tumblrdome
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styofa doing anything
RMH
d e v o n
KIROKAZE

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seen from Chile
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@endless-isolation
Teachers and professors that accept late assignments and allow you to retake exams deserve nothing but the best in the world.
Educators that actually care about you succeeding no matter how many times you fail at first are a godsend

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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The Caretaker
My heart canāt take so much cuteness!!!š©ššš
160820 Tabiās sister Choi Hyeyounās IG Updates of Yeonjun with BIGBANG ucles at Bakcstage of 10th Anniversary Concert in Seoulšššā¤ļø
Seungriās Instagram update (082016)
Pic caption: I recalled since 10 years ago⦠I spent half of my life with my members, fans and staff. I am thankful for the past 10 precious years. Today is such an exciting day #vip #0to10 #ILoveYou
trans by bb.translations
one of my fave ot5 shots of them~

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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John Cho: You know, I had requested that my husband be Asian. A.V. Club: Why was that? John Cho: The reason was that I grew up with some gay Asian male friends. You donāt really see Asian men together very often. Itās very rare in life. Iāve always felt that there was some extra cultural shame to having two Asian men together, because it was so difficult to come out of the closet, so difficult to be gay and Asian, that they couldnāt really bring themselves⦠Itās easier to run away from people that look like your family. I wanted the future to be where it was completely normal and therefore, aside from the gender, they look like a traditional heterosexual couple. So that relationship, to me, the optics of it are that it looks very traditional on the one hand and very radical on the other.
John Cho on representation and his concerns with gay Sulu Ā· Interview Ā· The A.V. Club (via jasmined)
u know what's great? im not in highschool anymore
Basically
White folk are finally seeing what poc have been saying for EVER and some of them still donāt believe itĀ this shit isnāt new
friendly reminder that the human race currently has the technological capacity to eradicate poverty and secure a safe existence for every person but that doesnāt happen because capitalists limit production so they can make money and live in comparative luxury to the rest of us
when mediocre boys have shitty personalities⦠listenā¦. u arenāt cute enough to pull off an attitudeā¦. use ur manners

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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Shoutout to all those people that have jobs like cleaning the bathrooms in rest areas or gas stations, to the people that take out the trash and wash dishes in restaurants, school janitors, house maids. Youāre doing jobs that donāt get much recognition but are some of the toughest. stay awesome
i hate when guests stay over too longā¦..like no offence but get out
person: you look dead
me: thanks
im sick and tired of men complaining about women being afraid of them like i DO NOT CARE if it hurts your feelings when a girl crosses the street to get further away from you!!! we hear how men talk about us! we see how men treat us! well stop being scared of men when they stop being so fucking scary!
Temperature Change Lipstick
NO.1 Ā NO.2 Ā No.3 Ā NO.4
Discount code: 20off1829

