chronichlesofnillory
chronichlesofnillory
chaotic 100 acre woods
6K posts
30s -- they/them -- lots of this and that
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chronichlesofnillory · 15 hours ago
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When it was discovered that Zalim (ironically meaning, cruel) was in the company of two very young cubs, those at Ranthambore feared the worst: that, as an adult male, he would kill them. Instead, he surprised naturalists with his “motherly” behavior when he took in his twin daughters following the death of their mother.
At this time, science stated that tigers were only as social as mothers and cubs could go and that tiger fathers rarely interacted with their offspring. Zalim changed that when he was witnessed, month after month, caring for his daughters and teaching them how to hunt. Their relationship eventually ceased when the two girls were shifted to Sariska Tiger Reserve and Zalim went on to father another litter with the then-dominant tigress Sundari, the so-called Lady of the Lakes. When she too mysteriously disappeared, Zalim unsurprisingly took care of their cubs as well.
Ranthambore National Park, India Photograph taken via camera trap
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chronichlesofnillory · 15 hours ago
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Tiger By: Unknown photographer From: Wildlife Fact-File 1990s
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chronichlesofnillory · 23 hours ago
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Ok, loves, so we've all got the message that joking about suicide is bad for your mental health. Now we need to get on "joking that the planet/all of humanity has no future" is bad for societal health/encouraging resistance to bad shit."
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chronichlesofnillory · 2 days ago
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chronichlesofnillory · 2 days ago
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Having a traumatic childhood means you cannot talk even objectively about your basic foundational experiences without it being "venting", even if you're not actually venting. You just straight up have a huge chunk of your life you can't talk about, full stop, without it being trauma dumping.
And it not being socially acceptable to talk about your own childhood is super alienating. Sometimes people want to know why, and any answer you can give them is going to be off putting.
It's to the point I get irritated when something I said is framed as venting when I'm literally just talking about my life experiences, doing my best to keep emotion out of it.
#oh we're all chatting about our favorite childhood memory and you say you had an unhappy childhood and everyone asks what do you#mean by that and you elaborate about some of the abuses you endured#just want to say that I think this is one of those “take the word away cause you're using it wrong” moments#trauma dumping is writing a youtube comment about your wife killing herself and the video is like the most common wedding song#or when someone is talking about how they love the lake and someone else talks about how they almost drowned and it was the most traumatic#experience of their life and no one asked them and they just sort of cut in and start blurting out how they could never swim again#trauma dumping is something where you're imposing OVER other people in an inappropriate situation#it's not#I had a friend once who would ask me “how's your day been” or “why are you sad” and I had to tell him to stop asking because whenever I tol#him the truth he got super weird about it and acted like I was “trauma dumping” and it wasn't until I went to literal therapy and was#talking about it with my therapist that she said he was the one with the problem not me#sharing your problems with friends and people who genuinely want to support you is NEVER trauma dumping#the emotional distance it puts between you and those close to you when you DON'T share those “trauma dumping” things is big and it is not#great for intimacy and bonding#if we all had more compassion and caring and stopped doing the “as your friend don't ask me to drive you to the airport” type shit#this wouldn't be an issue#you SHOULD be able to talk to your friends about fucked up shit that happened to you and you SHOULDN'T feel bad about it
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chronichlesofnillory · 2 days ago
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Solarpunk Activities for the Socially Anxious
 - Read up on the philosophical background(s) of solarpunk. I’ve got a bibliography page if you are looking for more. - Figure out which plants that are indigenous or endangered in your area. Read about their history (and if you can make seed bombs.) - Enjoy Alan Watts lecture on nature - Make a herb drying rack by using string and push pins. You can eat, burn or drink tea from the herbs. - Consider growing food from your scraps - Watch a Ted Talk on Conservation - Draw nature, real or imaginary. Take time to map out fantasy lands. (Think about it as an environmental vision board) - Consider if composting might be right for you - If you have houseplants, learn how to propagate them (or even just take the time to learn more about them…their history, and how best to care for them). If you do want to learn how to propagate, I suggest starting with succulents. They are hardy, fun, and fairly cheap. -Learn how to Talk to Trees with Charis Melina Brown - A National Geographic explainer on how trees talk to each other. - Listen to this amazing, free, nature meditation with Jessica Snow
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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this pride month i want everyone to consider the benefits of abolishing the sex binary
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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people will do/say the kindest thing you’ve ever witnessed then be like Sorry if that’s weird :(
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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Golden Lady 2019
Blueksy / Website / Youtube / Instagram
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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Summer Solstice (Ruslan Sonnov, 2023)
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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Hi! If you could travel anywhere in the world right now, free of charge and free to explore and learn, for sightseeing, cultural exchange or general enrichment, where would you go?
