listen people are starting to realize tumblr isnāt dead we all need to be as cringe as possible for the next few months, itās vital to our survival

blake kathryn

Kiana Khansmith
Today's Document
trying on a metaphor

titsay

taylor price
RMH

pixel skylines
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Claire Keane
Xuebing Du
Three Goblin Art
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć

⣠Chile in a Photography ā£
KIROKAZE

PR's Tumblrdome
occasionally subtle

if i look back, i am lost
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@livelovelearnbeach
listen people are starting to realize tumblr isnāt dead we all need to be as cringe as possible for the next few months, itās vital to our survival

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Artist Daniel Rarela creates āLetter from a Birmingham Jailā memes to stop people from whitewashing MLK
follow @the-movemnt
Miriam Callahan via Twitter (x)
āLetās pretend, for a moment, that you are a 22-year-old college student in Kampala, Uganda. Youāre sitting in class and discreetly scrolling through Facebook on your phone. You see that there has been another mass shooting in America, this time in a place called San Bernardino. Youāve never heard of it. Youāve never been to America. But youāve certainly heard a lot about gun violence in the U.S. It seems like a new mass shooting happens every week. You wonder if you could go there and get stricter gun legislation passed. Youād be a hero to the American people, a problem-solver, a lifesaver. How hard could it be? Maybe thereās a fellowship for high-minded people like you to go to America after college and train as social entrepreneurs. You could start the nonprofit organization that ends mass shootings, maybe even win a humanitarian award by the time you are 30. Sound hopelessly naĆÆve? Maybe even a little deluded? It is. And yet, itās not much different from how too many Americans think about social change in the āGlobal South.ā If you asked a 22-year-old American about gun control in this country, she would probably tell you that itās a lot more complicated than taking some workshops on social entrepreneurship and starting a non-profit. She might tell her counterpart from Kampala about the intractable nature of our legislative branch, the long history of gun culture in this country and its passionate defenders, the complexity of mental illness and its treatment. She would perhaps mention the added complication of agitating for change as an outsider. But if you ask that same 22-year-old American about some of the most pressing problems in a place like Ugandaāāārural hunger or girlās secondary education or homophobiaāāāshe might see them as solvable. Maybe even easily solvable. Iāve begun to think about this trend as the reductive seduction of other peopleās problems. Itās not malicious. In many ways, itās psychologically defensible; we donāt know what we donāt know. If youāre young, privileged, and interested in creating a life of meaning, of course youād be attracted to solving problems that seem urgent and readily solvable. Of course youād want to apply for prestigious fellowships that mark you as an ambitious altruist among your peers. Of course youād want to fly on planes to exotic locations with, importantly, exotic problems. There is a whole āindustryā set up to nurture these desires and delusionsāāāmost notably, the 1.5 million nonprofit organizations registered in the U.S., many of them focused on helping people abroad. In other words, the young American ego doesnāt appear in a vacuum. Its hubris is encouraged through job and internship opportunities, conferences galore, and cultural propagandaāāāencompassed so fully in the patronizing, dangerously simple phrase āsave the world.āā
ā
āThe Reductive Seduction of Other Peopleās Problemsā by Courtney Martin
(via
dietcokebisexual
)
Capitalism canāt save the world, but it can simulate the experience and sell it to you.
(via newwavenova)
2021 lasted 5 seconds and those 5 seconds lasted 20 years that felt like only a few months i hope that clears things up
Except for Boat Stuck, that was six days of beautiful clarity in march

