Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
he likes you!!!! :3
Was it really an accident thooođ I would obv help you love ya my sweet @number1jeonginstan <33
đ„ iâm curious
LMAO, this is funny. I feel like I would get either @quokkawritesarchive @chqnverse or @astraysimp to help me out!!! I know for a fact that Nessa would...
I CHANGED. I AM A NEW PERSON. A BETTER ONE!!! so, while all you six lovely followers are reading this I will be cleaning my Tumblr account for my self shipping shit
This picture is to remind me never to postpone a milestone -post again đ
 THANK YOU ALL FOR FOLLOWING ME!
Between 1650 and 1900, the global population went up by a billion. Between 1900 and 1950, that number went up another billion. And from 2010 up to today, yet another billion. As many people were born in fifty years as they were in 400. Today, as many people have been born in nine years as in fifty.Â
The more people there are in an area, the more resources are needed to sustain them. In one town, there must be enough water, food, and other energy sources to allow everyone to live comfortably. If there are not enough resources for everyone in that town, the town cannot sustain all its inhabitants. This has consequences for the environment. To try and meet everyoneâs needs, the town will take more and more from the land - more water from the rivers, more timber from the forest, more animals and plants for food. If these resources are taken at a faster rate than they can be replenished, the environment suffers. This happening world-wide. The higher the global population, the harder it is to sustain life on earth. Habitat destruction and deforestation are occurring at higher and higher rates to make room for farms, roads, and houses. Encroachment on an ecosystem harms the plants and animals that call it home. And the waste expelled by these actions pollute rivers and the atmosphere.
We must fulfill the three laws of sustainability. Say them with me now: reduce, reuse, recycle.
Who should worry most about climate change?Â
a) Poor people. Theyâre the most vulnerable to the harmful effects of climate change, including natural disasters and disease. Some people benefit from practices that exacerbate climate change - if those people were at risk, theyâd be actively fighting those practices. My teacher drew a diagram on the board; poor people live in one area and rich people live in the other. If the rich people want to build a big yucky factory, theyâll build it where the poor people live, because they donât have any money for lawyers. This is the way itâs been all over the world.Â
b) People who live by the sea. Rising sea levels, flooding, and storms wonât treat those places will. A lot of property will be damaged, people displaced, and coastal cities could be underwater before the century is out. Boston is my home. I donât want my people or my family to be uprooted by water. I donât want the history, art, and architecture of my city to go underwater - itâs too beautiful for that.
The Industrial Revolution of the 1800s saw a boom in manufacturing and technological achievement. Products as diverse as car parts to cleaning supplies were being assembled, built, woven, or otherwise created on a scale never before seen. But this renaissance required workers - lots of them. In capitalist countries in the West, business tycoons made profit off of the cheap labor of thousands of men, women and children. Most of them worked up to 16 hours a day, in insanely dangerous conditions. But where there is oppression there is resistance, and in the 1880s, workerâs unions across the United States began to fight for their rights.  Â
Many members of the movement at this time were communists and anarchists, who believed that the capitalist system exploited members of the working class. They demonstrated for an 8-hour day, as well as better wages and working conditions.Â
In 1886, in the first days of May, thousands of Chicagoâs working class went on strike. Â In Haymarket Square, a meeting of up to 3,000 radicals gathered to protest the conditions they worked in. When the Chicago police came to disperse the demonstrators, someone threw a bomb. At least 8 people died, and more than a hundred were wounded.Â
Three years later, in commemoration of what was called the Haymarket affair, the International Socialist Conference declared May first an international holiday for the worldâs workers. The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions (now know as the American Federation of Labor) declared that âeight hours shall now constitute a legal dayâs labor.âÂ
But the US no longer celebrates Labor Day on May first, or May Day. During the Cold War, May first became associated with the socialist and communist movements that it had been born from. President Eisenhower signed a resolution renaming May Day as âLoyalty Dayâ, a holiday dedicated to American patriotism. We now celebrate Labor Day on September second.  Â
But hey, in recognition of global celebrations and the industrious working class, hereâs a shout out to May Day. Equality and vacation days for all!Â
The 49th Earth Day is today! This yearâs theme is Protect Our Species, so hereâs an essay about 3 of the most endangered species in the world.
