Hot dogs in hot dog water = loose leaf sausage tea
Im So Tired My Dude.
|| Mori ֎ || INFP || talk to me about language || doin ok in Japanese and learning many other languages
|| Mori ֎ || INFP || talk to me about language || doin ok in Japanese and learning many other languages
Hot dogs in hot dog water = loose leaf sausage tea
(via taffybuns)
honestly the human brain is so small that you *will* forget how much beauty there is out there to experience unless you leave your house every three days. ik its fucked up but i promise its true
my brain, trying to deceive me: there’s literally nothing outside!!!!! it’s the same neighborhood it’s always been !!!!!
me, tying my shoes: shut up shut up!!!! by god we’re gonna try to find magic in mundane today !!!!
(via xiyade)
Karabagh partridge rug with inscription featuring a name and date in Armenian at the top: 13 March 1932 Vardider Yerzinkyan.
Since y'all love this piece of art, please pay attention to what is happening in the region where it’s from. Due to azerbaijan’s genocidal actions, Artsakh (aka Karabagh) is still in blockade, food and medicine supplies are scarce and mortality rate has actually increased.
(via harminuya)
guy in a band @ his gf: hey I wrote you a song…..kinda nervous
stacy: aww no it’s okay let’s hear it :)
(via xiyade)
Armenian Genocide Monument (Montevideo, Uruguay), by Nerses Ouanian. Uruguay recognized the Armenian Genocide in 1965, the first country to do so.
(via xiyade)
“Glimpsing at the seabed through the water and the complexity of the light within, at a soothing southern sea.” By Shigeko Inoue (2002).
Born in 1945, Inoue studied traditional Japanese and Italian woodblock printing. Her work focuses on nature, transparency and the movement of water.
(via mumblefox)
(via schifty-al)
fun fact: western shirts’ buttons are snaps instead of normal buttons so cowboys can more easily tear each other’s clothes off without ruining them in the heat of the moment
(via schifty-al)
The longer it takes for this to come across your dash the funnier it is
(via mumblefox)
Gustave Caillebotte, The Floor Planers, 1875
All hail Gustave Caillebotte, the only Impressionist who bothered to say “You know what this art movement doesn’t have enough of? Shirtless rough trade, that’s what!” And then he became the change he wanted to see in the world, and I think that’s beautiful.
(via senyahgirl)