When you’re really enjoying a book and someone tries to talk to you
this is the most accurate thing EVER.
this is the most accurate thing EVER.
The one’s that really mattered
Full of darkness and danger
Sometimes you didn’t want to know the end
Because how could the end be happy?
How could the world go back to the way it was, when so much bad had happened?
But in the end, it’s only a passing shadow
Even darkness must pass
A new day will come
And when the sun shines, it will shine out the clearer
Those were the stories that stayed with you
That meant something
Even if you were too small to understand why
But I think I do understand
I know now
Folks in these stories had lots of chances to turn back
Only they didn’t
They kept going
Because they were holding on to something
That there’s some good in this world
And it’s worth fighting for.
I really wanna go on a car ride with her
I’m her!
She had to pullover 😭😭😭😂😂
ITS SO CUTE I HAVE TO REBLOG IT AGAINN
I WANNA BE THIS KIND OF PARENT
#i was surprised this didnt end in some sort of murder #i’ve been on tumblr too long
“Ye”
iamonlyslightlydisneyobsessed:
Project Disney S3-Animal Week
Challenge: Favorite Location- Every Location from the Lion King, it’s all gorgeous
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Purpose- what is your antagonist’s goal? Is it to stop the protagonist? Is it your own protagonist, who gets in the way of their own goals? Does your antagonist not even wish to hinder the protagonist, but their goals merely conflict? What does this character want?
Motivation- why does this character want what they want?
I think those are the two main important components of an antagonist. Aside from that, I would create them as if they were a normal character.
This is the character bio I use to create my own characters:
Name:
Role:
Age:
Gender:
Sex:
Sexuality:
Social Class:
Personality:
Appearance:
Background:
Hobbies:
Quirks:
Education:
Occupation:
Aspirations:
Birth town and Current Location:
Birthday:
Star sign:
…evidently these people have never done goldwork embroidery.
I’m willing to bet there will be a follow up article about how scholars have made a startling discovery that the gold was used for crafts and the craft people of the world will just be like “…..Really?”
I love how they just kind of leap to “A PRIEST KING MUST HAVE WORN THIS SHINY GOLD STUFF!”
“Everything is mysterious! We have no idea! It, uh… it was for a ritual, yes.”
“…don’t you say everything is for a ritual?”
“Shhh, ancient peoples liked rituals.”
“But there’s a giant painting on this wall showing how this was used, and modern crafters you could ask.”
“SHHH. RITUALS.”I have a very strong urge to email that researcher.
This keeps happening, you know.
For decades we thought water or oil was poured onto the rocks being used to build Egyptian pyramids for “ritual purposes”. Turns out if you ask people who have worked on sand they can tell you that wet sand is A LOT EASIER TO DRAG ROCKS ACROSS.
We spent centuries unable to figure out how the hair styles of ancient civilisations were constructed, typically going with “all the women wore wigs” (seriously. That was literally the solution) until a hairdresser with an interest in the hairstyles she saw in classical art turned her hand to them and BLEW THE RESEARCH COMMUNITY AWAY with her incredibly accurate recreations of hairstyles using tools available to the original peoples.
Academia has this real, huge problem where you’ve got a whole bunch of insulated people who know a lot about history and research and academia but shit-all about anything else. And who, when presented with something they can’t figure out, they turn to other academics rather than to people who might have some practical experience with similar stuff.
And it spreads into popular culture in a really unhealthy way. Because there is so much stuff that academia leaves as “ritual purposes” or “we don’t yet know how X was done”, which becomes “it’s a mystery!!!1!” in popular science shows and magazines. Which winds up fuelling the fires of people who would rather believe that ALIENS BUILD THE FUCKING PYRAMIDS than that the Egyptian people might actually have been competent at this thing they did.Yep. Interesting thing about the hairstylist: there was a word that kept being used in documents about hairstyles that could translate as two different things, one of which was something like “sewing needle”. Academics ruled out that translation of the word, because “lol, sewing hairstyles. That’s ridiculous.” The hairstylist who recreated them… looked at that word, at the available tools of the time, and tried a sewing technique with needles to keep hair in place. AND IT WORKED.
The silo effect in academia is a major problem.Side note: IDK if this is the same lady or not (it probably is) but there’s an entire youtube channel devoted to not only period-correct hairstyles from ancient greece/rome and egypt all the way up to the napoleonic and civil war eras but also a few needle/fiber/cloth crafts like beading, dyeing, etc.
Channel is here, the lady’s name is Janet Stephens.
Yep, they are talking about Janet Stephens.
I love her.
The ones that bug me are always the textiles stuff – naturally, as I do that myself. Like the vase paintings of ancient Greeks and Romans and their warp-weighted looms. Archeologists kept saying shit like, “No, that must be an artistic rendering, that couldn’t possibly work like that,” and meanwhile people in Scandinavia are still using nearly identical looms today. Because nobody ever thought to ask actual weavers. The nitwits looking at women preparing wool and spinning on vases, and coming up with completely ridiculous explanations for this shit, and any spinner could glance at it and go, “Um, no.” Just. Argh.
this why you shouldn’t let archeologists theorize.
I bolded the portion above about the problem of insular academics, because I have been frustrated about this for quite some time.
Articles about the Egyptian engineers pouring water on sand to better support sledges with building materials seem to always use language like “clever trick” and “surprisingly simple” when they describe the science behind it:
Experiments revealed that the required pulling force decreased proportional to the stiffness of the sand. Capillary bridges arise when water is added to the sand. These are small water droplets that bind the sand grains together. In the presence of the correct quantity of water, wet desert sand is about twice as stiff as dry sand. A sledge glides far more easily over firm desert sand simply because the sand does not pile up in front of the sledge as it does in the case of dry sand.
If it was so simple and obvious, why were artworks and text showing and explaining how to do this ignored for millennia? Because Egyptologists didn’t look outside their discipline for answers:
The answer had been staring us in the face for a long time. In a wall painting from the tomb of Djehutihotep (schematic above), you can see a worker pouring water on the sand in front of a sled that’s carrying a colossal statue. The sleds were little more than large wooden planks with upturned edges. “Egyptologists had been interpreting the water as part of a purification ritual,“ Bonn says, “and had never sought a scientific explanation.”
People of Color in European history are marginalized as exceptions and rarities within almost every discipline, but MPoC is about taking those margins and putting them all together in the center of our focus and scrutiny to see what they really have to tell us about the past. I’ve posted about Janet Stephens before, and I’ve watched the videos she’s posted. And a lot of these ancient hairstyles are amazingly practical:
I think we could all benefit from applying a little pragmatism to our perspectives on history, and keeping in mind that we aren’t set on a course of linear improvement from “worse” to “better”. The past has a lot to teach us, and “ancient” isn’t synonymous with “primitive”. Similarly, we can’t assume that the people in the past didn’t travel, were less tolerant of difference, or more insular in their worldviews. This construction of the past as ubiquitously “worse” is also harmful to our present and our future. After all, if human society must of necessity be better than it has ever been right now, how can we effectively question where we’re going? Analyzing the present in historical context can help us improve not only our lives right now, but our hopes for the future.
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Spread the word!
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Hell yessss