curlicuecal:

bobcatmoran:

Favorite image of the day: A photo taken by Brett Cizek of a common merganser with a massive brood of over 50 ducklings trailing after her. Biologists guess that she picked up at least a couple dozen who got separated from their mother, and maybe a few more pre-hatching since ducks often lay a couple eggs in other ducks’ nests as a way of not…er…putting all their eggs in one basket. So big broods are not uncommon, but this is definitely larger than usual.

Apparently since this photo was taken, she’s picked up another two dozen and is now wandering around Bemidji, MN, with over 70 ducklings in tow.

[source] [source]

UltraMom

allthingshyper:

gehayi:

hiddlesbatchlove:

forever-falling-forward:

platredeparis:

bnycolew:

mannysiege:

Progress

What

Imma just let this sit here

MOTHA FUCKIN SCIENCE

sources:

Engagdget

DailyTech

CBS

They turned RNA into an anti-virus program. That is amazing.

Let me restate this in case it didn’t sink in the first time

Researchers physically DELETED ALL TRACES of the HIV virus from a human cell.

ALL OF IT.

IF YOU ARE NOT EXCITED ABOUT THAT I DON’T THINK YOU KNOW WHAT HIV IS

blindpandabear:

Hi everyone, I am really sorry to have to keep doing this, but I really need some help. For those of you who don’t know, last year I escaped my physically abusive family. I headed to NY where I thought I had some friends who could help me, and hopefully find work to support myself. Unfortunately, after being made homeless when my support group fell through, I wound up hospitalized instead for a breakdown, and have been in a spiral ever since. I’m currently trying to get disability for my severe PTSD and bipolar disorder, because my illness has progressed to the point of blackouts and losing spans of time that can last for days, along with the onset of chronic fatigue and pain that makes holding down a 9-5 job impossible. But I’m afraid it is taking longer than anticipated and I’m completely out of options.

I’m trying to maintain my housing situation for which I pay $180 a week (I pay every Tuesday). I’m in desperate need of rent because if I miss one payment then I’m back to being homeless.

If anyone can help me, even by just $1, I’d be so incredibly grateful. I pay my landlady through my PayPal which you can donate to via my Ko-fi here or PayPal here.

If you’d prefer to hire me, I am also available to hire, or you can take a look at my redbubble where I have t-shirts, home décor, stickers and much, much more available to purchase. Ideally, I’d love to work, so if you have any designs or t-shirt ideas or stickers you’ve always wanted, hit me up and I’ll see what we can do.

42 Amazing Books Written By Black Authors

writingwithcolor:

Woo, I’ve got a lot of reading to do…

If you’ve read any of these books please share your perspectives on them – or add recommendations of your own not seen here!

Some particularly potent (and sometimes painful…looking at you The Color Purple) reads I personally recommend from the list:

  • The Color Purple by Alice Walker
  • The Autobiography Of Malcolm X 
  • Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe 
  • Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor

Also, Mod Alice loves and recommends all things Octavia E. Butler.

-Mod Colette, WWC 

42 Amazing Books Written By Black Authors

gxlddustwoman:

theglitterous:

No porn on tumblr we describe our nudes in detail instead

today I was wearing a black corset with matching lace around it and a black leather miniskirt, pink fishnets and black combat boots. I was wearing black lipstick, white foundation, black eyeliner and red eye shadow. A lot of preps stared at me. I put up my middle finger at them.

No More “We Can’t Find Any Black Female Writers”: Here Are 62 Scribes in One Photo

profeminist:

“In 2014, Nkechi Okoro Carroll was an executive story editor on Bones when she met an up-and-coming scribe named Lena Waithe at a WGA Committee of Black Writers event. The two hit it off, so much so that Okoro Carroll got the future Emmy winner — whose major credit at the time was writing for the Nickelodeon series How to Rock — hired as a staff writer on her Fox procedural, making Waithe the second black woman in the room. “Aren’t you worried she’s going to take your job?” a fellow writer on staff asked Okoro Carroll.

“You should be worried she’ll take your job,” retorted Okoro Carroll, now showrunning The CW’s All American. What the duo felt was not competition but kinship: “We often felt like unicorns,” Okoro Carroll says. “When someone asked me to recommend mid-level female writers [of color] for a job, I was appalled to realize I didn’t know many names.”

Together with Erika L. Johnson, then writing for BET’s Being Mary Jane, the women decided to create a network of black female TV writers themselves. Twelve assembled for the March 2014 inaugural meeting of what came to be known as Black Women Who Brunch (BWB); today, the membership nears 80. “This group is the proof” against and antidote to “people saying, ‘We can’t find any black female writers,’” says Johnson, now a co-executive producer on NBC’s upcoming The Village.

BWB holds potlucks at Okoro Carroll’s house every few months (usually about 30 members are available at one time) to toast triumphs and troubleshoot challenges. “It’s not just a community we’re building, but a resource,” says Waithe. “We really are able to recommend eight or nine black women for certain jobs.”

In August, BWB took its first off-site trip — a weekend getaway to Palm Springs. And in November, 62 members gathered for THR’s biggest photo shoot ever, where they revealed what they wish their colleagues knew about being a black woman in the business.

Read the full piece here

No More “We Can’t Find Any Black Female Writers”: Here Are 62 Scribes in One Photo

nakayamariko:

diaspora:

Hi all, I know I haven’t been actively posting about Palestine over here like I did for the past 4 years. And that’s because I have become more active on ground rather online. And also because Tumblr is a dying platform and there aren’t new users I can expose my content to.