#1: Pangolins These little guys are the best. They eat insects with tongues longer than their bodies, and roll up into little scaly balls when afraid. In Malay, the word âpenggulungâ fittingly means âone that rolls upâ. There are 8 different species of pangolin; four are native to east Asia, and four to Africa. Every species is labeled either âvulnerableâ or âendangeredâ. In Africa, pangolin scales are used to attract potential lovers, and as medicine in China and other parts of Asia. The meat is considered a delicacy. These beliefs have created a vast illicit trade network of pangolin parts; the creatures themselves are being captured, killed, and cooked almost to extinction. Mother pangolins wrap themselves around their babies to protect them. But greater steps must be taken to save these mammals.
#2: Coral Reefs Not gonna lie: for the longest time, I thought coral reefs were big rocks at the bottom of the ocean, with maybe a few plants here and there. Turns out, corals, ancient organisms that are related to sea anemones, are a vital part of our oceans. An individual coral is called a pylop. A pylop will grow a calcium-based exoskeleton; when a colony of thousands of pylops do this together, it forms a coral reef. Coral reefs exist all over the world, and are home to thousands of underwater species. Fish, algae, plants and invertebrates all feed and shelter on reefs. They protect coastlines and contribute billions to ecotourism and fishing industries. But these homes are dying out. As the earth warms, so do the oceans. Changes in temperature and pH levels kill pylop by the thousands, leaving entire ecosystems bleached and dead. This leaves millions of other organisms homeless and with little food. Without coral reefs, the oceans would never be the same. And since 75% of the earth is covered in water, I think we should be worried about that.
#3: Bees Canât really emphasize this enough guys: we need bees to live. These insects live all over the world in diverse climates, from African deserts to the Arctic Circle, but their hives and habitats are under attack. Bees pollinate plants, which helps them grow. Pollinated plants go on to produce food, medicine, and other natural wonders we use everyday. And weâre not the only ones; birds, bears, and dozens of other species rely on the beesâ work. Our use of pesticides make bees and other creatures sick. Invading beesâ habitats  leave less space for hives and less plants for them to pollinate. Climate change is, as always, a threat. Without bees, there would be no us. Letâs freaking save the bees yâall.
What you can do:
Reach out to organizations working to protect these species. Donate, volunteer, or simply read up!
Make sure to buy produce that wasnât grown with pesticides.
Plant some flowers⊠Adopt a hiveâŠ
Reduce your carbon footprint: save the ozone and the reefs!
Always practice the rules of sustainably: reduce, reuse, recycle.
Thanks for reading, everybody. Happy Earth Day!
Hereâs a few extra tips for your morning routine, if youâre a tea-drinking environmentalist like me:
Use a ceramic mug rather than a paper or styrofoam cup.
Rinse and reuse mugs, rather than sending them right to the dishwasher
Try to use tea bags that arenât attached to string and paper. A little less material going into the trash.
Compost tea bags after use (not the string and paper - cut those off). Ripping the bag helps the decomposition process.
Iâve said it before and Iâll say it again: the smallest habits build a greater impact than we think. If we keep at them day after day, it adds up, the same way a short drive to the supermarket contributes to the amount of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere.
Some people look down on the environmentally friendly actions we can take, especially when they appear too small to matter. âYou just want to feel like youâre doing somethingâ - but I am. We tend to discredit small acts of conservation, because they donât seem to make a dent. But such an assumption is dangerously arrogant. Each of us can do something, and we must.
A snake is coiled, lying in wait. He is buying his time with the coins he stole from dead men's pockets. A snake is vicious, his little fangs biting off what he can chew only with a spoonful of shamelessness. He has learned to be soft and secret until the time is ripe to speak his bloated mind.
A snake has thick skin - until someone flips him belly up, and he wails like a child, and sends out his fangs like a thing gone wild.
Pablo Neruda said, "Hatred grows scale on scale..." And the snake has scales as sharp as slate. He rattles his tail, but by then it's too late.
