1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
starkmartell
heatherwitch

I think the reason I enjoy Ghibli so much is it romanticizes the little things. It makes me want to bake, study, clean the house, garden, and more while listening to happy music and occasionally picking wildflowers and lying in the grass. It helps me find joy in day-to-day life and that’s honestly sooo important for my mental health.

umbylievable

Hayao Miyazaki has said on numerous occasions that he wants children to know that even when the world seems harsh and life is hard, it is always still worth living, and there is always something beautiful in it.

That mental health boost is intentional and Miyazaki wants you to believe that you should continue to live, even if just for those little things.

Source: heatherwitch hayao miyazaki studio ghibli
lowanofthenorth

There’s this app where you can help a blind person with a problem they’re having and it’s mad wavy

thatpettyblackgirl

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thecringeandwincefactory

Oh, wow!

candidlyautistic

Holy shit this is cool!

oodlyenough

The app is called “Be My Eyes - Helping the blind”. 

comefanaway

IM SO GETTING THIS APP 

bot-dad

Hello so getting this app, I’m Dad!



Dad^bot^1.

All of you have loved ones. All can be returned. All can be taken away. (•_•) | PayPal | Patreon Beep-boop!
spellbookbitch

This is cool, but I want to note that this is all over call! I have speech, hearing, and social anxiety issues so that’s almost impossible for me. I emailed them and here’s the response!

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I am hopefully about to try it out!!!

Source: thatpettyblackgirl important
starkmartell
nicollekidman

natalie portman radiates such a terrifying energy i can’t describe it….. it’s not exactly evil but it’s not warm either…. i feel like she could unhinge her jaw and drag me into the ocean like a kraken but she wouldn’t bc it’s undignified 

dancinginthesetrees

Wanna know why?

“Oscar-winning actress Natalie Portman told the crowd at Saturday’s Women’s March in downtown Los Angeles that she experienced what she calls “sexual terrorism” as a 13-year-old after the release of the film The Professional.

Portman described her pride and excitement in releasing the film, only to encounter sexually explicit messages both directed toward her and made about her.

”I excitedly opened my first fan mail to read a rape fantasy that a man had written me,” she recalled. “A countdown was started on my local radio show to my 18th birthday, euphemistically the date that I would be legal to sleep with. Movie reviewers talked about my budding breasts in reviews.”

The experience, she said, changed the way she expressed herself publicly, in order to limit the ways she could be objectified by others.

”I understood very quickly, even as a 13-year-old, that if I were to express myself sexually, I would feel unsafe,” she said. “And that men would feel entitled to discuss and objectify my body to my great discomfort. So I quickly adjusted my behavior. I rejected any role that even had a kissing scene and talked about that choice deliberately in interviews. I emphasized how bookish I was and how serious I was. And I cultivated an elegant way of dressing. I built a reputation for basically being prudish, conservative, nerdy, serious, in an attempt to feel that my body was safe and that my voice would be listened to.”


Video of the speech here: https://www.vox.com/2018/1/21/16917130/natalie-portman-womens-march

shaelit

I support Natalie Portman unhinging her jaw and dragging every last man who made her feel this way into the deep like a kraken.

Source: nicollekidman important men are disgusting
starkmartell
theirisianprincess

DID HE MAKE IT??

imnotafraidofhospitals

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he makes it

theirisianprincess

THANK FUCKING GOD

song-of-the-moon-1025

Ok I saw a rb of this with some context and I only remember like half of it so I’m also using Google I may get some of this wrong

But apparently the “first errand” thing isn’t just a cute little fact about the little kid, it’s a totally real thing done in Japan to teach kids that they can like rely on the community to offer assistance if they need it. They send their kids (like 2-3 years old) out alone to perform a relatively simple errand like going to a convenience store and buying a carton of milk. (There’s even a tv show where a camera crew follows children as they accomplish this first errand.) It’s not uncommon to see kids as young as 6-7 riding the subway alone because they’ve gained this sense of independence that comes from knowing that there will be people to help out if they need it.

mineyoung-churyuu

Oh my god that’s even better

delotha

As someone who grew up with a paranoid and over-protective mother, this both warms my heart and terrifies me.

nitrosplicer

Here’s the tv show about First Errands!

Source: a-titty-ninja very true japan culture