“Healing is a gentle lover, sometimes it only comes when you invite it in.”
— Myss Bradley, healing comes softly.
cherry valley forever
todays bird
we're not kids anymore.

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Stranger Things

⁂

shark vs the universe
🪼
$LAYYYTER
styofa doing anything

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Keni
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

pixel skylines
Jules of Nature

JVL

blake kathryn

seen from Italy
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Tunisia

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Colombia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Côte d’Ivoire
@poor-pixie
“Healing is a gentle lover, sometimes it only comes when you invite it in.”
— Myss Bradley, healing comes softly.

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
from Leshii (Woodgoblin) No. 2, 1906
HOW TO BE MENTALLY STRONG IN ANY SITUATION
1. Don’t beg for love, attention, or respect
What is genuine will not require constant chasing. Real connections bring peace, not emotional exhaustion.
2. Stop expecting too much from everyone
Not everyone has the emotional depth, honesty, or awareness you have. Peace begins when you stop demanding understanding from people incapable of giving it.
3. Accept that life is unfair sometimes
Life will not always reward good people immediately or make every situation make sense. Strength is continuing forward anyway.
4. Control your reactions, not your feelings
Feeling emotions is human. Mental strength is learning how to respond wisely instead of reacting impulsively.
5. Stay calm during chaos
Anyone can stay peaceful when life is easy. True strength is remaining steady when everything around you feels unstable.
6. Stop taking everything personally
Most people act from their own wounds, fears, stress, and insecurities. Not every behavior is truly about you.
7. Walk away from toxic people without guilt
Protecting your peace is not selfish. Some people only enter your life to disturb your mental health and drain your energy.
8. Focus on solutions instead of staying trapped in problems
A strong mind asks: “What can I do now?” instead of endlessly replaying what went wrong.
9. Believe in yourself even when nobody else does
External validation comes and goes. Self-belief is what keeps you standing during lonely seasons.
10. Forgive people, but remember the lesson
Forgiveness frees your heart from bitterness. Wisdom protects you from repeating the same pain.
11. Do not fear being alone
Solitude can become one of life’s greatest teachers. Many people discover their deepest strength when they stop depending on constant company.
12. Stop trying to control everything
You cannot control people, outcomes, timing, or life itself. Peace begins when you release what is beyond your control.
13. Detach from outcomes
Attachment creates anxiety. A calm mind gives effort fully… while accepting that life may still unfold differently.
14. Protect your inner peace above everything
Without peace, even success feels empty. Guard your mental health carefully from chaos, negativity, and emotional exhaustion.
15. Choose discipline over comfort
Comfort keeps people stagnant. Discipline builds confidence, resilience, emotional control, and long-term peace.
The Buddha taught that the strongest person is not the one who conquers others…
but the one who conquers their own mind.
Mental strength is built quietly—
through difficult days, painful lessons, self-control, patience, and learning how to remain calm while life keeps changing around you.
#Buddhism
#MentalStrength
#InnerPeace

