I love him, your honor.
[ID: a tiny blue and white porcelain triceratops with gold horns]
I love him, your honor.
[ID: a tiny blue and white porcelain triceratops with gold horns]
Actually, people are good by nature and you’re a fool if you think otherwise.
When you sneeze in public, strangers will say “bless you”, even though they don’t know you.
When you ask for directions on the street someone will show you the way, even though they have nothing to gain from it.
People squeeze their legs against the chair so you don’t have to hop over them on your way to your seat in the theatre, and make funny faces to make babies laugh, and purposefully step on leaves to hear them scrunch, and hold the door open for someone leaving behind them, and ask what floor you’re heading to when you enter the elevator, and send others photos of things that reminded them of them, and recommend each other songs, and ask if anyone else wants a coffee because they’re getting one, and make videos teaching how to sew a button, and wish on shooting stars, and share fun facts, and listen to others rant about things they don’t even understand, and let you cross the street first, and give a bit of their food to others, and laugh at jokes they don’t find funny to make you feel good, and listen to kids talk for hours about nonsense, and let you know your keys fell from your pocket, and they may be strangers, but with every little gesture they’re saying “I love you, I love you, I love you”.
God, I needed to read this today. Humanity is overwhelmingly full of hope and kindness and it’s very easy to forget that these days.
not to be a sap or anything but this particular piece of little mermaid trivia does something to me
Quarles’ emblems illustrated by Charles Bennett and W. Harry Rogers, 1861
It feels like the right time to posts this. I made this fold-up zine with a poster inside in reaction to some incredibly damaging acts of systemic transphobia that occurred in my offline world a few years ago.
The text is adapted from a post by @covington-shenanigans. I hope it’s okay to post here. Thank you for your brilliant words of solidarity and reassurance.
This zine/poster project is a collage that involves the work of many different artists. I’m not sure what the best citation practices are for collage works (which is why I’ve never posted this before now).
Close up images of each page are below.
They’ll never kill us all.
@roach-works // Melissa Broder, "Problem Area" // Mary Oliver, "The Return" // @annavonsyfert // Koyoharu Gotouge, Demon Slayer // Haruki Murakami, Dance Dance Dance // David Levithan, How They Met and Other Stories // Tennessee Williams, Notebooks