frenrey nontraditional wedding 🎉🎉🎉
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
🪼
Not today Justin
todays bird
will byers stan first human second

Sade Olutola
Misplaced Lens Cap
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we're not kids anymore.
taylor price
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins

@theartofmadeline
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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@kfcjotchua
frenrey nontraditional wedding 🎉🎉🎉

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Gnarly Eddy from Splatoon 3
Does Gnarly Eddy have intentional, well thought-out visual Black character design?
Peak (Black)
Mid (Black)
Nah (Black)
Peak (NB POC)
Mid (NB POC)
Nah (NB POC)
Peak (White)
Mid (White)
Nah (White)
Rubric
TONIGHT WE'RE EATING CUBES AND DRINKING BLUE.
FUCK YOURSELF.
[ID: food items on tables from Star Trek. The first image is a bowl full of red, orange, and green cubes, presented like fruit. The second image is a wine glass with a dark, deeply blue liquid. /end ID]
IF YOU ARE A TRANS FEMME GET YOUR THYROID CHECKED, ESPECIALLY IF YOUVE NOTICED A DROP IN LIBIDO OR AN INABILITY TO MAINTAIN A STABLE WEIGHT
It isn’t a big deal if you have hypothyroidism, you just need to take an artificial thyroid hormone called Levothyroxine…but don’t let it go untreated!!! It’s super fucked up doctors don’t regularly check our thyroid when we start HRT
Specifically get your thyroid-binding globulin levels, since according to these articles your thyroid hormone levels might appear normal despite this occurring
[image description: screenshots from articles. They read:
Transgender HRT with estrogen can have a higher incidence of hypothyroidism than the general population. Estrogen therapy is associated with increased production of thyroid-binding globulins (TBG), which bind to thyroxine or T4 and prevent conversion to the active or free form of thyroid hormones called Tri-Iodothyronine or T3 hormone. The net result is the thyroid produces more T4 to compensate for this effect. This can overstress a weak thyroid gland and cause long-term hypothyroidism issues.
Individuals on estrogen-feminizing therapy can have typical symptoms of hypothyroidism. However, thyroid-binding globulin levels are not routinely checked, and thyroid hormones can remain normal. This often results in an undiagnosed or undertreated thyroid problem and may exacerbate underlying depression and chronic fatigue in transgender patients.
A recent study estimated the prevalence of hypothyroidism (low levels of thyroid hormone) in the gender-diverse population to be almost 9%. This level is higher than in the general population. This surprising statistic begs the question: can gender-affirming hormonal therapy like estrogen or testosterone trigger hypothyroidism or the autoimmune thyroid disease known as Hashimoto's thyroiditis? /end ID.]
[image descriptions: a tweet with four parts of an infographic attached. The tweet by @ SuppressedNews reads, "ISRAEL DUMPS NUCLEAR WASTE IN THE WEST BANK, POISONS PALESTINIANS. Credit @ RyanRozbiani."
The first part of the infographic shows the header of a document from the UN. Overlayed text reads, "A recent UN Human Rights Council report titled 'Israel's Lethal Disposal of Nuclear Waste' was published on February 15, 2024."
The second part shows an excerpt from the report. Bullet points beneath it read, "Important points in report: 1. Israel buries nuclear waste in the Hebron hills. 2. 1989 witness: trucks being buried whole, and cancer increased amongst residents. 3. 2014 witness: Israeli army buried barrels in a cave in the Bani Naim desert (located in West Bank), sealed with concrete. Army continues to restrict access here."
The third part shows another excerpt. Continued bullet points read, "4. Israel prevents Palestinian environmental inspectors from visiting suspected areas. 5. Israel doesn't allow import of equipment that can be used to measure radiation. 6. Israel prevents international and UN experts in the field from entering Palestinian territories. It's evident that the Israeli desecration of indigenous land and poisoning of indigenous people with nuclear waste has been occurring for decades, based on this and other reports."
The final image is titled, "Israel's Dimona is one of the few nuclear facilities not subject to inspections by IAEA. (UN)". Another excerpt is shown. Text beneath it reads, "Note: Israel is one of four nations that have not signed the NPT (Nuclear Proliferation Treaty) which is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and to further the goal of achieving nuclear disarmament and general and complete disarmament. This includes safety inspections by IAEA. See previous post 'Israel has not signed the NPT' for more details." /end descriptions.]