Madness rules, and the snake is free.Â
You have to decide if you want to be one of the best, or the best.Â
The fact is, thereâs gonna be a lot of people in youâre life who will get the same grades and credit and praise and points, but who arenât the best people. They can be rude, vapid, inconsiderate, myopic, or just not very nice; plenty of people like that will get the credit you deserve. But theyâre not the best - you are. You are a person with a big, beautiful heart. Youâre hardworking, talented, conscientious, and kind; itâs people like you who should get the best in life. But youâre the only one who can make that happen. You, for the sake of everyone, need to commit to being one tough cookie: donât let them get the best of you, get the best of yourself. Be the best version of yourself that you can be. Make sure that you get everything other people get, that you do everything other people do, and more. Donât cheat yourself. Â
And the people I mentioned above? The oneâs who donât hold a candle to you? The goal isnât to stop them; itâs to not let them stop you.
Thank you so much for 200 followers! Iâm so grateful for the support; itâs really encouraging to se that so many people are interested in my writing, in my thoughts and musings and ideas. This means so much - thank you.
Keep shining, beauties. Have a lovely day. :)
Pros:
young ppl will have a voice earlier on
theyâll be empowered + encouraged to change their communities
the voices with the most knowledge about what people need will be elevated.
foster responsibility
Cons:
teens are too young to understand impact of their actions.
arenât knowledgable or aware of political issues
too much pressure put on young shoulders.
those who are too immature could misrepresent peopleâs needs.
I say yes! More 16-year-olds than you would think, myself included, are ready and willing to make a difference. Some kids might be too immature for the vote, but frankly, so are some adults. Weâre smart; we can handle it. Â After all, weâve only got a couple more years before adulthood comes along, so why not start preparing in the meantime? If weâre properly informed and coached by adults, we will make the right choices. Age doesnât determine a personâs intelligence, maturity, or sense of responsibility.Â
I really, really want to do something, something more than join a few clubs or run a blog. I want to help my community. I want to have an impact on the legislation that determines my future, to make the adults sitting indoors deciding my fate hear me. Adults donât realize how much power they have - if I could vote.⊠man, you have no idea the things Iâd make happen.
Iâm here for photography, beach days, and my favorite flower. Yes.Â
Sunflowers are the perfect flowers
A lioness is cool, watchful for her cubs. She is responsible, open; she cares for the orphans and works with the others. She is a fighter for the ties that bind her pack together, the ties that keep them safe.
She holds the savannah in her clean paws - or, at least, paws that are clean only when she steps in a puddle. Smart, collected; she knows her high-up place as one who belongs. She belongs because her job is to control her own fate. She does it well.
The lioness is part of the power, demos, and one of the people, kratos. The lioness is fair, free, and roars as she pleases, because all are protected, all are loved, in her savannah home.
Or at least, that's what she strives for.Â
Prompt 1 February 17&18: DiscoveryÂ
I started questioning my sexuality two and half years ago, and for a while I was experimenting with different labels and words to describe myself. Figuring out I was asexual was pretty easy, but my romantic orientation continued to confuse me - sometimes it still does. I knew for certain I fell on the aromantic spectrum when a close friend of mine developed a crush on me, and we started to âdateâ. It became pretty clear to me that there was a problem, and it wasnât my friend. Two weeks into our relationship, I had to break it off, and I explained all my feelings and discomforts to my friend. Ever since then, Iâve been exploring my aromantic-ness and finding new ways to describe and express it.Â
I donât ever want to date someone, or even kiss them - like a real kiss. I donât know how I know this for certain, but I do. I never want to say about my relationship with someone âweâre an item. donât touch us.â Staying single is what works for me. Iâm a really affectionate, emotionally open person, but Iâve learned that itâs hard for me to show love for someone without leading them on. Iâve been aware of people developing feelings for me that they think I might reciprocate, but I donât. It has hurt some friendships and my own way of expressing myself. But Iâm just gonna focus on being me, and loving people exactly the way I want to.
