(via)
Can I req a tiny mb with indigenous stuff pwease? U can attach it here too if u want :3
I like this ask because I believe that cottagecore & farmcore are "aesthetics" that can be found within every culture. Here ya go! 😊
"The life of inner peace, being harmonious & without stress, is the easiest type of existence." — Norman Vincent Peale ✧*。
T is for teeth. 🦷💕
Marie.L.Manzor 💚✨
You've lost your rugged charm
Your wide presence no longer nourishes me
With even a tingle of warmth.
Your cold breaths
Turn everything around
In a labyrinth of fog.
The long silence of your being
Only howls within the dark hollows
Of my bones.
Amid this long frozen painting
Of our lives
My tireless chase
To seek a mirage of pleasance
Goes on.
I hope I'm not bothering you I have a few questions?
1. What's your favorite color?
2. Chocolate or coffee?
3. Why are your eyes purple?
4. Can we see your bedroom? If you don't want us to that's okay lol
5. Have you ever thought about getting married and having kids?
You're not bothering me at all, it's no problem really.
1). My favorite color is either gold or burgundy. Pick either.
2). Chocolate, of course. Believe it or not, I'm not a huge fan of coffee. It stains your teeth and can give you bad breath and anxiety. I don't understand the obsession with it, but to each their own.
3.) My eyes are in fact not purple, they're brown. Rather than color, I believe the purple tint you're seeing is due to reflectiveness, depth and dimension. All that science-y stuff. That's been a topic of confusion for quite some time.
4). I'll have to think about it. I'm not very fond of my privacy being invaded.
5). No, I've never thought about it. The Buckets are like family and my Oompa Loompas are like my children, honestly. I don't think I need anything more than that. I'm very content with the way things are now here at the factory. ☺️
Mary Oliver, from “There you were, and it was like spring”, Red Bird
The theatre of Marcellus, near the Capitoline Hill, Rome. Begun under Julius Caesar, the project was completed under Augustus and the theatre was named after the son of Octavia who, before his death in 23 BCE, was Augustus’ heir. Built in travertine stone it was the most important of Rome’s three theatres at that time and had a capacity for around 20,000 spectators. The current building rising from the ruins was constructed in the 16th century CE.