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Are fedoras really that bad?
YES YES THEY ARE
voidethered:
ask-omnipony:
I donāt really believe this mumbo jumbo
I mean itās a goddamn hat.
Right..?
The white rose, it symbolizes the unique beauty of all the women who wish not to be with a nice guy such as myse-
I wonder if this works with other kinds of hatā¦
Nothing ventured, nothing gainedā¦
WHEEEN THE MOON HITS YOUR EYE LIKE A BIG PIZZA PIE THATāS AMORREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Men of Tumblr are my favorite kind of peopleā¦
wait, does that mean?
oh boyā¦ā¦.
Luckily, this nonsense doesnāt work on girls.
Observeā¦
ITāS GOTTEN BETTER!
This post is immaculate
It canāt be true.
And it canāt possibly work on motorcycle helmets.
I must test it.
Nothing happening so farā¦
HOLY SHIT IT WORKS
What in the world?
Oh why not? This should be interesting.
Here we go!
Were all mad here in Underland!
What the hell! Never Again!
⦠Actually ā¦
One more time.
Alright, I gotta try this!
Canāt be that bad!
ā¦.
ā¦oh my godā¦
ask-gmodsfmrocks:
LOL
This just gets better and better
This is one of my favourite things to look at
holy shit this stuff is back
The Gravity Falls one though
i wonder if it works for flower crowns?
here goes nothin-
w HAT THE
DID I JUST-
WHAT THE FUCK
Okay Clearly something is up.
Hmm⦠I wonder
Iām sure nothing could possiblyā¦
HOLY SHIT
IT GOT BETTER
I HAVE BEEN SEARCHING SO LONG FOR THIS POST OH MY GOD!!!
I wonder what happens when you wear 8 of these at onceā¦
Never not reblog
ITāS ON MY DASH. ACTUALLY ON MY DASH.
Oh my God, there are so many new ones
Friggin, yis
Always reblog.
IT HAS EVOLVED
The legend marches onā¦
BEWARE THE MAGIC OF HATS
JDNXHSBSBF
I TĀ ā S Ā B A C KĀ
a classic meme from when the world was less of a tire fire
ITS ON MY BLOG YESSSS
THIS IS WONDERFUL.
time to bring back outdated memesā¦
what could possibly go wrong?
eww, it smells like fuckboi
welp, down this rabbit hole we goā¦
nothingās happeni-
WTF-
Oh boy, this meme
I wonder if this would work with a wolf hat.
May as well try it.
Please donāt be awful, please donāt be awful, please donāt b-
get wet 4 furry
This is obviously fake
Look, Iāll prove it
Yāall are just acting
Watch and learn
WTFFFFFF
Shouldā¦ā¦ should Iā¦ā¦.
DO IT!
Whelp guess I gotta put on the hat now
Canāt be that bad, I mean whatās the worst a squid hat can do to m-
IĢĶĢĢĢŖĢ¤Ģ ĢĢĶĶ«ĶĢĶÆĶĶĢ͔̹̱̮̳ĢHĢĶĶĶĢ AĢĶĢŅĶĢ VĢĢĶͣͨĶͧĢĶĶEĶ̸ͨ̈́̿ĶĢĢ£Ķ Ģ½ĶĶĶ®ĶͬĢͩ̈́ŅĢĶĢŖĢĢĢĢAĶͤͩĢ̓̓ĢĢ̬̪ĢWĶͬĶĢ£OĢĶ„ĶĶ®ĶĢ«ĢĢĶĢĶKĢĶĶŖĢĶĢĢØĢĶĶĢŗĢ«ĶEĶĢĶĶ̲̩̪ĢĢ NĶĢͨͤĶĶĢͧĶĶĶĢ̱
World Heritage Post
Iāve always wanted to show this to @theforwardslash
IT WAS A CULTURAL RESET. A CULTURAL RESET.Ā
HAHAH
Someone call UNESCO this dinosaur of a post needs to be protected
Iām so glad itās back to normal after that weird glitch from 2020
I missed this post so much
Union Real Talk for a mo.
My coworker broke her foot today because of an unsafe wobbly cart combined with a poorly maintained ramp.
Our union rep (when contacted) came over and had a quick less than 10min chat with the supervisor. After that chat?
1. My coworker was given admin time to go get X-rays as opposed to needing to use sick time.
2. The Union rep helped her successfully fill out the worker's comp forms so she doesn't have to pay for it
3. They're getting rid of that cart
4. All carts are being re-routed to the front entrance until the ramp is fixed
5. She's going to work at home for the next month while her foot heals.
Without a union present? Maybe #5 would have happened, but the rest? Doubtful
Unions work. Unionize.
McF*ck them up
I want a story about a king whose son is prophesied to kill him so the king is like āwhatever what am I supposed to do, kill my own kid wtf is wrong with youā so he just raises him as normal, doesnāt even tell him about the prophecy, and instead of some convoluted twist of events that leads to the kingās murder the son grows up and when the king is very old and dying and in excruciating pain the kid is just like alright I'mma put him out of his misery.
The kingās son becomes the new king, and is prophesied to defeat evil and bring an age of prosperity. His generals and knights all crack their knuckles but he pretty much ignores them and focuses on strengthening the infrastructure of his kingdom. Forty years later he is old and sick but still hearing his subjectsā grievances, and a generalās like āhow will you defeat the prophesied evil now? Youāre old and weak.ā Another visitor, a teenager fresh out of the kingdomās public education system, looks at the general like he is an ignoramus. The king eradicated poverty, housed the homeless, taught the ignorant, ended class exploitation by abolishing the nobility and imprisoning the corrupt, and established a highly respected guild of doctors that recently figured out how to cure the plague. There are no brigands because there is enough wealth for everyone to live comfortably; hiding in the woods and taking trinkets from people simply doesnāt make any sense for anyone but the desperate, and the people are not desperate. Evil is a weed, explains the teenager. It grows in cracked roads and crumbling houses and forgotten corners, rooted in indifference and watered by suffering. But the king demands that broken things be mended and suffering people be made well.
No evil lives in this kingdom, says the teenager. It starved to death before I was born.
Every once in a while, when Iām feeling down, I go and look at the notes on this post and they make me feel a lot better. This is the energy I want to carry into 2018.
For those who need to carry it into 2019.
And on to 2022
This screenshotted thread by sensitivity reader elainesoup with recommendations for picture books with fat representation can be read on Twitter here:Ā https://twitter.com/elainesoup/status/1450176697156866051