So, todayâs Valentineâs Day, and I asked myself, what do I want my fellow aromantic kids to know?Â
I want them to know that thereâs nothing wrong with who they are. Theyâve been told that thereâs only one way to love, but thatâs a lie. So they donât fit inside a box, a box of flowers and pink hearts and stuffed teddy bears? So what? Theyâve got broader feelings in their hearts, feelings that donât have to be limited, or cookie-cutter perfect, or as recognizable as holding hands. I want them to know that you donât need to date someone to show them you care. You donât need to date anyone, in fact: you can just love everyone equally, and thatâs OK. Weâre told that we need someone to be complete, but hereâs a secret: we donât need other people. We want people, maybe, but we donât need them. Not in that way.  Â
I want them to know that their color is green. On the color wheel, green is the opposite of red; red is the color of romance, and we are aromantic.  Â
I want them to know that they arenât âmissing out.â All forms of love are beautiful, vibrant, exquisite, and kind. Theyâre kind.  Â
Iâm writing from the heart, guys, from this small green heart that didnât feel whole until I realized there was nothing wrong with me. Thereâs nothing wrong with me. Iâm just a kid who wants to be me, to be free and love freely. Freely, in colors that arenât just pink and red and âweâre an itemâ colored. I want all of you to feel that same love; just shout it from the rooftops. Youâre valid. Youâre beautiful. I know itâs complicated, I know itâs not all clean edges and perfect form. But weâre gonna be okay. I just know it. Weâre gonna be okay.Â
Green hearts, everybody. Peace.
The queer community is itâs own worst enemy.  Â
Itâs gay men and lesbians against bisexual people, who âjust need to choose.â Angry spitfires who say asexual people arenât really part of the community, arenât really human. Cisgendered queers who degrade and dehumanize trans and non binary people.  Â
We put each other in boxes. We tell one another that thereâs something false about that personâs LGBTQ+ identity. We say âyou donât belong, you have to fit into this cookie cutter. You canât be that one, or none at all.â Thereâs always something wrong with you, but if you were to be something else, then youâll be part of the community. Weâll finally get equal rights, if only you change.Â
Get married, adopt kids. Donât be poor, donât be disabled, donât be a person of color. You can be queer, but not too much, because then they wonât help us. Youâll scare them away. You can come under the umbrella, but if youâre this-or-that, weâll push you out into the rain.Â
This is what assimilation does to people. It pits them against each other, because everyone is holding themselves to a standard of a people that is not their own. And it isnât just the LGBTQ+ community that does it.Â
 ~ âYouâre dark skinned - youâre not as good, not as clean, as people with light skin.â  ~ âYouâre light skinned - youâre not black enough. Who do you think you are?âÂ
 ~ âYou speak Spanish, so youâre living in the past; you arenât âAmericanâ enough.â  ~ âYou donât speak Spanish, so you arenât in touch with youâre Latinx roots.âÂ
And round and round in circles. No one is safe, no one is free. There are too many eyes, too many boxes, and so an identity is scattered like loose change. A people forgets that they are all the same blood, in an effort to dilute it. This is what assimilation does to a people. Society hurts the community, which hurts the individual. All people, vs. your people, vs. you.Â
To be queer is to be gifted with an eye-opening experience that never truly ends. Itâs a life-long journey of discovery, about who you are and how you want to express that. Itâs a description, not a definition. The LGBTQ+ community is vibrant, diverse, and all-encompassing. To be a part of it is to belong, to learn, and to gain friendship. It spans the globe, it brings out the best in people. Your never really stop seeing itâs beauty.  Â
But itâs made to be something else. Itâs told it must be a set of easily identified categories. Queer people are told that they must fit one of these categories, and stick to it. Their identity must be a tight package to fit into. It must be easily understood and easily explained, because God forbid we confuse anyone! And so the queer individual suffers.Â
And when the person suffers, so does the community.
Women belong to every minority; raise women up, and you raise up those minorities.
