this soulmate bit is so HLĀ
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always

pixel skylines
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
trying on a metaphor

PR's Tumblrdome
$LAYYYTER


ā
Claire Keane
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
Mike Driver
Keni
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć

ā
I'd rather be in outer space šø
DEAR READER
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from China

seen from France

seen from Japan
seen from Italy

seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@marpar12
this soulmate bit is so HLĀ

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
Sir Edward Poynter,Ā The Israelites in Egypt: Water Carriers, n.d.
From New York Magazine, 92 years of women votingā¦Ā Check out the slideshow here!
The ones I chose are 1922, 1948, 1955, 1966, 1972, 1982 (Bill and Hillary Clinton!), 2004, and 2012. But check out the full slideshow! And check out the women who will be joining the 113th Congress (weāre breaking the all time record for representation in the federal legislative branch!).
TAMMY BALDWIN, the Senator-Elect from Wisconsin, will become the first openly gay person ever elected to Senate. MAZIE HIRONO, the Senator-Elect from Hawaii, will become the first Asian-American woman in Senate. TAMMY DUCKWORTH, the Representative-Elect for Illinois, will become the first disabled female veteran elected to the House of Reps. (she lost both her legs in the Iraq War).
Tonight is one for the history books.
Ella Cara Deloria āĀ AÅpĆ©tu WaÅ”tĆ© WiÅā: Why she kicks ass
She was anĀ educator,anthropologist,Ā ethnographer,Ā linguist, andĀ novelistĀ ofĀ Yankton SiouxĀ background. She recorded SiouxĀ oral historyĀ andĀ legends, and in the 1940s wrote a novel,Ā Waterlily, finally published in 1988.
Her linguistic abilities and her intimate knowledge of traditional and Christianised Sioux culture, together with her deep commitment both to Native American culture and to scholarship, allowed Deloria to carry out important, often ground-breaking work in anthropology and ethnology, as well as to produce translations in to English of historical and scholarly texts in Sioux. She was compiling a Sioux dictionary at the time of her death.
In 1938-39, she was part of a small group of researchers hired to construct a socioeconomic study on the Navajo Reservation for the Bureau of Indian Affairs that was funded by the Phelps Strokes Fund. This study resulted in a report,Ā The Navajo Indian Problem, that was published. This well received project opened the door for her to receive more speaking engagements and funding to continue her important work on native languages.Ā
In 1940, she and a sister went to Pembroke, North Carolina to conduct some research among the Lumbee tribe, who were in the process of pursuing federal recognition. Deloria believed she could make an important contribution to their effort by studying their distinctive culture and language. In her study, she diligently conducted interviews with Lumbee women about plants, food, medicine, and animal names. She also conducted a comparative study between some of the native languages and Lumee slang words. She came very close to completing a dictionary of their original language before the addition of English and various other language phrases.Ā
She also assembled two successful pageants for and about the Lumbee people in 1940 and 1941 that depicted their origin account that allegedly connects the Lumbee to the Lost Colony of the Outer Banks region.
Deloria won theĀ Indian Achievement AwardĀ in 1943, and was the recipient of grants from theĀ Wenner-Gren FoundationĀ (1948) and theĀ National Science FoundationĀ (1960s).
In 2010, the Department of Anthropology ofĀ Columbia University, herĀ alma mater, established the Ella C. Deloria Undergraduate Research Fellowship in her honor.

