writer-on-hiatus:

if you’re going to urge people to think critically about the media they consume, you must accept that they might do that and come to a different conclusion to you.

the phrase ‘think critically…’ all too often comes with an unspoken assumption of ‘…and you’ll adopt my opinion, which is the right one’ which is both arrogant and contrary to the initial suggestion.

let people come to their own conclusions. you don’t have to adopt, support, or even like them but you should respect them.

(also stop assuming that people haven’t already ~thought critically~ about the media they consume before you deigned to show up. condescending intellectual elitism is not a good look.)

alwaysabeautifullife:

alwaysabeautifullife:

alwaysabeautifullife:

@patron-saint-of-smart-asses Is a vampire she is literally the subject of every painting in the 1900s EXPOSED

I WILL prove this later tonight

So some of the art styles are different and I screen shot these all from the same blog so credit to them for their posts but here are just some random examples I found through a quick scroll

VAMPIRE. Idk if u wanna attach a photo of yourself to further expose your vampire identity but

What do you think needs to be done to improve Catholic education and instruction? I’m noticing that converts to catholicism are typically much more devout and traditional than those born into the faith, and it seems to me like the reason is because of sub-standard instruction and education throughout their life.

patron-saint-of-smart-asses:

patron-saint-of-smart-asses:

I personally can’t comment too much on this, since I am not too well informed on what *exactly* is the problem. I do know that there are poor instructors who teach watered down morals and such, but that’s about it. My own response is to simply homeschool my kids and have them interact with local faithful through co-ops and church groups.

#from my pov as a religious education instructor we need better teaching materials#some of the stuff I’ve seen in the book I’m *supposed* to use#few of us actually follow the book#is borderline heresy#and barely goes into the topics at all#they had three pages on the Mass#and most of it was the drawings in the book#I’ve been borrowing soooo much from Seton to help flesh it out more

feenyxblue:

yourbigsisnissi:

the older i get the more it’s clear that being smart doesn’t get you very far if you’re not disciplined. there are tons of people who are brilliant but not disciplined. they have amazing ideas but cannot finish a project. they are creative and innovative but cannot execute a plan. i see how important it is to set deadlines and boundaries for myself an to be disciplined.

jurakan:

you-oughta-know:

I just realized all the kids growing up with Spotify don’t have to spend money on specific music anymore, so they probably won’t have the memory of saving up money to buy their first CD and having it be something super cringy…like I think I saved up $15 for three weeks to buy the Pirates of the Caribbean soundtrack at Barnes & Noble when I was 9 and I was really proud of myself for that. Add your first CD you were way too proud of buying in the tags

The PotC soundtrack rocks don’t cringe about that.

sabotabby:

s4wdust:

plantconstellations:

i imagine getting my own place all the time and going down to the grocery store early in the morning before everyone else and to the coffee shop and having a really small place with wide windows and lots of plants and shelves of books and a tiny kitchen where i can make tea and noodles and a bed with a pile of blankets and just a place i can make uniquely my own or maybe a place i could share with someone but i just think about this place a lot idk

One of my professors is an extremely famous, well-known painter who has been in galleries since he was a young man in the 80s. He once asked me in class, “Alyssa, what are your dreams and aspirations for the future?”

You should have seen the puzzled look on his face when I described something similar to the post above.

“Why so humble?!” He laughed. “You know you’re talented, right? You could aspire to a lot more than that for sure.”

And I had to take that moment to explain to him that this is what my generation is given, this is how low our standards for happiness have to be. A humble existence, a small piece of the world for ourselves, and comfortable stability are just as out of reach for some of us as fame and reknown was for him in the 80’s. His face went somber immediately.

Millennials are killing the dream industry.