I was on a boat!!!
I have become a rather sloppy drunk as of late. Time to cut back.
(Source: xylogen)
The human family - originating in one small locale in East Africa a few million years ago - wandered, separated, diversified and became strangers to one another.
*** Therefore, there is no such thing a race. We are all African. The way we look now is only an adaptation to our environment.
Carl Sagan, Billions and Billions (via slychedelic)
(Source: abduccion)
Drew and jacob
this is too cute i cannot handle it uihregdfjkn
brittany!!!
(Source: tfc11)
I’m urchin everyone to stop making these!
[pleatedjeans, via]
Censorship Towel
Product concept is a flesh-coloured towel with pixelated pattern.
[link]
awesome
On thing my future home will have; a hammock. <3
agreed
(Source: chelsamander)
i <3
(Source: shygirl364)
Feminist Frequency - Tropes vs. Women: #1 The Manic Pixie Dream Girl
yesss. MPDG movies kill me.
I actually like this portrayal of women, well to an extent. It surely is better than the classic bimbo, whore with the heart of gold, or damsel in distress. At they are being seen as a solution to the problem instead of what is causing it.
(Source: erosum)
Package Free, Zero-Waste Grocery Store to Debut in Austin
I don’t get to toot my own city’s horn quite as much as I would like to, so I’ll gladly take that opportunity now. I recently heard about a new grocery store debuting this summer in Austin called In.gredients. They will be the first package-free and zero-waste grocery store in the United States, an idea with small footholds in Latin America and Europe.
I’m really intrigued by this idea. You bring in your own reusable containers for, well, everything. That means no package waste, which is a huge fraction of the waste that goes into our landfills. It means less processed foods, which support subsidized and often unhealthy corn and soy products, in addition to a bunch of unpronounceable chemicals. It means seasonal, local foods, reducing transportation costs, pollution and promoting natural agriculture. It means less food waste, since you only buy what you need, and you don’t throw away spoiled food.
This is an environmentally-friendly idea that I think could be adapted in almost any city. It could also give major grocery chains some ideas on how to improve their big box offerings.
I’d love to hear your thoughts. Is this an admirable but unscalable solution? Or is this something you’d like to see everywhere?
NICE!!!! so proud that this is in ATX!!!