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I was walking through the toy aisle at Target when I found this thing and had a VIOLENT AND IMMEDIATE FLASHBACK to when JP first came out and they had a bunch of REALLY COOL T Rex toys that I would have sold one of my scrawny small-child limbs for but my mother wouldnāt get me one because they were ātoo violent and also ate peopleā :(
hnn I WANT IT SO BAD
on closer inspection, it makes a lot of really obnoxious noises and is also Too Expensive. BUT FEAR NOT I found this slightly smaller dude wedged in the back!
IT HAS BITE ACTION, AND THATāS THE ONLY THING THAT MATTERS
now we enter the testing phase
yup. looks good.
Extreme Chompin T-Rex says ITāS NEVER TOO LATE TO FOLLOW YOUR DREAMS
Can we take a moment to appreciate that we can use this as a rosetta stone to say āEXTREME CHOMPINā ā in four languages?
OH SHIT YOUāRE RIGHT, let me check the garbage to see if itās still there! hopefully I didnāt destroy it in my excitement
*roar sound effect*
IMPORTANT UPDATE:
update update: I re-sized her collar and found a bag of toy bones at the craft store. I havenāt put this much effort into a non-school thing since my last job search, help
(secret bonus: the other side of her tag)
Thereās more!
I love.
I saw that people are reblogging the thread again, so I thought Iād give you all an update on how Wexter is doing!
(just fine)
Wexter And The Case Of Her Continuing Marvelously Naughty Garden Adventures
Wexter says SHE WOULD NEVER DO SUCH A THING (but she might chew your ankles a little bit maybe)
so itās come to my attention that at some point this weekend Wexter blew past 100,000 notes, and I for one think thatās very cash money of her.
itās been a few weeks, I suppose we should check up on the AHSGSHGAFB?!
ajdhf.
well thatās just,,,
REXCELLENT
two hundred THOUSAND notes???!?!
HELL
YES
HELL
FUCKING
YES.
Nearing on 375K Notes!!! What in the Paleolithic are y'all gonna do when they top 400K?!
cry, probably
Reblogging to get you one note closer to crossing the 400k mark!
ITāS TIME
YOU MANIACS. okay, here we go!
HAIL TO THE QUEEN
LONG MAY SHE REIGN!
(she was a skater Rex, she said see you later Rex, sheās finally hit 400k!)
Wexter: *Exists.*
Tumblr:
I came for the dino stayed for the #cursed biology tags
This is why Tumblr.
no more homework. abolish it
we do not need to spend our entire childhood and early adulthood doing hours and hours of work in overdrive with no reward or even a break, exhausting ourselves mentally and physically for a letter grade. homework isnāt even necessary. it helps no one learn and has actually been proven to be a detriment to school work and health. people flourish with time for creativity rest and imagination. our capitalistic school system is destroying that for the sake of creating some worn-out and beaten down little machines. not to mention the ableism and classism in expecting every student fo have the same amount of time and ability to do assignments to the standards of the school.
Radicals are cool.
Iāve always described myself as a radical for these exact reasons.
Fourth in a series I of comics about protesting safety tips I made with @this.is.ysabel . This one is about the dangers of police surveillance and how to avoid it if possible. Keep being safe when you go out. Donāt get snatched!