Today is the 3rd annual Womenâs March, an international movement advocating for gender equality and human rights. The quote above is what my poster said at the first one two years ago.Â
And itâs true: women are members of every community on the planet (unless you count fraternities, which I donât). Religious, ethnic, racial, sexual -  you name it, women are a part of it. Unfortunately, lots of these groups often face discrimination and prejudice in any number of ways, for any number of reasons. Anywhere in the world, someone is always getting crap for being who they are. And regardless of their cultural identity, women often have it much worse.  Â
So letâs stop the hate against hijabis. Letâs stop underestimating women of color. Letâs stop the neglect of transgender woman, and the objectification of girls who like girls.Â
Raise up the women, and you raise up the world.Â
Youâve probably wondered what the title of this blog means. I probably shouldâve gotten around to explaining it to you a while ago.  Â
âAvere grill per la testaâ literally translates to âto have a head full of cricketsâ in Italian.Â
Sometime in the late spring of 2017, I was in a gift shop somewhere. I found a small, rectangular book called âThe Illustrated Book of Sayings: Curious Expressions from around the World.â It was published by Ella Frances Sanders, in 2016. I really wanted this book, because it was around this time I was developing a passion for linguistics, words, and the all-around coolness of language. Either way, the book was charming, and I borrowed some money from my dad.Â
âAvere grilli per la testa.â To have a head full of crickets.Â
What struck me about this phrase, when I stumbled upon its entry, was itâs compelling word choice. Apparently, whoever came up with it didnât think it was enough to say that someone is dreamy, or has a short attention span. Nope - there are jumpy insects inside their head, and thatâs what makes them so imaginative. Welcome to Italy, m-effers.  Â
This describes me perfectly: dreamy, distracted, creative, semi-ADD. Iâm prone to flights of fancy, so much that I struggle to cool down or get myself organized. Thereâs a whole lot of fluff and bulls*t in my head (f youâll pardon my French); my thoughts jump all over the place. Maybe that explains the boxes of filled notebooks in my closet. Good traits, since I strive to be a good writer; bad traits, since I have a mother.  Â
In another way, it captures the content on this blog - my endless thoughts, opinions, and ideas, all thrown together in one place. My varied interests and passions, channeled into the mini-essays you see here. There are many things Iâd like to talk and write about, to organize in a constructive way. After all, if thereâs that much going on up here, why not share it with all of you?  Â
Also, itâs linguistic trivia. I love me some linguistic trivia.
What I want in 2019 - a prevention plan for climate change. preferably involving lots of solar panels and immigrant employees. - an end to world hunger. preferably involving sustainable agriculture and lots of international aid. - for everyone to have access to clean water. See my âWorld Water Dayâ post for details.Â
And hey, @ my classmates - stop using âgayâ as an insult. It ainât cute.Â
ooh, yâknow what would be even better!? Letâs have everyone stop saying âhe or sheâ or âhis or hersâ to refer to someone whoâs gender we donât know. Doesnât matter the context - its unnecessary and cis-normative and hard on the tongue. If you wanna be fancy and impress your friends, try saying âguys, gals, and non-binary pals,â (as coined by Thomas Sanders). Or just use âtheyâ. âTheyâ is fine, guys.Â
Thank you for coming to my TED talk.
Hi everyone. Itâs been a while.Â
I started this blog in September of 2017. I stopped posting in March 2018. Now iâm back, after 9-odd months of figuring stuff out.Â
I guess I needed to get myself together, to eliminate some pressure from my life. Iâll say it, last spring was a really rough time for me, and I just couldnât keep this blog up anymore. I took the summer to recollect myself, and the autumn to enjoy my new life. And it is pretty new - new school, new friends, new schedule. Iâm glad to say Iâm doing much, much better.Â
And during this time, I didnât think much about this blog and its purpose at all. I was still writing all the time. I was still thinking about the same things Iâve written about here. But last year, the pressure was getting to me - to be clear, pressure I was putting on myself. I wanted to put my all into this blog - and I genuinely enjoyed doing so - but I guess it just became too much.  Â
This is a long post. Itâs written by someone you donât know and have never met, so you probably wonât spend 10 minutes of your time reading it. I donât really mind. But Iâm writing this for three reasons: to explain myself, to advise you, and to make a super rough draft of a mission statement for this blog. That sounds a little dramatic. But I think it fits the goal here, actually: To explain, to advise, and make some super rough drafts of crap.
