When increasingly drunk, we become less aware of how drunk we are. When increasingly high, we become more aware of how high we are.
walmart- paranoia
7/11- certainty
target- home
super target- your estranged aunt’s home
macy’s- smugness
Home Depot- loss
whole foods- the kale feeling
CVS- the all knowing eye of God
dunkin donuts- a lady yelling at me in a brooklyn accent
walgreens- grandpa’s firm hand shake
costco- endurance
31 days of Mental Health Month have come and just about gone. Tumblr, thank you for sharing your stories. Thank you for reading the stories of your peers. Without you—all of you—Post it Forward would not be the beautiful, caring community it is today.
Though we reblogged a lot of the art that was created this month, we wanted to end on a particular high note and highlight just a few more pieces in a special post.
You can check out her full post—and more pages from her zine—here.
Mental Health Month may have been limited to, well, May, but it doesn’t mean our efforts stop in June. Post it Forward is always here as your hub for sharing stories and finding a support system with others who might be going through the same things you are. So keep sharing if you can, keep reading, and keep up all of the amazing work we’ve seen so far. And please always remember, there are resources out there if things ever get too hard. <3
Take care of yourself, Tumblr. You deserve it.
Amigurumi elephant // Etsy
How colorful knitting can be
@theopeninvite on Instagram
Representative Carrie Meek, 1980
From the Florida Memory, with the following caption: Representative Carrie Meek’s shirt reads: “A women’s place is in the House and the Senate.” Meek wore this prophetic T-shirt in the Florida House chamber in 1980, where she served from 1978 to 1983. In 1982, she became the first African-American woman elected to the Florida Senate. Meek later served in the United States Congress (1992-2001). Prior to her career in politics, she taught at Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach and Florida A&M University in Tallahassee.
Kids are the public voice for their parents’ private conversations.
If you repeatedly criticize someone for liking something you don’t, they won’t stop liking it. They’ll stop liking you.
Read more psychology facts Here