Whoa what an interesting question, thank you so much for asking!
Either Iceland or Aotearoa.
Iceland because it's a place my spouse and I both have a shared connection to, but with Aotearoa I've been in love with it since I was a child. I had to do a report for Model United Nations and I was given Aotearoa (which in the UN is of course still called New Zealand) and not only is the landscape incredible, the Maori peoples were the first to open my eyes to more than just the very sterile white culture I was raised in. Their cultural practices of tattooing sparked my interest in archeological tattooing practices and actually got me interested in learning more about the Indigenous peoples in the place I grew up in (San Diego) and that stuck with me everywhere I've moved since. I'd love to backpack through the country and camp in as many places as possible.
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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when I drew this comic 3 years ago I had NO idea how far it would reach. I'm happy to finally share a corrected version with proper abbreviations, and even MORE state names of indigenous origin ♥️
however, the goal of this comic was to inspire people to do your OWN research on indigenous history. To question everything we have been taught, and everything that has been pointedly left out. This erasure, this “forgetting”, of history is not just of the past… it is happening now. - Across so-called Canada, the US, and US-occupied islands, native women are victims of murder at 10-12x the rate of non-native people, and are the most likely to go missing without being searched for by the law. - Native reservations have the highest rates of poverty in the US, with over HALF of tribal homes with no access to clean water (with more joining this list by the year) - Native people are 6-10x more likely to be unhoused than the rest of the population, and native teens suffer suicide rates higher than any other demographic. This list of modern day genocide goes on (thank you for compiling @theindigenousanarchist <3) and yet take a look at those environmental stats!
Native people manage to do SO much for the planet as a whole - thanklessly - and with all this stacked against them. Don't even get me started on kin fighting in south america. Could you imagine if there was help? #landback is resistance to genocide, and it is the key to saving our warming earth.
So look into it and the other hashtags, cuz a cartoon goose ain't a substitute for a proper education. Love to my grandparents who always kept a map of tribal territories of turtle island on their wall, to speaking on our Tsalagi & Saponi heritage. Love & solidarity forever, happy research, and happy #indigenouspeoplesday
LANDBACK.ORG
(Also, if you care to support the artist, I'm publishing a book ! and writing another - a fantastical afroindigenous graphic novel - that I post exclusively about with tons of other art on my patreon.)
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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trees are very 🥺 because sometimes i’ll stand under the shade of a tree and look up at it and it’ll sway its branches about in the wind and i’m like oh my God i’m alive and YOU’RE alive. we are alive together and made up of the same starry stuff and standing right next to each other in this moment on this earth. do u feel it when i reach out and press my hand to your trunk? can you hear me? i think you’re so neat. and then the sunlight filters through its leaves just so and that lovely green color leaves me dazzled. it’s just very nice to be an alive thing next to a different sort of alive thing
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chronichlesofnillory · 3 days ago
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Hannah Close in conversation with Andreas Weber (2022)
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chronichlesofnillory · 4 days ago
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i keep thinking about this: maybe love isn’t a destination or a possession but an influence. a force that changes your shape. that helps you become. and when it’s gone, it doesn’t mean you’ve lost it. it means you’ve absorbed it. the people who leave don’t take it with them. they leave it behind in you.
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chronichlesofnillory · 4 days ago
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Altar Guardian (Making of)
Some time ago, I posted about the North German practice of the Bannkorb ((Spell)Binding Hive), a beehive adorned with a human face, which is supposed to keep evil spirits and honey thieves from a group of beehives.
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While researching, I came across a publication by Aladin Borioli, who took some stunning photos of extant examples in German museum collections. I cut some of these out from a brochure of his publishing house (spector books), which I plan to frame and hang in my flat.
I’ve been thinking a lot about binding practices and how in different spiritual practices figurines and statues guard holy and sacred places. Since I felt such a resonance with these hive-figures, I wanted to create a miniature Spellbinding Hive for my Altar Space.
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I collected a whole bunch of dandelion stems, that had already gone to seed and hung them up to dry. Once they were nice and crispy, I began braiding them into one long braid and startet sewing it to itself.
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I’m currently in the process of forming the basket-structure. The next step will be to form the face/mask and attach it to the finished miniature hive.
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