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.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
my night manager (who is a gay man) and i sometimes sit down and exchange stories and tidbits about our sexuality and our experiences in the queer cultural enclave. and tonight he and i were talking about the AIDS epidemic. heās about 50 years old. talking to him about it really hit me hard. like, at one point i commented, āyeah, iāve heard that every gay person who lived through the epidemic knew at least 2 or 3 people who died,ā and he was like ā2 or 3? if you went to any bar in manhattan from 1980 to 1990, you knew at least two or three dozen. and if you worked at gay menās health crisis, you knew hundreds.ā and he just listed off so many of his friends who died from it, people who he knew personally and for years. and he even said he has no idea how he made it out alive.
it was really interesting because he said before the aids epidemic, being gay was almost cool. like, it was really becoming accepted. but aids forced everyone back in the closet. it destroyed friendships, relationships, so many cultural centers closed down over it. it basically obliterated all of the progress that queer people had made in the past 50 years.
and like, itās weird to me, and what i brought to the conversation (i really couldnāt say much though, i was speechless mostly) was like, itās so weird to me that thereās no continuity in our history? like, aids literally destroyed an entire generation of queer people and our culture. and when you think about it, we are really the first generation of queer people after the aids epidemic. but like, when does anyone our age (16-28 i guess?) ever really talk about aids in terms of the history of queer people? like itās almost totally forgotten. but it was so huge. imagine that. like, dozens of your friends just dropping dead around you, and you had no idea why, no idea how, and no idea if you would be the next person to die. and it wasnāt a quick death. you would waste away for months and become emaciated and then, eventually, die. and i know itās kinda sophomoric to suggest this, but like, imagine that happening today with blogs and the internet? like people would just disappear off your tumblr, facebook, instagram, etc. and eventually youād find out from someone āoh yeah, they and four of their friends died from aids.ā
so idk. it was really moving to hear it from someone who experienced it firsthand. and thatās the outrageous thing - every queer person you meet over the age of, what, 40? has a story to tell about aids. every time you see a queer person over the age of 40, you know they had friends who died of aids. so idk, i feel like we as the first generation of queer people coming out of the epidemic really have a responsibility to do justice to the history of aids, and we havenāt been doing a very good job of it.
Younger than 40.
Iām 36. I came out in 1995, 20 years ago. My girlfriend and I started volunteering at the local AIDS support agency, basically just to meet gay adults and meet people who maybe had it together a little better than our classmates. The antiretrovirals were out by then, but all they were doing yet was slowing things down. AIDS was still a death sentence.
The agency had a bunch of different services, and we did a lot of things helping out there, from bagging up canned goods from a food drive to sorting condoms by expiration date to peer safer sex education. But we both sewed, so⦠we both ended up helping people with Quilt panels for their beloved dead.
Do the young queers coming up know about the Quilt? If you want history, my darlings, there it is. They started it in 1985. When someone died, his loved ones would get together and make a quilt panel, 3āx6ā, the size of a grave. They were works of art, many of them. Even the simplest, just pieces of fabric with messages of loved scrawled in permanent ink, were so beautiful and so sad.
They sewed them together in groups of 8 to form a panel. By the 90s, huge chunks of it were traveling the country all the time. Theyād get an exhibition hall or a gym or park or whatever in your area, and lay out the blocks, all over the ground with paths between them, so you could walk around and see them. And at all times, there was someone reading. Reading off the names of the dead. There was this huge long list, of people whose names were in the Quilt, and people would volunteer to just read them aloud in shifts.
