@tarikcarroll on IG
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Today's Document
Mike Driver

DEAR READER
Xuebing Du
dirt enthusiast
NASA
YOU ARE THE REASON
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă
AnasAbdin
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines

Love Begins
One Nice Bug Per Day
almost home
Sade Olutola
wallacepolsom

tannertan36

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Romania

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany

seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Panama

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Brazil

seen from France

seen from Netherlands

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@tarikcarroll
@tarikcarroll on IG

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
MYA
Mikael Cummings by James Jeter

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
 (amir.)
Christopher London (LA Models) by Jamie Luca
ww.talldaddy-og.tumblr.com/archive
Tupac impersonating Rick James
Grace Jones in her restaurant âLa Vie en Roseâ in 1987 in New York City. Credit:Â Peter Carrette Archive

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
this always gives me solace when iâm feeling alone. the one is out there, just keep looking :)
Spring Break at Daytona Beach, Florida (1999)
whoâs father?
Whatâs the mood for Thursday?
I canât choose.
This is the money Patrick. Reblog so money will come your way
âIâm getting back in line.â
OKAY but i just reblogged this last night and guess what i got today from my workplaceâs self-audit!
THANK YOU PATRICK FOR FREE MONEY
BLESS ME PATRICK
PATRICK I HAVE NEVER STRAYED YOU KNOW HOW MUCH I LOVED YOU
@billshitposts
*rolls sleeves* aight dude lets get me some money
Can i just *Gets in line*âŚthere
Y'all I reblogged this and got $240 in tips in one day at work so đ¤đ¤đ¤
đ˛đ˛đ˛đ˛
E V E R Y Â M A N
As a kid, I was always different. Iâm sure it was challenging for my parents to raise an outspoken, headstrong, vibrant, eccentric black child. As I began elementary school, I found myself in classrooms filled with students that looked nothing like me. In those moments, I began to embark upon my first understanding of body concept. I began to develop perceptions of my bodyâs attractiveness, acceptability and functionality by comparing myself to others. In those moments, reality would consistently hit me like tons of bricks. During my developmental years, I often felt isolated. I was consistently the tallest kid in class, the dude with a voice higher than most of the other boys, and (of course) I was always the chubbiest kid in the class. I started to feel self conscious about myself even as I rode public transportation to and from school. I worried about getting glances and being judged based on my appearance. I would always refrain from making eye contact and would head straight to the back of the bus. But, when I became a teenager, I learned how to make my self smaller. I would hide myself under large stylish baseball caps and $5 sunglasses from St Marks Place to mask the fear and shame of my face. From the beginning, I was labeled âdifferentâ which is something that has followed me throughout my life. At 6 years old, being âdifferentâ felt like a curse. But now at 29, being âdifferentâ feels more like a blessing.
Society has always had this obsession with perfection. This obsession that conditions most of us to never feel comfortable in our own skin because we are simply not enough and most likely will never be. Voices beginning to ring in our heads. Echoes of âyou are not thin enough, thick enough, too pale, too black, or simply not beautiful enoughâ to be accepted. These deafening voices circled my thoughts throughout most of my life. This tone echoes from our coaches, teachers and even our own parents.This idea that â perfectionâ MUST be achieved no matter the emotional cost.
It wasnât until I started working in the fashion industry that I started to see through the â4th wallâ. Upon learning the powers of retouching, I started to realize that perfection and beauty are purely subjective concepts. Once I started to build friendships and working relationships with various models, I quickly learned that body image issues didnât discriminate. Listening to male models with bodies that rival greek gods tell me that they too suffer from body image issues was equally eyeopening and jarring. Hearing damaging childhood stories of isolation, fear and obsessive self scrutiny made me realize that as men, we had more in common than I previously believed. Most of us had been programmed with this cycle of self hate beginning at the playground; in a space where we were most impressionable and vulnerable.
I am creating the âEveryMANâ project to empower and inspire. This project is geared towards creating a safe space that I hope will serve to liberate men worldwide from self hate. This book will challenge societyâs standards of what the REAL male aesthetic is through the lens of re-imagined iconic 90âs fashion ads. I want to challenge societyâs obsession with hyper masculinity and perfection by capturing men/male identifying from all backgrounds, orientations, gender identifications, personal classifications, races and colors.This is a call to all. This is a visual conversation about inclusion and diversity which I intend to translate into an actual conversation about the positivity that begins within.
- Tarik Carroll

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
E V E R Y Â M A N
As a kid, I was always different. Iâm sure it was challenging for my parents to raise an outspoken, headstrong, vibrant, eccentric black child. As I began elementary school, I found myself in classrooms filled with students that looked nothing like me. In those moments, I began to embark upon my first understanding of body concept. I began to develop perceptions of my bodyâs attractiveness, acceptability and functionality by comparing myself to others. In those moments, reality would consistently hit me like tons of bricks. During my developmental years, I often felt isolated. I was consistently the tallest kid in class, the dude with a voice higher than most of the other boys, and (of course) I was always the chubbiest kid in the class. I started to feel self conscious about myself even as I rode public transportation to and from school. I worried about getting glances and being judged based on my appearance. I would always refrain from making eye contact and would head straight to the back of the bus. But, when I became a teenager, I learned how to make my self smaller. I would hide myself under large stylish baseball caps and $5 sunglasses from St Marks Place to mask the fear and shame of my face. From the beginning, I was labeled âdifferentâ which is something that has followed me throughout my life. At 6 years old, being âdifferentâ felt like a curse. But now at 29, being âdifferentâ feels more like a blessing.
Society has always had this obsession with perfection. This obsession that conditions most of us to never feel comfortable in our own skin because we are simply not enough and most likely will never be. Voices beginning to ring in our heads. Echoes of âyou are not thin enough, thick enough, too pale, too black, or simply not beautiful enoughâ to be accepted. These deafening voices circled my thoughts throughout most of my life. This tone echoes from our coaches, teachers and even our own parents.This idea that â perfectionâ MUST be achieved no matter the emotional cost.
It wasnât until I started working in the fashion industry that I started to see through the â4th wallâ. Upon learning the powers of retouching, I started to realize that perfection and beauty are purely subjective concepts. Once I started to build friendships and working relationships with various models, I quickly learned that body image issues didnât discriminate. Listening to male models with bodies that rival greek gods tell me that they too suffer from body image issues was equally eyeopening and jarring. Hearing damaging childhood stories of isolation, fear and obsessive self scrutiny made me realize that as men, we had more in common than I previously believed. Most of us had been programmed with this cycle of self hate beginning at the playground; in a space where we were most impressionable and vulnerable.
I am creating the âEveryMANâ project to empower and inspire. This project is geared towards creating a safe space that I hope will serve to liberate men worldwide from self hate. This book will challenge societyâs standards of what the REAL male aesthetic is through the lens of re-imagined iconic 90âs fashion ads. I want to challenge societyâs obsession with hyper masculinity and perfection by capturing men/male identifying from all backgrounds, orientations, gender identifications, personal classifications, races and colors.This is a call to all. This is a visual conversation about inclusion and diversity which I intend to translate into an actual conversation about the positivity that begins within.
- Tarik Carroll
find out more at
www.theeverymanproject.com
ââŚTrumpâs star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was destroyed early Wednesday morning in what looks to be a Tinseltown first.â
Blessed Image
reblog in less than 30 seconds for good luck