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Overcompensation
[ID: a three-panel mostly black and white comic.
In the first panel, a comedian in a spotlight holding a microphone in one hand and its cord in the other, says, "so there's this gormless oaf whose boorish conduct sears a doleful look on my already haggard features". Behind them, a tomato slides down the wall.
In the second panel, someone with short hair and a red bow looks at their phone, which shows an article titled "Comedian bombs onstage". Above the headline is a picture of the comedian leaning back and laughing as another tomato slides down the wall. Someone with a hat behind the person with the bow says, "bomb".
In the third panel, several other people in hats trample the two from the previous panel, who are now flattened. Two of the tramplers are yelling and one is upside down. In the background, two simplified figures stand. One says, "this is a AIRPORT".
end ID.]
similar vibe to this absolutely unhinged car
The Iranian Regime is going to execute rapper Toomaj Salehi for supporting protests of Jina Amini’s murder by the regime in his songs.
Iranian activist Elica Le Bon says, “Iranians in the diaspora picked up on the fact that the regime tends not to execute people who become known to the international community. We have seen many examples of prisoners that were either released on bail or had their sentences commuted through our “say their names to save their lives” campaign on social media, using hashtags to garner attention for their causes, and even before social media existed, through getting the stories of political prisoners to international media outlets. Once reported on, and once the eyes shift to the regime and the reality of its pending brutality, realizing that the action is not worth the repercussions, we have seen them back down and not execute. For that reason, this is part of an urgent campaign for readers to talk about Toomaj as much as you can, using the hashtag #FreeToomaj or #ToomajSalehi. Every comment makes a difference, and if we were wrong, what did we lose by trying?”
Toomaj Salehi, a dissident Iranian rapper, was sentenced to death on charges related to the antigovernment music he released during the 2022
LET'S SPREAD THIS LIKE WILDFIRE
It is very rare that posting actually is activism.
But in this case, getting this man's name trending on multiple platforms could literally save his life.
Exactly this ^^^
This is one of the very rare cases where the only thing we are being asked to do is make something go viral.
🥚
crack egg directly into hot pan, scramble while cooking
crack egg directly into cold pan, stir/scramble, then cook
crack egg into bowl, whisk or stir, THEN pour into pan and cook
other
results
i wanted to show everyone my favorite tiktok
the creator of this tiktok, zainah.mb, has many family members in palestine who have been martyred. at least 37, in fact. if you would like to help her out financially, she runs a hijab shop called modest behavior, and sells sister minnie merch. here's a link to her paypal as well.
as far as i know, she doesn't live in palestine, but she is palestinian. consider supporting her

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Why are agriculture classes the first time I've learned extremely basic info about nutrition and how digestion works. Why isn't this stuff in health textbooks or any easily accessible resource about healthy eating.
I dont want to talk in excessive depth about it because i'm not an expert, but it's like...the agriculture textbooks go into detail about what the nutrients do for the body and how they are broken down, in the animal agriculture class talking primarily about how to feed your animals, the plant agriculture class talking about why certain crops are grown and how the agriculture system has to meet human needs.
The animal agriculture class was the first time I experienced each macronutrient (fats, proteins, carbohydrates) being discussed in depth from the point of view of being needs that MUST be met, rather than things it's "okay" to eat "in moderation."
My college health class actually used the word "macronutrient," but it still mostly described fats and carbohydrates in terms of their calorie content and didn't go into the same amount of depth about them.
My animal agriculture class on the other hand, was the first time I'd been taught in a class that the amount of nutrition absorbed from eating food varies depending on genetics, environmental factors, what the digestive system is accustomed to processing and what it was conditioned to process during development, and mechanical aspects of the digestion process like how much it is broken down by chewing (!!). Of course it was discussing these things from the point of view of like, cows, but it was really striking to me that I'd never been taught about human digestion from this point of view, where digestion is a complex process that can be affected by various biological and environmental factors.
At the beginning of the class we did a lab where we went over feedstuff analysis, and this was the first time I'd learned about where the numbers in nutrition labels come from, the kind of tests that are done to break food down to its components.