HIV- people would come in to work on panels, too, of course, but most of the people we were helping were dying themselves. The first time someone Iād worked closely with died, it was my first semester away at college. I caught the Greyhound home for his funeral in the beautiful, tiny, old church in the old downtown, with the bells. Iād helped him with his partnerās panel. Before I went back to school, I left supplies to be used for his, since I couldnāt be there to sew a stitch. I lost track of a lot of the people I knew there, busy with college and then plunged into my first really serious depressive cycle. I have no idea who, of all the people I knew, lived for how long.
The Quilt, by the way, weighs more than 54 tons, and has over 96,000 names. At that, it represents maybe 20% of the people who died of AIDS in the US alone.
There were many trans women dying, too, btw. Donāt forget them. (Cis queer women did die of AIDS, too, but in far smaller numbers.) Life was and is incredibly hard for trans women, especially TWOC. Pushed out to live on the streets young, or unable to get legal work, they were (and are) often forced into sex work of the most dangerous kinds, a really good way to get HIV at the time. Those for whom life was not quite so bad often found homes in the gay community, if they were attracted to men, and identified as drag queens, often for years before transitioning. In that situation, they were at the same risk for the virus as cis gay men.
Cis queer women, while at a much lower risk on a sexual vector, were there, too. Helping. Most of the case workers at that agency and every agency I later encountered were queer women. Queer woman cooked and cleaned and cared for the dying, and for the survivors. We held hands with those waiting for their test results. Went out on the protests, helped friends who could barely move to lie down on the steps of the hospitals that would not take them in ā those were the original Die-Ins, btw, people who were literally lying down to die rather than move, who meant to die right there out in public ā marched, carted the Quilt panels from place to place. Whatever our friends and brothers needed. We did what we could.
OK, thatās it, thatās all I can write. I keep crying. Go read some history. Or watch it, there are several good documentaries out there. Donāt watch fictional movies, donāt read or watch anything done by straight people, fuck them anyway, they always made it about the tragedy and noble suffering. Fuck that. Learn about the terror and the anger and the radicalism and the raw, naked grief.
I was there, though, for a tiny piece of it. And even that tiny piece of it left its stamp on me. Deep.
2011
A visual aid: this is the Quilt from the Names Project laid out on the Washington Mall
I was born (in Australia) at the time that the first AIDS cases began to surface in the US. While I was a witness after it finally became mainstream news (mid-85), I was also a child for much of it. For me there was never really a world Before. Iām 35 now and I wanted to know and understand what happened. I have some recommendations for sources from what Iāve been reading lately:
And the Band Played On: Politics, People and the AIDS Epidemic by Randy Shilts is a seminal work on the history of HIV/AIDS. Itās chronological and gives an essential understanding of all the factors that contributed to the specific history of the virusā spread through the US and the rest of the world, the political landscape into which it landed (almost the worst possible)*. Investigative journalism and eyewitness account. Shilts was himself an AIDS casualty in 1994.
AIDS at 30: A History by Victoria Harden
The Origin of AIDS by Jaques Pepin for the science of it all.
Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UPās Fight against AIDS.
The Secret Epidemic: The Story of AIDS and Black America.
Larry Kramer is a pretty polarising figure and he had issues with the sexual politics of gay New York to begin with (see: Faggots) but heās polarising for a reason: heās the epidemicās Cassandra. Reports from the Holocaust collects his writings on AIDS.
I donāt think I can actually bring myself to read memoirs for the same reason I canāt read about the Holocaust or Stalinist Russia any more. But I have a list:Ā
The AIDS Generation: Stories of Survival and Resilience
The Quilt: Stories from the Names Project
Body Counts: A Memoir of Politics, Sex, AIDS, and Survival by Sean Strub
Borrowed Time: And AIDS Memoir by Paul Monette