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
Dying petals | unknown source
JAPANESE TECHNIQUE TO STOP OVERTHINKING
Master the art of letting go — Shikata ga nai
1. Accept what you cannot control
“Shikata ga nai” means: it cannot be helped.
Not as hopelessness… but as wisdom.
The more you fight reality, the more your mind suffers. Peace begins when acceptance replaces resistance.
2. Separate action from worry
Ask yourself honestly:
“Can I do something about this right now?”
If yes — take action.
If no — stop feeding it mentally.
Overthinking grows where action is absent.
3. Stop replaying the past repeatedly
The mind loves revisiting old conversations, mistakes, and regrets.
But replaying the past does not change it.
It only keeps the wound emotionally alive.
4. Return your attention to the present moment
In Japanese culture, mindfulness lives in ordinary moments—walking, tea, cooking, breathing, silence.
Overthinking weakens when your awareness returns to what is happening now.
5. Focus on the next small step
You do not need to solve your entire life tonight.
Clarity comes from movement, not endless mental analysis.
6. Let go of perfectionism
The Japanese philosophy of Wabi-Sabi teaches the beauty of imperfection.
Nothing in nature is flawless… yet everything still has beauty and value.
7. Create boundaries with your own thoughts
Not every thought deserves your attention.
Observe thoughts like clouds passing through the sky instead of chasing every single one.
8. Simplify your life
Too much noise, comparison, information, and stimulation overwhelms the mind.
A simpler life often creates a calmer mind.
9. Trust the flow of life
Not everything needs immediate answers.
Some things become clear only with time, patience, and experience.
The Japanese understand something many people forget:
A peaceful mind is not created by controlling everything…
but by learning what deserves your energy
and what deserves your release.
Sometimes the deepest peace comes from quietly saying:
“Shikata ga nai.”
“It cannot be helped.”
#Buddhism
#Overthinking
#JapaneseWisdom
#InnerPeace
IF YOU THINK YOUR LIFE IS NOT PEACEFUL, READ THIS:
Sometimes your life is not lacking peace…
you are simply surrounded by too much noise.
Too many opinions.
Too many expectations.
Too many people pulling your energy in different directions.
Too much comparison.
Too much pressure to constantly prove yourself.
And slowly, without noticing,
your mind forgets what calm even feels like.
The truth is, peace rarely disappears all at once.
It leaves quietly.
Through relationships that drain you.
Habits that exhaust you.
Thoughts that constantly attack you.
And a life that keeps moving faster while your soul becomes more tired.
Many people believe peace will come after they fix everything.
After more money.
After success.
After everyone understands them.
After life becomes perfect.
But the Buddha taught something different:
Peace does not come from controlling life.
It comes from learning how to stop fighting reality constantly.
You suffer when you hold onto what is already gone.
You suffer when you chase validation from people who cannot give it.
You suffer when your happiness depends on things outside your control.
A peaceful life is built differently.
It is built through slower mornings.
Healthier boundaries.
Quiet walks.
A calmer nervous system.
Honest relationships.
Less comparison.
Less attachment.
And learning when to let go instead of forcing.
Sometimes peace requires disappointing other people
so you can stop disappointing yourself.
And sometimes the most healing thing you can do
is step back from chaos
and return to your own soul again.
The Buddha once said:
“Peace comes from within.
Do not seek it without.”
Your peace is not hiding somewhere far away.
It begins the moment you stop giving your mind, energy, and heart
to everything that destroys them.
#buddhism
#peacefullife
#hacks
https://youtu.be/dTkbHiUxOfY?si=hyS0FPVwA4ptDji8
Me losing respect for you is far worse than me being mad at you.
Because anger is emotional.
Anger can cool off.
People calm down.
Conversations happen.
Healing happens.
But respect?
Once that’s gone, something shifts permanently.
And honestly, people underestimate how hard it is to rebuild respect after somebody watches your actions expose who you truly are. Because respect is not built off words. It’s built off consistency. Integrity. Loyalty. Character. Accountability. The way you move when nobody is watching.
That’s why losing respect hits differently.
Because it usually doesn’t happen all at once.
It happens slowly.
Through patterns.
Broken trust.
Inconsistency.
Manipulation.
Disrespect.
Lies.
Watching somebody say one thing and continuously do another.
Watching their actions stop matching the image they try so hard to present publicly.
And if we’re being completely real, once somebody sees you differently at your core, it becomes hard to unsee it.
That’s the painful part.
Because anger still carries emotion.
But losing respect often creates emotional detachment.
The arguing stops.
The explaining stops.
The disappointment turns into clarity.
And suddenly the same person you once admired, trusted, defended, or valued deeply no longer feels the same in your spirit.
That’s not hatred.
That’s realization.
And honestly, one thing life taught me is this:
People can apologize for actions, but rebuilding respect requires changed behavior over time. Not promises. Not speeches. Not temporary effort once consequences finally arrive.
Real change.
Consistent change.
Because mature people eventually stop listening to words and start watching patterns instead.
That’s where truth lives.
And if we’re being completely real, some people think forgiveness automatically restores access, trust, admiration, or respect.
It doesn’t.
You can forgive somebody and still recognize they no longer align with the type of energy, loyalty, honesty, or integrity you want close to your life.
That’s growth.
Because protecting your peace sometimes means accepting that somebody crossed lines your heart can’t fully uncross emotionally.
And honestly, losing respect for somebody you genuinely loved or valued is a painful thing to experience because part of you still remembers who you thought they were before the mask slipped. Before the lies surfaced. Before the inconsistencies became impossible to ignore. Before their actions forced you to see them differently.
That’s why some disappointments cut so deeply.
Not because you hate the person.
Because you mourn the image of them you once carried in your heart.
And once respect dies, relationships rarely feel the same again.
Because respect is the foundation of everything healthy.
Without it, love becomes exhausting.
Communication becomes fake.
Trust becomes fragile.
And eventually the connection starts emotionally collapsing under the weight of what was revealed.
So yes…
Me being angry at you can pass.
But me losing respect for you?
That usually means I finally saw something I can’t pretend not to see anymore.
And once that happens…
Everything changes.
— j. anthony | @TheSoberSessions 🖤

