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“Breathe. You’re going to be okay. Breathe and remember that you’ve been in this place before. You’ve been this uncomfortable and anxious and scared, and you’ve survived. Breathe and know that you can survive this too. These feelings can’t break you. They’re painful and debilitating, but you can sit with them and eventually, they will pass. Maybe not immediately, but sometime soon, they are going to fade and when they do, you’ll look back at this moment and laugh for having doubted your resilience. I know it feels unbearable right now, but keep breathing, again and again. This will pass. I promise it will pass.”
— Daniell Koepke (via thoughtkick)
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The Guildhall of Corpus Christi in Lavenham, England is a National Trust property and one of the finest timber-framed buildings in Britain. It reflects the town’s early 16th-century heyday when it had become wealthy from the export of woolen cloth to overseas markets.
In 1522 Lavenham boasted 24 merchants who would be considered millionaires today. At the same time, skilled artisans working for these clothiers earned four or fivepence per day and were rarely able to save more than a few shillings. (The more I learn about history, the more I think nothing ever changes.)
The bubble burst when European wars interrupted key export markets in the 1520s and ‘30s and a recession hit cloth manufacturing, forcing clothiers to lay off their workforce. Around 1525, Lavenham began to have demonstrations by unemployed men and women several thousand strong. The merchant families took their wealth elsewhere, investing in land and joining the gentry, and the town became an economic backwater. The poor folk who were left behind continued to live in the Tudor-era properties because they couldn’t afford to rebuild. This is why many of Lavenham’s timber-framed buildings are so well-preserved to this day.
This guildhall now houses a small museum of local history, but it was used in the past as a paupers’ jail, a workhouse, a tenement building, a factory, and a warehouse. It was restored by a local Baronet in the late 19th-century and served as a Red Cross refugee center and British restaurant for servicemen during the Second World War. Photos by Charles Reeza.
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Are you getting ahead or just getting some head to find faithful. Everybody's depressed, self perscribing their meds, I'm no angel.
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“A good person knows how to be kind when it is necessary. A warm person knows how to be kind for no reason at all.”
— juansen dizon
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If you want to say thank you, don’t say sorry
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Skate or Die // https://www.instagram.com/sunlightafterdark/?hl=en
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Fookin clean m8






Commande privée pour gravure sur skateboard.
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“There will always be someone who can’t see your worth. Don’t let it be you.”
— Unknown
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