fkyb:

thesilentdarkangel:

fkyb:

I love my life today!!! Science fair with the grades 1 and 2 that i mostly organized was a fucking SUCCESS, everything worked, kids were happy and engaged, and now to celebrate i am going to swim in the caribbean sea!!!! ❤😍

(Also i need to wash the scent of boiled cabbage out of my hair, but it was WORTH IT)

📣📣🎉🎉📣🎉🎉👍

……but why you have “scents of boiled cabbage” in your hair tho?

Because i spent all afternoon mixing boiled red cabbage juice with baking soda and vinegar to make it change color, and it smells baaaad, but it was worth it

please read. and please reblog.

juliawritesbooks:

writingsforwinter:

Please, please read.

3 years ago I wrote a very personal prose piece titled The Morning After I Killed Myself, about a young woman who commits suicide and looks back on the impact it has on her family and friends and ends up regretting her decision.
I posted it on my writing blog 3 years ago and it went viral, shared over 300,000 times on my blog and almost a million times on Imgur/Reddit. 

So many people have told me it’s saved their lives.

But I almost wish I hadn’t written it. Because, despite all the good it managed to do, it’s been plagiarized over a hundred times, probably several hundred.
I’ve seen dozens of cases of it being stolen and retitled with someone else’s name as the author, cases of it being published in someone else’s book under their name, cases of it being used as song lyrics by a band who claims they wrote it, cases of it being posted nearly ten times on the same website alone and because the website is so enormous they didn’t catch each instance of plagiarism…

Once a girl based her senior art thesis off of my piece…only she accidentally based it off of a plagiarized version of my piece and had no idea. She called me, a complete stranger, in tears, begging me to forgive her for something that was not her fault at all, but the fault of the person who plagiarized me. She had to redo portions of the thesis she worked so hard on.

I’ve had cases of it being submitted to writing contests under other peoples’ names and them winning awards for it. One girl submitted it to the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards and won a gold key for it, coincidentally the same contest I submitted some of my work to in high school and won awards for. What was her excuse? She said she read the piece awhile ago, liked it so much that she saved it to her computer, and when the time came to submit to the contest, she “forgot she hadn’t written it” and sent it in under her name.

I had a case of a stranger who posted it on their blog under their name and when I asked them, politely, to provide me with credit and remove their name, they claimed they’d “written the piece 10 years ago in their private journal and that I was the one who plagiarized them.”

I’ve had cases of people messaging my writing blog and accusing me of plagiarism…of my own piece, because they saw plagiarized versions of it going viral and had no idea I was the original author.

And finally, a few weeks ago, a girl submitted it to a contest under her name and won $100 for it. Now she’s apparently denying plagiarism.

This piece of mine was intended to help people. It’s a very very personal piece and always will be. I’m glad it’s helped so many people. But something that is so personal and painful for me has been twisted and manipulated and stolen and published for profit and taken away from me so many times I’ve lost count.
I don’t care about money. But when I saw this girl win $100 for a piece about suicide that I wrote, that is the last straw.

Please, for the love of god, don’t steal from artists and writers. Don’t steal something and claim you wrote it. Write and create your own work. If you see a piece of art or writing floating around with no source or a mis-attributed source, tell the original author. Spread the word. Don’t share artworks without sources on them. 

You might think that it’s not a big deal, that it doesn’t matter, that it only happened once.

But it happens all the time. All the time. This is exhausting and artists deserve credit. They deserve respect.

I’ve considered deleting the writing blog I’ve had for 5 years because of how often this piece is plagiarized.

Don’t let it get to that point, where someone considers getting rid of something they love because it’s hardly theirs anymore.

Thanks for reading.

Important.

fkyb:

andwebegin:

ANDWEBEGIN’S FAVOURITE TINCAN MOMENTS: Extended kiss

@andwebegin

Can kisses him back. Can kisses him back, and surely he must know the effect he’s having on Tin because his hand is cradling his neck like he wants to make sure he cannot escape, and he’s smiling the softest smile Tin ever saw on anyone, and it’s a smile for him, for Tin. This is not the look of someone that’s going to back up and pull away, Tin feels it in his gut, this is the same absurdly besotted and totally aware of it look that Tin thinks Can learned from him. They’re in this together now. A kiss like that cannot mean anything else, not when it’s directed at Tin’s lips and making Tin’s skin tingle with the want for more, not when he can feel Can’s pulse, calm and steady, beneath his own fingertips behind Can’s ear.

andwebegin:

weilongfu:

What does reblogging do? Seriously, I’m new to all of this and really just learned how to reboot something but the question remains what does it do for tumblr?

So one of the issues about tumblr (we’ll leave issues in policy, the bad apples, etc aside for now) is people saying that fandoms are dying. If your fandoms on tumblr are dying, then more people are likely to leave the website and go somewhere else to engage in fandom. 

And that’s true, fandoms come and go. It’s a natural part of the cycle.

But part of the reason why fandoms and such die out is that people stop creating material for the fandom. When there’s no more new material for a fandom, it stagnates. When it stagnates too long, people stop being in the fandom. 

But why stop creating? 

Because no one is actively viewing your material and helping to spread it through fandom. Rebloging on tumblr helps other people see what fandom creators are making. It also encourages creators because it gives comments and shows creators how people feel about their work. This is, of course, a double edged sword, but usually commentary is positive. Encouragement is important for people who create because it tells us that we’re doing something that people appreciate. 

Reblogs also do another important thing. They provide visibility to creators. Tags do as well, but searching tags on Tumblr is a special kind of annoying sometimes. I have no idea how the algorithm works sometimes because things I know I’ve tagged never seem to show up in some searches. :shrug: In any case visibility is great because it expands the base of people who look at your work and might appreciate it. They will then also potentially share it. And that’s how things get around in fandom. A chain of people sharing what they love. If you just hit the like button, the spread of content that you might think is spectacular stops and only reaches a tiny corner of fandom, making other parts think fandom is dying because new content is being created, but they aren’t seeing it.

Overall, the spread of new work is important to fandom because it encourages creators and ensures that everyone in fandom sees it at some point. Fandom dies when both things stop happening. 

Also, I did not expect to pause my workday to write this essay and I apologize to everyone for doing it.

We want to be seen. Please don’t keep us behind glass doors or under wraps, shunned away from society. We will suffocate from loneliness. If you are proud of us, we want to be flaunted, be shown around to all your cool friends. Treat us like we are the most precious diamonds in the universe and we promise you, what we will give in return will be worth it.

– excerpt from an unpublished book of a content creator

Today is a fresh start.

So I start with appreciating
a little bit more of what I have
and let go of the broken pieces of
yesterday.

I will find gentle joy
in the little things and I will
dance in the rain for I have faith
in the process.

I have faith
that recovery is possible for me.

I will survive.

Juansen Dizon, Affirmation For Depression (via juansendizon)