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
Let’s fucking talk about it.
Some people don’t want friendship.
They want a human charging cable.
They show up spiritually homeless, emotionally on life support, dragging three failed relationships, six crises, and a personality held together with gas-station coffee and bad decisions.
Then they plug into you.
Suddenly you're giving advice.Giving energy.Giving time.Giving sleep.Giving pieces of yourself like you're some emotional Costco free sample stand.
And because you actually give a shit, you do it.
For months.Sometimes years.
Then one day your world catches fire.
Your chest gets heavy.Life starts kicking your teeth in.You finally whisper, “Yo... I’m not okay.”
And suddenly...
“I'm protecting my peace.”
Ohhhh, now we found boundaries.
Interesting how your "peace" clocked in for work right when my batteries hit 1%.
Funny how I was your emotional support animal while you were leveling up—but now that you're standing on your own feet, my problems suddenly “feel heavy.”
That’s not friendship.
That’s emotional pyramid scheme shit.
Some people don't miss you.
They miss access to you.
And that realization?
That shit'll make your sense of humor REAL dark.
#TraumaCore #DarkPsychology #LetsTalkAboutIt #Healing #RivenHale
© Anthony Sellers (Riven Hale) 2026
A guilty conscience usually means one of two things:
1. you did something that conflicts with your values, or
2. you feel responsible for something beyond your control.
The way forward depends on which it is.
Here are approaches that actually help:
1. Name the specific thing
Vague guilt grows. Define it clearly:
* What exactly happened?
* What part was your choice?
* What part wasn’t?
2. Separate guilt from shame
* Guilt = “I did something wrong.”
* Shame = “I am wrong.”
Guilt can guide behavior. Shame tends to trap people.
3. Repair what you can
If you hurt someone:
* acknowledge it plainly
* apologize without defending yourself
* make practical amends if possible
* change the behavior going forward
Action reduces guilt more effectively than rumination.
4. Accept that discomfort is part of accountability
You do not need to erase guilt instantly. Sometimes the feeling is evidence that your conscience works.
5. Watch for “false guilt”
People often feel guilty for:
* setting boundaries
* disappointing others
* surviving when others struggled
* saying no
* things they couldn’t realistically control
Ask: Would I judge another person this harshly for the same thing?
6. Avoid punishment loops
Constant self-criticism rarely makes people better. It usually just keeps them stuck. Learning and repair are more useful than self-destruction.
7. Talk to someone trustworthy
A friend, mentor, therapist, or spiritual advisor can help you reality-check whether your guilt is proportionate.
8. If the guilt is persistent and overwhelming
Especially if it’s tied to trauma, anxiety, OCD, or grief, professional support can help a lot. Some forms of guilt are more about intrusive thinking than morality.
A simple framework:
* If you were wrong → repair, learn, move forward.
* If you weren’t wrong → challenge the guilt instead of obeying it.
* If you’re unsure → seek perspective, not punishment.
IF YOU’RE SUFFERING FROM THE LOSS OF A DEAR ONE, READ THIS
A grieving woman once asked a Buddhist monk:
“How do I continue living after losing someone I loved so deeply?
Everywhere I look, I feel their absence.
Nothing feels normal anymore.”
The monk looked at her gently and asked:
“When rain falls into the ocean…
does the water disappear?”
The woman softly replied,
“No.”
The monk smiled sadly.
“Love is the same.
The people we lose may leave this world physically…
but the love they gave never truly disappears.”
Tears rolled down the woman’s face.
“But the pain is unbearable,” she whispered.
The monk nodded slowly.
“Yes.
Because grief is the price we pay for deep love.
And a heart that truly loved cannot become untouched overnight.”
The woman lowered her head.
“I keep replaying memories,” she said quietly.
“Their voice. Their smile. The things left unsaid.”
The monk replied softly:
“That is because the mind struggles to accept what the heart still longs for.”
Then he pointed toward the trees moving in the wind.
“Look at nature.
Nothing stays forever.
Leaves fall.
Seasons change.
The sun sets every evening without asking permission.
In Buddhism, we are taught that suffering grows when we demand permanence from a world built on impermanence.”
The woman cried quietly.
“Then how do I survive this pain?” she asked.
The monk answered gently:
“You do not survive grief by forcing yourself to forget.
You survive it by learning how to carry love without letting it destroy your life.”
The woman sat silently as the monk continued:
“Right now, your pain feels endless because love still has nowhere to go.
But slowly, the memories that cut you open today…
will someday begin warming your heart instead.”
Then he added softly:
“Your loved one’s life was not meant to become your lifelong prison of sorrow.
Love them. Miss them. Honor them.
But continue living fully for them too.”
THE MONK’S ADVICE FOR HEALING THROUGH GRIEF:
1. Allow yourself to cry without shame
Tears are love expressing itself after loss.
2. Speak about them often
Keeping memories alive through stories helps the heart heal gently.
3. Do not isolate yourself completely
Pain becomes heavier when carried alone for too long.