The class discussed how the digestibility of food was analyzed by testing the food, feeding animals the food, collecting the feces, and doing the same tests on the fecal matter to determine how much of the starting nutritional content was literally just going out the other end.
This raised a lot of questions for me: I don't think Pop-Tarts are analyzed by confining a human volunteer to a small room and feeding them only Pop-Tarts, then doing lab tests on their poop. Does that mean we know even less about feeding humans than we do animals? At any rate, nutrition labels would have to be rough estimates to begin with, and then accounting for the variability in the way bodies process food, it's even less descriptive.
Now i'm in plant agriculture, and I'm learning about the different types of proteins and fats and what plants and/or animals they come from. There are different types of protein with different sources. There are...nine? I think? different amino acids that have to be consumed in the diet, and different foods contain different ones?? The reason combinations of grains and legumes are so common as staple diets throughout the world, is that this is closest to being nutritionally complete for humans???
And also protein supplements are mostly useless unless you're an Olympian or something, because the body doesn't have a way to store protein for later. If you eat protein and your body doesn't have an immediate use for it, it just gets taken apart in your liver and you pee it out. Sports greatly increase your need for energy far more than they increase your need for protein, but everyone thinks you should eat a ton of protein as an athlete and that carbohydrates are unhealthy.
I learned from the same chapter WHY fiber is important to help digestion (having texture to the stuff in your gut stimulates peristalsis which is the muscular movements that push things along).
I feel really weird and resentful about health textbooks and classes now, because it feels like they didn't want us to have the facts on how our bodies work, and instead just taught us to see certain foods as "good" or "bad," as though it was more important to be afraid of "unhealthy" food than to understand why food is needed. Health classes barely teach why food is needed.
Like, vegetables are seen as the quintessential "healthy" food, but what is traditionally seen as "vegetables" are mainly important because they provide micronutrients, fiber, and water (the water content in food is actually a big deal). There's a reason they aren't staple foods. You need carbohydrates and fats to live. Period.
I say "what is traditionally seen as vegetables" because it's an incoherent category nutritionally. Beans, sweet potatoes, and spinach are doing very different things for your body. Are beans even a vegetable? Clearly "comes from a plant" isn't the main criteria since grains, nuts, and fruits aren't considered vegetables.
So like, the "myplate" graphic (and the "food pyramid" that came before it)? Total bullshit basically.
It's really frustrating how writings on healthy eating assume you are probably already eating too much or are at risk of overeating. I learned very young about the harms of being "overweight" and eating too much of a certain nutrient. But I just realized from my reading in the plant agriculture class that I had never read a resource that teaches in the same detail about the harms of undernutrition.
It's so easy to fail to get the nutrients you need, holy shit. Particularly protein, because it isn't one thing, it's a bunch of different types of molecule pieces that are found in varying amounts in different foods. People who eat animal products or soy don't have to worry about it very much, since they are essentially complete in terms of protein, but if you are a vegan who doesn't/can't eat soy as a staple, you HAVE to be careful to eat a variety of foods that complement each other in terms of what they're lacking. There's something called the PDCAAS that rates each food by the amino acids they contain, but generally the best idea is to eat a bunch of grains and legumes.
I'm not saying that people can be "scared straight" out of developing eating disorders. But I am saying that young people can benefit from being exposed to scary information when they have the power to possibly encounter situations where that information is applicable. And the horrifying realization of what starvation is and does is such an information.
My plant agriculture text explained that carbohydrates and fats are the basic sources of energy under normal circumstances, and that it takes around 1,600 kcal per day to run your internal organs. Protein is only used for energy in unusual circumstances. When fat reserves are exhausted and there isn't any food, the body starts breaking down proteins for calories—and the first ones to go are the ones that are already all throughout the bloodstream, found in YOUR ANTIBODIES. That's right, when you run out of fat to burn off, your body starts EATING ITS OWN IMMUNE SYSTEM.
The plant agriculture book also says that digestion and energy needs vary from person to person, like literally when different people eat the same meal their blood sugar rises different amounts, and that how the body decides to store energy or use energy stores is determined by complicated feedback loops controlled by hormones. Meanwhile the average person thinks that it's a matter of "eat too much = get fat and unhealthy, eat less = lose weight and be healthier" and even the college health class I took used more or less this model.
