Just showing my likes and interests. Name: Nia Age:Unknown. Birthplace: Venus Species: Take a guess Lives in NYC ...Ask away I do not not bite! :)
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I’m gonna love you forever, I know that.
Things He Once Said To Me (via paragon-paradoxon)
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Tell me you love me, come back and haunt me Oh, and I rush to the start Running in circles, chasing our tails Coming back as we are
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INVISIBLE BRIDGES: LIFE ALONG THE CHINESE-RUSSIAN BORDER
In the summer of 2014, Davide Monteleone, an Italian photographer who had lived in Moscow for more than a decade, began to travel to the Russian-Chinese border in search of something that felt real and reliable. “I had been covering the uprising in Ukraine, and then the civil war and the occupation of Crimea,” he told me. “I was disturbed by how hard it was to remain neutral when there was so much press attention. I felt like whatever I did was going to be used for propaganda. So I thought about doing something far away.” After the European Union and the United States levied sanctions against Russia, the country began signing high-profile gas and trade agreements with China. “There were a lot of articles in Russia about this new friendship between Russia and China,” Monteleone said. “So I figured, let’s go and see what’s going on. Is this relationship real?”
Over the past two centuries, there have been periodic tensions between Russia and China, including some serious border conflicts, and historically Russia has usually held the upper hand. But nowadays, at the personal level, Monteleone notices a different dynamic. “In a remote place like this, the Russians just wait for something that is going to happen, while the Chinese try to do something,” he said. This disparity seemed to shape the interpersonal dynamics of many Russian-Chinese couples that Monteleone met on his travels.
In Blagoveshchensk, he spent time with a Chinese businesswoman who runs a small empire of Russian hotels and restaurants. Back in her hometown of Harbin, she has a husband and a child, but across the border she has acquired a kind of modern-day concubine—a Russian husband, along with another child. “I suspected that the Russian husband—it’s also for practical reasons,” Monteleone said. “Chinese cannot open companies in Russia if they don’t have a Russian partner.” He found it fascinating to watch them interact: “She was saying, ‘Go and get the car!’ ‘Bring me there!’ ‘Call this person!’ He was a husband, but at the same time he was an employee. She was speaking Russian, but in a strange accent.”
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I fucking loved you and you hurt me again
(via hippii)
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Perhaps home is not a place but simply an irrevocable condition.
James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room (via psych2go)
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“I’ve got nothing to do today but smile.”
Paul Simon (via goodreadss)
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I like this version of Rosie The Riveter better. ❤️
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For more posts like these, go to @mypsychology
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For more posts like this, come visit @mypsychology
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Skai Jackson, “Paper Magazine” by Jiro Schneider
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OMG! This is adorable! Reblog if you’re going to take care of your child’s natural hair when you have a child, so that their hair can flourish in all of its natural swag!
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