4. Stop blaming yourself for what you could not control
Grief often creates guilt, even when none belongs to you.
5. Create quiet moments of remembrance
Pray for them. Light a candle. Visit places that remind you of love instead of only loss.
6. Be patient with your healing
Some wounds soften slowly. There is no correct timeline for grief.
7. Continue living your life fully
The greatest way to honor someone you loved deeply…
is to keep becoming the person they hoped you would be.
And one day, your heart will realize something beautiful:
The pain never came from losing love.
It came from having a love so deep
that even absence could not erase it.
#buddhism
#innerpeace
#overcome
If you woke up without a goal, go back to sleep.
And honestly, that might sound harsh, but too many people are sleepwalking through life with no direction, no discipline, no vision, and no real purpose attached to the way they move every day.
They wake up.
Scroll.
Complain.
Survive.
Repeat.
And years pass without them ever truly building the life they keep praying for.
That’s dangerous.
Because life does not accidentally become meaningful.
Purpose requires intention.
Growth requires effort.
Healing requires discipline.
And the version of yourself you keep dreaming about will never appear while you continue living every day without focus or direction.
You do not have to have your entire life figured out.
But you should wake up chasing something.
Peace.
Growth.
Sobriety.
Purpose.
Financial freedom.
A stronger relationship with God.
Becoming a better parent.
A healthier mindset.
Something.
Because people without goals eventually become consumed by distractions. They let social media, drama, temporary pleasure, addiction, negativity, laziness, comfort, and excuses eat years of their life while convincing themselves they still have “plenty of time.”
And honestly, time is the one thing you never get back.
That’s why intentional people move differently.
They protect their mornings differently.
Protect their energy differently.
Protect their focus differently.
Because they understand every single day is either building something… or wasting something.
And if we’re being completely real, one of the biggest reasons people stay stuck is because they wait to “feel motivated” before they start changing their life.
But discipline matters more than motivation ever will.
Motivation fades.
Purpose doesn’t.
So wake up with intention.
Wake up with vision.
Wake up understanding that your future is being shaped by the small decisions you make consistently every single day.
Because one day you are going to either thank yourself for staying focused… or regret how long you stayed asleep to your own potential.
— j. anthony | @TheSoberSessions
THINGS YOU’LL DEEPLY REGRET ONE DAY
1. Losing years trying to impress people who never truly cared
Many people waste their peace chasing validation from strangers while neglecting the people who genuinely loved them.
2. Not taking more photos with the people who won’t be here forever
One day, pictures will become priceless memories of moments you can never relive again.
3. Letting fear destroy dreams meant for you
Fear has buried more potential than failure ever will. Most people regret the chances they never took.
4. Staying silent when someone needed your love
Sometimes a call, hug, apology, or honest conversation could have changed everything.
5. Remaining too long in relationships that slowly broke you
Not all pain arrives loudly. Some people destroy your spirit quietly over time while calling it “love.”
6. Believing your parents would always have more time
One day, the people who once waited for you at home will no longer be there. And the missed calls, postponed visits, and rushed conversations will hurt deeply.
7. Waiting for the “perfect moment” while life kept moving
Life rarely becomes perfectly organized before happiness begins. Waiting too long steals years silently.
8. Ignoring yourself to keep everyone else happy
People-pleasing slowly teaches you to abandon your own needs, emotions, and peace.
9. Not starting when you had the chance
Many dreams die not because people failed… but because they never began.
10. Realizing too late that peace mattered more than approval
At the end of life, nobody regrets not impressing more people. They regret not living more honestly, peacefully, and fully.
The painful truth is:
life moves faster than we think.
One day, the things you take for granted now…
will become the things you wish you had one more chance to experience.
#buddhism
#Regret
#selfgrowth

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
In Mos Def's 1999 song "UMI Says," the phrase "Umi" means mother in Arabic, a title he uses to reflect on his mother's wisdom and guidance. "Mos Def" (now legally known as Yasiin Bey) adapted the Arabic word to symbolize matriarchal insight and universal, unconditional love. www.egoxless.com +2The song serves as a soulful, acoustic meditation on healing, social justice, and self-liberation. Throughout the track, he repeats the refrain "My Umi says shine your light on the world, shine your light for the world to see". The meaning behind this is a deeply personal and spiritual plea to share one's inner gifts, spread positivity, and remain grounded and connected to your roots while navigating a chaotic society.
EGOxLESS Writing Services offers SEO Writing, Blog and Article Writing, Personal Branding Consultancy and Digital Magazine Publishing.