not to be native on main but like, it’s everyone’s responsibility to steward the land they’re on. like you’re required. if you’re in america the people who own the land aren’t around to steward it so pick up the slack. learn how people cultivated and cared for the land you’re on. if you’re an animist there’s really no excuse. man, i get disabilities and stuff (i’m disabled myself) but you gotta do something. get some native grasses and toss em into your yard. mow your grass a little higher. leave a little strip that’s completely untouched so native wildlife can take residence there. cultivate a relationship with the land you’re on, not only for magical reasons (and you WILL get magical benefits) but also because the earth is deserving of love and respect in itself.
Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai. Filmmakers: Alan Dater, Lisa Merton, 2008.
The documentary tells the inspiring story of the Green Belt Movement of Kenya and its founder Wangari Maathai, the first environmentalist and first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
The U.S.- educated Professor Maathai discovered her life’s work by reconnecting with the rural women with whom she had grown up. Their lives had become intolerable: they were walking longer distances for firewood, clean water was scarce, the soil was disappearing from their farms, and their children were suffering from malnutrition. Maathai thought to herself, “Well, why not plant trees?” She soon discovered that tree planting had a ripple effect of empowering change. Countering the devastating cultural effects of colonialism, Maathai began teaching communities about self-knowledge as a path to change and community action. The women worked successively against deforestation, poverty, ignorance, embedded economic interests, and violent political oppression. They became a national political force that helped to bring down Kenya’s 24-year dictatorship -Kanopy.
Once upon a time,
Long Ago. Away.
I met a pretty girl.
I smiled at her and she smiled back
I giggled, you’re cray.
You’re cray - she giggled, chiming with
me.
The wind blew at us
Hair blurring our face. We
smiled at it, together.
We grumbled-just a tiff. I flicked
pebbles at her. She hid,
ducking underwater
I frowned.
10 seconds after, she was
back. Patient. Together.
Said stay as I mouthed-
I lip-read her.
And smiled as she did-
She understood.
Now, she won’t be there.
I look for her
She is gone. Just my face.
It’s not the same.
It’s not pretty.
Crazy
The way spiritual fuccbois are here for a good time not a long time and yessir I will have your ✨presence✨ for 5 star-crossed days and no more
https://www.instagram.com/p/CRANcn_Dnl1/?utm_medium=copy_link
what does it take to love truly
Based in the Philippines, multimedia artist Yvonne Quisumbing has made a name for herself creating wearable art for the fashion world. The designer also channels the fashion industry in her surreal paintings, which explore complex notions of beauty and identity. More on HiFructose.com.
There's only one precondition to marry me it's that we exercise solarpunk anarchy