Like people are walking around with this completely wrong idea of how their bodies work and making AWFUL decisions based upon it because the resources they have to educate them think it's more important to...make people afraid of food? I don't think it's even common knowledge that the body burns most of the calories you consume just from existing. I want to chew concrete.
Why don't we teach everyone in school why staple foods are staple foods?! Not even getting into people who are so deep into eating disorders they think carrots have too much sugar, it's so normal to do things like "cut out bread" or "cut out carbs" (????!??!) and to perceive hunger as an innately untrustworthy thing, when genuine success at dieting like this is a great way to Corn On The Kill Yourself.
I'm just kind of reeling right now at how much research and monitoring it would take to safely diet in the ways people constantly attempt to diet with NO research NO supervision NO medical testing, 100% believing that they are doing something good for their health.
If people aren't taught what a macronutrient is and why you will die without it, they will think celery sticks are a "healthy" substitute for a chocolate chip cookie, and then not understand why they feel like shit.
Also... this is slightly different, but it's connected to the problem of "people not understanding what food does to the body". In the animal agriculture class, it was surprising to me how in livestock animals, things like muscle and fat composition are strongly genetically determined. All the modern breeds of cattle, pigs, chickens, etc. used in corporate farming have been bred to be very lean and have very little fat while having huge amounts of muscle tissue, because that's what the modern consumer wants in meat.
With pigs, a lot of older heritage pig breeds were bred to store most of what they ate as fat, because pigs were used to change food waste into lard that could be added to cooking for flavor and calories. And most of these breeds either went extinct or dwindled severely to be replaced by "meat" breed pigs that don't put on very much fat at all.
With humans, "everyone knows" that the amount of fat and muscle in your body comes from what you eat and how much you exercise. But a feedlot-finished beef cow that spends the last several months of its life doing nothing but gorging itself on carbohydrates will stay lean and put on muscle because it's genetically predisposed to.
It violates common sense and yet a multi-billion-dollar industry revolves around cramming animals into a small area without much room to do anything, feeding the animals whatever crap has the most calories in it, and ending up with a lean, muscular carcass.
Yeah one thing I've learned by being in an agriculture school is that most of what's "mainstream" knowledge is false or at the very least very watered down and not presented in a way that makes it easier to understand. Like there's a soil bacterium that's used as a pesticide that only effects caterpillars and west Nile carrying mosquitos and also works as an anticancer in lab settings but people see the big scary pesticide and run away even though you could drink it and be fine.
Yeah, and the widely held belief that Glyphosate (Roundup) is uniquely dangerous as a pesticide when the active ingredient is actually significantly safer than most of the other stuff out there. (I say active ingredient because there are inactive ingredients that may actually be more harmful but are less regulated)
Or just...a lot of things about pesticides. Like USA consumers freaking out over the possibility of pesticide residues on their food, and pesticide residues driving all the safety concerns, when there are underpaid and oppressed migrant workers being forced to touch and breathe the stuff all the damn time, probably without proper PPE, because a lot of agricultural laborers in the USA are undocumented and if they complain about unsafe labor practices their boss (You're not a farmer if you just own a farm and don't touch dirt yourself, lol) can squeal on them to ICE.
Like no, one nanogram of roundup having been in the same room of your food isn't going to give you cancer, but inhaling and having skin contact with roundup day in and day out for 30 years just might.
Also I hope you don't use Raid or any kind of bug-killing spray in your house on a regular basis and turn around and complain about pesticides on your food.
Reading in depth about the active ingredients of pesticides and the content of their safety data sheets, how they've been tested, and their rules for handling and using them made me much less afraid of pesticides on food, and much MORE afraid of pesticides in houses.
Like to be completely honest with you, as long as they're not bedbugs or some other kind of parasite, I would prefer to just have the bugs in my house, thanks.
(Predators like spiders and house centipedes are actually helping to STOP actually harmful creatures from moving in to those niches, so there's also that.)