If you are reading this, youâre probably one of my much beloved followers. Thank you so much for all your support and (dare I say it) interest. I didnât forget about you these past nine months, but I also learned not to forget about myself. It takes guts to put yourself out there on the Scary InternetTM, and Iâve learned that if I wanna do it right, Iâve gotta be thinking about my own well-being. I only have to do this if I want to, not for the sake of strangers. No shade - itâs just me being honest.Â
And I guess thatâs where the advice come in: if you want to put yourself and your work out there, whether thatâs here or anywhere else, it shouldnât be just for others. It has to be for you, too.  Â
And now for the mission statement part, or a very rough draft of it: the purpose of this blog is to share with you my opinions, ideas, values, and writing. Thatâs why I do it for me. What I do for you (hopefully) is inform and teach, about issues I care about and that I hope you care about too. Social justice, environmentalism, history, sociocultural issues; sometimes just poems or stories.Â
Someone, upon hearing about my blog, told me I was a social critic. I prefer the term âsocial observerâ. I think that, in a way, that is my responsibility as a writer. Itâs also my responsibility as an activist. Your craft, gift, passion, whatever you want to call it should be shared. It deserves to be shared. So have at it.Â
There will be more posts coming up in the next few weeks. But for now, thank you, everybody. Happy (almost) New Year!
World Water Day is celebrated internationally on March 22. Declared by the UN 25 years ago, this day annually focuses on our most important resource: water. But damaged ecosystems, water pollution, and climate change are hurting the supply. The 2018 theme for World Water Day is how we can use natural solutions to solve modern-day challenges. Replanting forests and protecting water-based ecosystems will balance the water cycle. Recycling and reusing wastewater can provide energy and water to urban areas. Solutions are everywhere, and its time we started looking for them.
We use water in our homes to drink, cook, and clean with. But 95% of water is used outside the home, for agriculture, industry, and textiles. The rising population in our developing world requires more water than ever. In a decade, we might need twice as much water as Earth can supply.
In places like Cape Town, South Africa, droughts are breaking records held for over a century. The city awaits âDay Zero,â when, likely this summer, it will shut off itâs taps. My youth choir has the chance to travel on international goodwill tours every other summer. Last August, we traveled to South Africa, spending two out of our three weeks in Cape Town. The drought had been going on for years at that point; shower times were limited to two minutes, and every public building we performed in had signs reminding us to conserve water. When âDay Zeroâ comes, Cape Townâs schools, libraries, and homes wonât have running water. Until it rains, residents will have to get their water by other means. I donât want to think about such a catastrophe happening here in Boston.
So what can you do? Water woes are endless, and go way beyond a few plastic bottles. But hereâs some small steps (shameless plug lol) to help you conserve our most important resource.
Buy less. As goods travel around the world, so does the water that made them (metaphorically, of course). Buying one less shirt or cooking pot can save up to 700 gallons on another continent. By changing your habits, you can have a global impact.
Flip the Switch. Water is used to prepare coal, extract oil, and build solar panels. The energy that lights your homes is the top user of water, after agriculture. So conserving electricity is a double pat-on-the-back for you.
Go (Part-time) Vegetarian. A single burger uses up to 600 gallons of water. Taking meat off the menu one or two days a week will cut down on your water footprint (so to speak). So if youâve grown up in an Italian household like mine where vegetarianism will get you disowned, no problem: a part-time no-meat diet will do.
& Now the Basics⊠Turn off the faucet overtime you brush. I know youâve heard it before, but you can save up to 4 gallons every time you brush. Thats almost 3,000 gallons a year.
Today, over 2 billion people are living without clean drinking water at home, and over half of them draw from contaminated sources. 663 million people spend countless hours each day trekking and queuing to distant sources, effecting their health and education. Since our actions have a direct impact on the global supply, celebrate your World Water Day by spreading the word about these issues and the many ways to solve them.
Happy International Womenâs Day! Every March 8, the world celebrates the social, economic, and political achievements of women everywhere. For centuries, women around the world have become heroines of all shapes and sizes, reshaping their communities and achieving their goals. For over a hundred years, international communities have recognized this day as a time to honor their accomplishments and fight for gender equality. Today is the day to fight for womenâs rights, to global equity, education, and dignity. So what history will you make, on March 8, 2018?