Nevertheless, before Tumblr completely dies out, I’m going to use it to its last breath to promote Palestine and in a way I can get my followers somewhat engaged with what I do.

Now as you may know (or didn’t know) Marc Lamont Hill, a Black-American

academic, has been fired from his job as a commentator to CNN for simply advocating for human rights for the Palestinian people. He delivered a speech at the UN on the ‘International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People’ expressing his complete and total solidarity with the Palestinian people. As a result he was fired from CNN and received a condemnation from Temple University, where he teaches, because advocating for Palestinian human rights is a big no-no in the mainstream media and academia. 

Anyways, many Palestine clubs across Canada started circulating a student/prof letter to condemn CNN and Temple University’s disgusting and racist behavior. And this letter has spread quickly to the point we have students, and student groups across North America signing it.

So, if you’re a post-secondary student or professor, and I would like you to sign it and to bring it up to your school club/group that you may part of to sign as well! 

Sign here. (X)

@allthecanadianpolitics can u reblog this please?

Why “doing something relaxing” does not help your anxiety

midnightstarlightwrites:

lovelyplot:

merrybitchmas91:

A lot of the time when people give advice intended to relieve anxiety, they suggest doing “relaxing” things like drawing, painting, knitting, taking a bubble bath, coloring in one of those zen coloring books, or watching glitter settle to the bottom of a jar.

This advice is always well-intentioned, and I’m not here to diss people who either give it or who benefit from it. But it has never, ever done shit for me, and this is because it goes about resolving anxiety in the completely wrong way.  

THE WORST THING YOU CAN DO when suffering from anxiety is to do a “relaxing” thing that just enables your mind to dwell and obsess more on the thing that’s bothering you. You need to ESCAPE from the dwelling and the obsession in order to experience relief.

You can drive to a quiet farm, drive to the beach, drive to a park, or anywhere else, but as someone who has tried it all many, many times, trust me–it’s a waste of gas. You will just end up still sad and stressed, only with sand on your butt. You can’t physically escape your sadness. Your sadness is inside of you. To escape, you need to give your brain something to play with for a while until you can approach the issue with a healthier frame of mind. 

People who have anxiety do not need more time to contemplate, because we will use it to contemplate how much we suck.

In fact, you could say that’s what anxiety is–hyper-contemplating. When we let our minds run free, they run straight into the thorn bushes. Our minds are already running, and they need to be controlled. They need to be given something to do, or they’ll destroy everything, just like an overactive husky dog ripping up all the furniture. 

Therefore, I present to you: 

THINGS YOU SHOULD NOT DO WHEN ANXIOUS

–Go on a walk

–Watch a sunset, watch fish in an aquarium, watch glitter, etc.

–Go anywhere where the main activity is sitting and watching

–Draw, color, do anything that occupies the hands and not the mind

–Do yoga, jog, go fishing, or anything that lets you mentally drift 

–Do literally ANYTHING that gives you great amounts of mental space to obsess and dwell on things.

THINGS YOU SHOULD DO WHEN ANXIOUS:

–Do a crossword puzzle, Sudoku, or any other mind teaser game. Crosswords are the best.

–Write something. It doesn’t have to be a masterpiece. Write the Top 10 Best Restaurants in My City. Rank celebrities according to Best Smile. Write some dumb Legolas fanfiction and rip it up when you’re done. It’s not for publication, it’s a relief exercise that only you will see. 

–Read something, watch TV, or watch a movie–as long as it’s engrossing. Don’t watch anything which you can run as background noise (like, off the top of my head, Say Yes to The Dress.) As weird as it seems, American Horror Story actually helps me a lot, because it sucks me in. 

–Masturbate. Yes, I’m serious. Your mind has to concentrate on the mini-movie it’s running. It can’t run Sexy Titillating Things and All The Things That are Bothering Me at the same time. (…I hope. If it can, then…ignore this one.) 

–Do math problems—literally, google “algebra problems worksheet” and solve them. If you haven’t done math since 7th grade this will really help you. I don’t mean with math, I mean with the anxiety. 

–Play a game or a sport with someone that requires great mental concentration. Working with 5 people to get a ball over a net is a challenge which will require your brain to turn off the Sadness Channel. 

–Play a video game, as long as it’s not something like candy crush or Tetris that’s mindless. 

THINGS YOU SHOULD DO DURING PANIC ATTACKS ESPECIALLY:

–List the capitals of all the U.S. states

–List the capitals of all the European countries

–List all the shapes you can see. Or all the colors. 

–List all the blonde celebrities you can think of.

–Pull up a random block of text and count all the As in it, or Es or whatever.  

Now obviously, I am not a doctor. I am just an anxious person who has tried almost everything to help myself.  I’ve finally realized that the stuff people recommend never works because this is a disorder that thrives on free time and free mental space. When I do the stuff I listed above, I can breathe again. And I hope it helps someone here too. 

(Now this shouldn’t have to be said but if the “do nots” work for you then by all means do them. They’ve just never worked for me.)

This would’ve been great an hour ago

This is so so true! When I was younger and suffering anxiety attacks, I used distraction techniques as I liked to call them. I’d watch tv shows, read a book, write something or play a game. Something that distracted my mind. 

Sometimes it takes a while for it to work so don’t give up on distraction right away. Keep doing it! My mind eventually trained itself into recognising sitcoms as a “calm down” thing, so it became easier to distract myself with them the longer I did it.