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
November is Native American Heritage Month
All photos by Edward S. Curtis via theĀ LibraryĀ of Congress, original captions:
Top:Ā O Che Che, Mohave Indian woman,Ā Qahatika girl,Ā Selawik Woman
Middle:Ā ChaiwaāTewa,Ā Klamath woman,Ā Cayuse woman
Bottom:Ā Wisham female,Ā Tsawatenok girl,Ā Yaqui girl
You're a woman, embrace that shit.
As women, I donāt understand how you can even look at Romney and Ryan and remotely want to vote for them.Ā
I understand that Womenās rights shouldnāt be the only thing you base your vote off of.. But it is a really big factor you should consider.Ā
I donāt understand how men think they have any say in what a woman can and can not do with her body.Ā
I donāt understand how they need to shut down planned parenthood because they allow abortions when abortions make up only 3% of what they actually do.Ā
I donāt get how my rights as a woman can even be debated by a bunch of men who donāt live their life as women, so why the hell should they get to put rules on mine?Ā
If these were their bodies, you better sure as hell believe that debates that involve womans rights wouldnāt even be considered.Ā
We get to live our lives, and get picked our choices, by pricks who believe that my rights as a woman intrude on their religious beliefs.
Youāre a woman, You have a choice in who you vote for this election and you better make sure you are damn educated.Ā
92 years ago we were granted the right to vote. Use that shit.Ā
Maria Sibylla Merian was a fine painter and superb naturalist, one of the first woman scientists we know of. Her observations of insects and their relationships with plants revolutionized botany and zoology. Maria Sibylla revealed, for the first time in print, the mystery of metamorphosis. Before her work, the prevailing opinion was that flies and worms came to life by spontaneous generation. Maria was one of the very first scientists who observed living animals and plants rather than dead specimens preserved in alcohol.
Maria Sibylla was a painter of great power at a time when in Germany, women were not permitted to earn a living as painters. But they could publish āmodelsā for embroidery, which she did in her first book, Flowerbook, in her twenties.
Maria kept a journal of nature observations for 53 years, from age 16 to age 69. Her journal was rediscovered and published in German in 1976.
At 13, she wrote,
āI collected all the caterpillars I could find in order to study their metamorphosis. I therefore withdrew from society and devoted myself to these investigations.ā
Understanding animals and their plant connections became the focus of her life, and from 1660 on she collected insects, recording and painting everything she could observe about their life cycles and behavior.
In 1699, at the age of 52 years, Maria and her daughter Dorothea set sail for the Dutch colony of Surinam in South America. In those days such a voyage took three months. It was shocking for women, especially an old woman of 52, to undertake such a voyage.
For two years the two women explored Surinam, painting insects and plants as they traveled. When Maria became ill with malaria she returned to Amsterdam, but her daughter stayed five years, continuing her motherās insect studies.Ā
In 1705, Maria Sibylla published Metamorphosis of the Insects of Surinam (Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium), lavishly illustrated with colored plates. The book earned wide acclaim and some financial success. However, her work was derided as fantasy by some naturalists for describing bird-eating spiders, (later confirmed) and found offensive by colonial officials who did not like her comments on the treatment of the indigenous Indians and African slaves. This book brought her work to the attention of the great scientist Carl Linneaus, and established her reputation.
Maria Sibyyla died from stroke in 1717. Just weeks before her death, Peter the Great, Tsar of Russia, purchased all of her original works. When Peter died, they were displayed in a museum, the first in Russia, where they remain.
Text & Flower image via Morning Earth.
Kids are never the problem. They are born scientists. The problem is always the adults. They beat the curiosity out of the kids. They out-number kids. They vote. They wield resources. Thatās why my public focus is primarily adults.
Neil DeGrasse Tyson when askedĀ āCan we inspire more kids to pursue space-related science and research? If so, how?ā (via ikenbot)
when i was 12 i babysat this girl for a few years and she would come to me and show me her art, drag me by my wrists and point at the pieces sheād made during the week. and sheād be likeĀ ādo the voiceā and iād put on a sports-announcer olympics-style voice and be likeĀ āsuch form! this level of coloring! why i havenāt seen such perfection in crayola in a long time. and what is this? why jeff, now this is a true risk⦠it seems sheās made ⦠a monochrome pink canvasā¦. i havenāt seen this attempted since winter 1932⦠and i gotta say, jeff, itās absolutely splendidā Ā and sheād fall back giggling. at the end of every night sheād check with me:Ā ādid you really like it?ā and iād say yes and talk about something i noticed and tucked her in.
she was just accepted into 3 major art schools. she wrote me a letter. inside was a picture from when she was younger. monochrome pink.Ā
āthank you,ā it said,Ā āto somebody who saw the best in me.ā