My English class has been exploring a unit on the Harlem Renaissance. And since Black History Month has been celebrating black achievement for the past few weeks, heres a report on one of my favorite artistic time periods.Â
The Harlem Renaissance was a period of artistic and cultural revolution for the African-American community, originating in the NYC neighborhood of Harlem. In the early 20th century, African Americans mass-migrated to the North to escape poverty and racial segregation. They relocated in Northern cities such as Chicago, Detroit, and New York City, searching for jobs and housing. They found social and economic freedom where they came, especially in Harlem, a neighborhood of NYC. Harlem had previously housed rich white people, but low rent and open jobs allowed black migrants to fill the space instead.Â
Harlem fostered a new sense of community and identity within the African-American community. During the 1920s, this manifested into a period of significant artistic and literary achievement. Black writers, musicians, and artists found pride in their identity, using their work to celebrate black identity and culture. Though these figures faced obstacles because of their color, and racial bias was common, Harlem of the 20s was a social hotspot for African-Americans. Writers such as Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston (my personal favorites) wrote extensively on the themes of racism and African-American identity. Musicians like Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Bessie Smith shot to fame, performing blues and jazz in Harlem and other cities. They performed in Harlemâs vibrant clubs, a common scene featured in paintings such as Archibad J. Motleyâs iconic Nightlife.Â
Though these icons, and many more, were able to have successful careers, most black Americans were treated poorly. Down South, Jim Crow laws segregated people based on race, leaving non-whites with fewer rights and opportunities. Northern cities werenât legally segregated, but many African-Americans faced discrimination and lived in poverty. Change would come over long periods of time. But despite these challenges, African-American art and culture flourished for nearly a decade. Today, this inspiring and influential era would be known as the Harlem Renaissance.
Thank you so much for 100 followers!!! I didnât expect this much support within 6 months, thank you so so much! Sorry thereâs been a lapse in posting lately - theres a lot going on in my life right now, but expect some good stuff soon. Have a lovely day everyone! :D
Small Steps #2: Hygiene Edition
Turn off the water while brushing your teeth.
Use a washcloth for washing your face, rather than running the faucet.
In the shower, turn the water off while you wash yourself. Lather, then rinse at the end - more water saved in a shorter amount of bath time.
Rinse, lather, rinse, and youâre done. Little habits arenât so hard to break, or make; just keep these details in your head, and youâll remember more and more often when the time comes. That bit of extra effort will be good for your water bill and the environment. The effect of your actions isnât as small as you think, so letâs make sure itâs a good one.
Itâs Martin Luther King Jr. Day, everyone! Today we honor the legacy of one of the most inspiring and dedicated leaders of the Civil Rights Movement.Â
Before the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964, racial segregation was a part of daily American life. MLK Jr. saw the injustice in this, and wanted to fight against it. A preacher and an activist, as well as a loving husband and father, he dedicated his career to improving the lives of African-Americans. Sit-ins were jeered and people were arrested, but Mr. King continued his work. He encouraged many Americans, black and white, to fight for racial equality. In the end, they succeeded. Today we honor this manâs life, and the effect his message has had on America. The rightâs and opportunities of this great country should never be denied to anyone - Martin Luther King Jr. helped teach us that.Â
Thereâs something about a girl, some unspoken phenomenon. The unfathomable depth beneath words that makes you love her. Because all the gorgeous melancholy and unimaginable happiness makes her more than human. It makes you marvel at the wonders of creation. It is her resilience.