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The winner of Glamour's 2016 essay contest shares a story of heartbreak and in-the-kitchen healing.
Iām so tired of white guys on TV telling me what to eat. Iām tired of Anthony Bourdain testing the waters of Korean cuisine to report back that, not only will our food not kill you, it actually tastes good. I donāt care how many times youāve traveled to Thailand, I wonāt listen to youājust like the white kids wouldnāt listen to me, the half-Korean girl, defending the red squid tentacles in my lunch box. The same kids who teased me relentlessly back then are the ones who now celebrate our cuisine as the Next Big Thing.
I grew up in the Pacific Northwest, in a small college town that was about 90 percent white. In my adolescence I hated being half Korean; I wanted people to stop asking, āWhere are you really from?ā I could barely speak the language and didnāt have any Asian friends. There was nothing about me that felt Koreanāexcept when it came to food.
At home my mom always prepared a Korean dinner for herself and an American dinner for my dad. Despite the years heād lived in Seoul, selling cars to the military and courting my mom at the Naija Hotel where she worked, my dad is still a white boy from Philadelphia.
So each night my mom prepared two meals. Sheād steam broccoli and grill Dadās salmon, while boiling jjigae and plating little side dishes known as banchan. When our rice cooker announced in its familiar robotic voice, āYour delicious white rice will be ready soon!ā the three of us would sit down to a wondrous mash-up of East and West. Iād create true fusion one mouthful at a time, using chopsticks to eat strips of T-bone and codfish eggs drenched in sesame oil, all in one bite. I liked my baked potatoes with fermented chili paste, my dried cuttlefish with mayonnaise.
Thereās a lot to love about Korean food, but what I love most is its extremes. If a dish is supposed to be served hot, itās scalding. If itās meant to be served fresh, itās still moving. Stews are served in heavy stone pots that hold the heat; crack an egg on top, and it will poach before your eyes. Cold noodle soups are served in bowls made of actual ice.
By my late teens my craving for Korean staples started to eclipse my desire for American ones. My stomach ached for al tang and kalguksu. On long family vacations, with no Korean restaurant in sight, my mom and I passed up hotel buffets in favor of microwaveable rice and roasted seaweed in our hotel room.
And when I lost my mother to a very sudden, brief, and painful fight with cancer two years ago, Korean food was my comfort food. She was diagnosed in 2014. That May sheād gone to the doctor for a stomachache only to learn she had a rare squamous cell carcinoma, stage four, and that it had spread. Our family was blindsided.
I moved back to Oregon to help my mother through chemoĀtherapy; over the next four months, I watched her slowly disappear. The treatment took everythingāher hair, her spirit, her appetite. It burned sores on her tongue. Our table, once beautiful and unique, became a battleground of protein powders and tasteless porridge. I crushed Vicodin into ice cream.
Dinnertime was a calculation of calories, an argument to get anything down. The intensity of Korean flavors and spices became too much for her to stomach. She couldnāt even eat kimchi.
I began to shrink along with my mom, becoming so consumed with her health that I had no desire to eat. Over the course of her illness, I lost 15 pounds. After two rounds of chemo, she decided to discontinue treatment, and she died two months later.
As I struggled to make sense of the loss, my memories often turned to food. When I came home from college, my mom used to make galbi ssam, Korean short rib with lettuce wraps. Sheād have marinated the meat two days before Iād even gotten on the plane, and sheād buy my favorite radish kimchi a week ahead to make sure it was perfectly fermented.
Then there were the childhood summers when she brought me to Seoul. Jet-lagged and sleepless, weād snack on homemade banchan in the blue dark of Grandmaās humid kitchen while my relaĀtives slept. My mom would whisper, āThis is how I know youāre a true Korean.ā
But my mom never taught me how to make Korean food. When I would call to ask how much water to use for rice, sheād always say, āFill until it reaches the back of your hand.ā When Iād beg for her galbi recipe, she gave me a haphazard ingredient list and approximate measurements and told me to just keep tasting it until it ātastes like Momās.ā
After my mom died, I was so haunted by the trauma of her illness I worried Iād never remember her as the woman she had been: stylish and headstrong, always speaking her mind. When she appeared in my dreams, she was always sick.
Then I started cooking. When I first searched for Korean recipes, I found few resources, and I wasnāt about to trust Bobby Flayās Korean taco monstrosity or his clumsy kimchi slaw. Then, among videos of oriental chicken salads, I found the Korean YouTube personality Maangchi. There she was, peeling the skin off an Asian pear just like my mom: in one long strip, index finger steadied on the back of the knife. She cut galbi with my momās ambidextrous precision: positioning the chopsticks in her right hand while snipping bite-size pieces with her left. A Korean woman uses kitchen scissors the way a warrior brandishes a weapon.
Iād been looking for a recipe for jatjuk, a porridge made from pine nuts and soaked rice. Itās a dish for the sick or elderly, and it was the first food I craved when my feelings of shock and loss finally made way for hunger.
I followed Maangchiās instructions carefully: soaking the rice, breaking off the tips of the pine nuts. Memories of my mother emerged as I workedāthe way she stood in front of her little red cutting board, the funny intonations of her speech.
For many, Julia Child is the hero who brought boeuf bourguignon into the era of the TV dinner. She showed home cooks how to scale the culinary mountain. Maangchi did this for me after my mom died. My kitchen filled with jars containing cabbage, cucumbers, and radishes in various stages of fermentation. I could hear my momās voice: āNever fall in love with anyone who doesnāt like kimchi; theyāll always smell it coming out of your pores.ā
Iāve spent over a year cooking with Maangchi. Sometimes I pause and rewind to get the steps exactly right. Other times Iāll let my hands and taste buds take over from memory. My dishes are never exactly like my momās, but thatās OKātheyāre still a delicious tribute. The more I learn, the closer I feel to her.
One night not long ago, I had a dream: I was watching my mother as she stuffed giant heads of Napa cabbage into earthenware jars.
She looked healthy and beautiful.
Michelle Zauner is a writer and musician in Brooklyn.
@god I just want clear even skin with no discolouration whatsoever and tiny ass pores