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
I donāt just want love, I want to obsess over every inch of your skin on those dreadful Monday mornings before we both awaken.
A.L NashĀ (via wordsnquotes)
Undeveloped luna moth because its cocoon fell from a tree
source
Poor baby
Photo byĀ Yann Libessart
From Margaret Barclay, MSF midwife: āIn the Philippines, the (Typhoon Haiyan) disaster destroyed everything and people did not know whether health care was accessible or not. The first woman who delivered with us in Tacloban would have died if she had not received care. ā¦She was very sick, had been displaced by the typhoon and was living in a tent. Her labor was obstructed and she had also developed pre-eclampsia, a hypertensive disorder, which is a severe complication of pregnancy.ā Saturday is International Womenās Day. On that day, and every day, thousands of women worldwide will leave their homes to flee war or persecution. The fact that they are women makes their ordeal even more harrowing. Read this and other stories: http://bit.ly/1fLR5fE
Iāve said this before and Iāll point it out again - Menstruation is caused by change in hormonal levels to stop the creation of a uterine lining and encourage the body to flush the lining out. The body does this by lowering estrogen levels and raising testosterone. Or, to put it more plainly āThat time of the monthā is when female hormones most closely resemble male hormones. So if (cis) women arenāt suited to office at āThat time of the monthā then (cis) men are NEVER suited to office. If you are a dude and donāt dig the ladies around you at their time of the month, just think! That is you all of the time. And, on a final note, post-menopausal (cis) women are the most hormonally stable of all human demographics. They have fewer hormonal fluctuations of anyone, meaning older women like Hilary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren would theoretically be among the least likely candidates to make an irrational decision due to hormonal fluctuations, and if we were basing our leadership decisions on hormone levels, then only women over fifty should ever be allowed to hold office.
timemachineyeahĀ (via arnericasinger)
#BreakingStereotypes
šššš
Love this!
Yeah \m/

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
Queen Hatshepsut of Ancient Egypt. She has a lovely smile for someone whoās been dead for thousands of years.
she wasnāt a queen. she was a pharaoh and wanted to be referred to as such.Ā she even had her statues modeled after the male pharaohās statues to state her dominance and authority. she was actually one of the most successful pharaohs in all of ancient egyptian history and she reigned longer than any other woman in power in egypt.
damn no wonder she died and smiled for a trillion years afterwards
The fact that we know about her is marvelous.
the next Pharaoh after her Tuthmosis IIIĀ tried to erase Hatshepsut out of history ,chiseled her name off her monuments ,covered the text on her obelisks with stone,knocked down and defaced her statues .
she was even left off the list of pharaohs ..talk about some patriarchy bullshit
her name was lost for a couple of millennia, her body was found in a unmarked graveĀ in early twentieth century
sad part is in Egyptian belief isĀ if your are forgotten in the living world you donāt exist in the afterlife,so he was trying to kill her even in deathĀ
My best friend throwing down some herstory. A+ commentary
She wore a fake beard, you guys. She was the fucking boss.
If we remember her now does that save her from an awful afterlife?
Iām just picturing the Kemetic afterlife. All the Pharaohs are hanging out in some kind of swanky club, drinking and congratulating each other on being bros.Ā
The doors slam open and Hatshepsut strides in, glorious, robes swirling, rocking the fake beard and the insane amounts of wealth and power. āMiss me, bitches?āĀ
this post was amazing from start to finish
ART: Scarily Realistic Oil Paintings by Yigal OzeriĀ
What kind of fucking sorcery?! Today weāre delighted to bring you some of the most hyperreal artwork our eyes have ever seen.
Yigal Ozeri is a New York-based artist, originally from Israel.
Keep reading