Read or watch The Normal Heart. Read or watch Angels in America. Read The Mayor of Castro Street or watch Milk. Dallas Buyers Club has its issues but itās also heartbreaking because the characters are exactly the politically unsavory people used to justify the lack of spending on research and treatment. Itās also an important look at the exercise of agency by those afflicted and abandoned by their government/s, how they found their own ways to survive. Thereās a film of And the Band Played On but JFC itās a mess. You need to have read the book.
Some documentaries:
Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt (1989) [hard to find]
How to Survive a Plague (2012)
We Were Here (2011)
Everyone should read about the history of the AIDS epidemic. Especially if you are American, especially if you are a gay American man. HIV/AIDS is not now the death sentence it once was but before antiretrovirals it was just that. It was long-incubating and a-symptomatic until, suddenly, it was not.
Read histories. Read them because reality is complex and histories attempt to elucidate that complexity. Read them because past is prologue and the past is always, in some form, present. We canāt understand here and now if we donāt know about then.
*there are just SO MANY people I want to punch in the throat.
Theyāve recently digitized the Quilt as well with a map making software, I spent about three hours looking through it the other day and crying. There are parts of it that look like they were signed by someoneās peers in support and memoriam, and then you realize that the names were all written in the same writing.
That these were all names of over 20 dead people that someone knew, often it was people whoād all been members of a club or threatre group.
Hereās the link to the digitization: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/redmond/projects/aidsquilt/
As well, there are numerous people who were buried in graves without headstones, having been disenfranchised from their families. I read this story the other day on that which went really in depth (I would warn that it highlights the efforts of a cishet woman throughout the crisis): http://arktimes.com/arkansas/ruth-coker-burks-the-cemetery-angel/Content?oid=3602959
Iāve had several conversations recently with younger guys for whom this part of our history isnāt well known. Here are some resources for y'all. Please, take care of one another.
http://www.aidsquilt.org/view-the-quilt/search-the-quilt
Updated link to the quilt
this is so hard to read or even think about but⦠itās so important. itās so important to understand just the ā¦overwhelming SCALE of this. how many people died while the government did NOTHING.
Reblogging for pride
Never forget your fallen. Your people were nearly annihilated in an epidemic. Never forget how lucky we are, never forget how they tried to let us die.
I grew up hearing about the Quilt all the time and this post reminded me how long itās been since Iāve heard about it. Kids, go out and learn your history.
Iām a trans woman and Iām 38 now. My grandfather was a gay man living in Florida and he died of AIDS in the mid 90ās. He was in his 50ās.
My parents took care of him as he died, but they go to church 5 times a week to this day and though grandpa died saying he had no regrets my parents still insist that he must have ārepentedā for his āsinā before he died. The thought comforts them, apparently.
Meanwhile Iām in Florida right now for the first time in a decade and I canāt visit grandpaās grave because I donāt remember where it is and I canāt ask my parents because they disowned me for being trans. 30 odd years after the crisis began and weāre still dealing with the trauma of it. The response to the AIDS crisis was practically genocide against the queer community.
āi donāt understand how you just get so much stuff done under pressure and like donāt freak outā i just go into autopilot bro like i genuinely do not know what happens in high volume situations. i let my body deal with that shit. not for me
if you completely block off a whole portion of your mind youāll find that it is actually quite peaceful and you can move very fast, almost ungodly so, and achieve a lot while feeling absolutely nothing
i have been informed that this is not how normal people process and handle stress.⦠. dam that shitās crazy. sorry yāall have to deal with it in like a rational healthy way
This is 100000% how I am when the restaurant gets busy