Don't even get me started on GMO's.
wanted to share my favorite art pieces from the google drive collection of 300 free-to-use palestine-related posters by Artists Against Apartheid
poster numbers: 10, 102, 128 226, 20 34, 204, 127 158, 176, 26
IDs copied from alt text:
image 1, poster #10: A drawing of two people, girls, smiling calmly and loosely hugging on a tree stump. One has braids and a checkered scarf. The other has a headscarf, a key on a necklace, and red embellishments on the sleeves. They are both holding olive branches. At the base of the stump are scattered oranges and new plant growth. Text above them says "until liberation and return".
image 2, poster #102: A red, white, and green slightly floral and symmetrical abstract design against a black background. Arabic text says, in English, "we are staying here."
image 3, poster #128: Several figures taking care of a lush, deeply colorful and vibrant land.
image 4, poster #226: Text at the top reads, "my humanity is bound in yours." Beneath it is a white fishnet pattern on a black background with an open spot in the middle shaped like Palestine, with tiny stars. To its right is a vertical bar with a poppy flower climbing up, followed by a row of the olive leaves symbol. Then, text reads, "we belong in a bundle of life." Then doves and poppy flowers are stamped in a vertical row. Underneath it, text reads, "a person is a person through other persons." All text is uppercase.
image 5, poster #20: Text reads, in all caps, "the world stands with Palestine!" Beneath it are three figures raising their fist. Behind them are olive tree branches and a stylized earth. The background is yellow, the shadows are dark red, and the lines are black.
image 6, poster #34: Text reads, "now is the moment." The word “now” is red. Under it, there is a collaged and green tinted picture of the patterns of the keffiyeh. Then it says, "all in, all out for palestine." The word “Palestine” is red, bolded, and separated by a bar. At the bottom there is a row with alternating text and symbols. Left to right: "find each other everywhere. speak out • march • resist"; the Palestinian flag; "stop the genocide. stop the apartheid"; a key; "save Gaza"; the outline of Palestine with red fishnets in the middle. All text is uppercase.
image 7, poster #204: Two cartoon cats standing upright, one taller than the other and holding a white kite, the other small and raising its arms towards the kite. They are on light green background, surrounded by a large border of poppies, doves, olive branches, kites, suns, and clouds. Soft-shaped text within the border reads, "if I must die, let it bring hope. Let it be a tale. Refaat Alareer." The word hope is emphasized and on its own line. All text is uppercase.
image 8, poster #127: Text reads, in all caps except for the i, "Palestina existe en el futuro." There is a bright red background, with a yellow circle like a sunset and a green silhouette of Palestine with its long side up. Four figures line dance together on it, and roots extend from their feet.
image 9, poster #158: A black and white illustration. In the middle, there a figure with their back to the viewer, holding the Palestinian flag high, wearing a keffiyeh and loose, billowing clothes. They are standing in a tumultuous sea, and facing a large, sprawling olive tree that fills the page. Text at the top reads "free Palestine", and is continued at the bottom, "from the river to the sea." All text is uppercase. The background is black and the olive leaves, the flag, the figure's clothes, and the text are white, as if illuminated in the dark.
image 10, poster #176: A green-tinted map of Palestine, overlayed with red bubble text that reads, "cese al genocidio del pueblo palestino." The text drawn back at the edges and bulges in the middle. Underneath it, smaller text reads, "libertad para Palestina". All text is uppercase.
image 11, poster #26: An angled drawing of the Palestinian flag paired with the olive leaf pattern and an array of figures forming the fishnet pattern. Angled text at the bottom reads, "freedom within our lifetime.” end ID.
If there was so much discourse over continents I CAN'T WAIT for you to find out about the south-up map
This is what the earth looks like btw
Ok stop answering to this post with "up and down don't matter in space" cause north and south are not up and down and their orientation doesn't matter on earth either. This is legit what the earth looks like.
Well somebody has a superiority complex. Go to a shrink or something idk
Just in case you're feeling important, our planet also looks like this:
"there's a very good reason we humans tend to draw north up maps" yeah, colonialism and eurocentrism. anyway south up rules
mapposting time post your favorite projections mine is the pierce quincuncial!!!
My favorite map of Earth
Oh I feel like I should be able to fold up the pierce quincuncial into a sort of ball
did someone say fold up into a ball
Waterman is clearly the best except it needs the origami gold lines
@elodieunderglass You might appreciate Jarke van Wijk's "Unfolding the Earth: Myriahedral Projections" (site, pdf)

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made on blinkies.cafe, text on the second blinkie from this post
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