Welcome back - hope you had a happy January 1st! Everyone has been talking about their hopes for 2018. Iâve heard themes of unity, peace, and working towards a better future. Iâm happy that everyone is talking about about a better new year, but Iâve been thinking about something else.Â
Climate change is an issue that is more important than ever. To kick off the new year, I wanted to take us on a short, much-needed tour of what it is and what could happen. Hope this answers some questions~Â
True or False: Climate change is real.   True. Climate change refers to the change in global climate patterns, seen from the late 20th century onward. Increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are produced by fossil fuel emissions; as atmospheric gases damage the ozone layer, heat from the sunâs rays is trapped between the earth and space. More heat means warmer weather, and scientists everywhere agree that temperatures have risen drastically in recent years.   There will be many negative outcomes of climate change, especially if nothing is done to prevent it. The earthâs temperatures are changing too much and too fast, and so many places will suffer - if they arenât already. If a global effort to battle this issue doesnât kick in, weâll face the consequences.  Â
True or False: Humans have nothing to do with it.   False. Humans have everything to do with it: weâre the reason itâs happening. There are many harmful effects human activity has on the environment, and we have to understand what weâve done before we can decide what to do.   With rising populations, more resources will be needed to provide the worldâs population with food, transportation, medicine, and more. Countries need space to develop and harvest food for their citizens. Cars, trains, and other forms of transportation take people where they need to go every day. Public institutions like hospitals and schools are vital to a community. All these factors of daily life required energy sources and materials; often, those efforts end up creating excess waste.   Every day, humans produce trash just by going about their daily lives. Using a paper napkin, bagging groceries with plastic bags, ordering takeout - all these actions will result in something being thrown out. Our trash ends up in landfills, bodies of water, or as litter blowing around the street. When bits of plastic or other discarded materials make their way into the environment, habitats are polluted and species suffer. While we canât totally eliminate the waste we produce, we can make those numbers smaller. By reducing how much we use, reusing what we can, and recycling what we canât, we can make the environment a cleaner, healthier place.   âThe Greenhouse Effectâ refers to the increasing levels of atmospheric gases harming our planet. As I said before, increased amounts of gases cause heat from the sun to be trapped in the earthâs atmosphere - the main culprit of climate change. Many of our activities require the burning of fossil fuels, which emits carbon dioxide and other gases. But there are better ways to power your home or car, such as solar power instead of electricity, or vegetable oil rather than gas. Unless we switch to these renewable energies, the main cause of climate change will remain.  Â
True or False: Ecosystems and species will suffer.     True. A warming planet will negatively effect many environmental patterns, habitats, and species.   In the arctic, ice is melting at an alarming pace because of warmer temperatures. Sea levels are rising, endangering many land habitats and the animals who live there. Polar bears, for example, are loosing homes and hunting grounds because of climate change.   Heat waves, shifting rainfall patterns, and other weather-related events will become stronger. A warming planet causes more heat waves and droughts, while excess rainfall and worse storms have become more frequent in recent years. All these disasters will cause global ecosystems to suffer, forcing threatened species to migrate - or go extinct.   Everything in nature is connected. Rising temperatures cause more water to evaporate into water vapor, which makes up precipitation in storms and hurricanes. If more ice is melting, there is more water in the oceans, which contributes to that risk. Underwater temperatures are rising as well, which harms the inhabitants of coral reefs and other habitats.   When an animal or plant species faces extinction, the biodiversity of its habitat suffers. Species that depend on it may loose a vital food source; if that speciesâ population shrinks, those that depend on it will suffer as well. When the food web takes enough hits, the entire structure could unravel at the seams. Climate change and what it means for the natural world is an issue with multiple moving parts, and some of those could be disastrous.  Â
True or False: Climate change effects us. Â Â True. Rising sea levels threaten coastal cities, many of which could be underwater in just a couple of decades. Without biodiversity or stable ecosystems, the plants and animals we depend on for food could be wiped out in a similar time frame. Storms and other weather-related disasters have already damaged many peopleâs lives, and so many more would be uprooted. With these desperate possibilities, all your sic-fi movies could come true. Â Â
True or False: We canât do anything. Â Â 100% False. Thereâs so much we can do, as individuals and as an international community. But larger steps must be taken sooner, if we want to slow down this global catastrophe. Â Â Today, many people are âgoing greenâ, a term that refers to making more environmentally friendly and responsible decisions. Cutting down on how much you throw out, driving a car less often, and being conscientious about the effects of your actions all will lead to a healthier planet. Changes in your daily habits have a larger effect than you think. Â Â Human emissions of greenhouse gases are the main cause of climate change - energy transition is the key. Conversion to solar and wind power, among other alternatives, will offer more jobs and be safer for the environment. But while citizens are taking action, international policy isnât doing nearly enough. Society has put off action for so long, scientists say that the worst outcomes of climate change might not be that far off. Widespread change must happen ASAP, if we want a chance at winning the war against climate change. And that starts with you! Join organizations that do research on renewable energies, provide aid to damaged ecosystems, or advocate for government action. Find ways you can go green within your own home. Talk to others about what you know, and what needs to be done in the future. Â Â Â
The way I see it, all the rights in the world wonât matter if this planet isnât sustained - & that fate rests in our hands. My hope for 2018 is that people everywhere will crack down on preventing climate change. My New Yearâs resolution is to play my part by doing what I can for environmental efforts - I hope you will too. Happy New Year!Â