whereevershegoes
With Rings On Her Fingers & Bells On Her Toes
753 posts
She Will Make Music
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
whereevershegoes · 1 year ago
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Mean Girls (2004) dir. Mark Waters
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whereevershegoes · 2 years ago
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Black cats are lucky. (via leahweissmuller)
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whereevershegoes · 3 years ago
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dark chocolate raspberry cookies
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whereevershegoes · 3 years ago
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When I enter a bookstore
My heart: 
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My Bank Account: 
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whereevershegoes · 4 years ago
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Just wanted to share this from Diet Prada on Instagram...
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Resources and Donations:
https://www.advancingjustice-aajc.org/
https://www.asianamericanadvocacyfund.org/
http://cpacs.org/
https://www.asianmhc.org/about-us
https://secure.qgiv.com/for/apfund/mobile
https://actionnetwork.org/fundraising/support-georgias-asian-american-community/
https://www.napawf.org/donate
https://www.apalanet.org/
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whereevershegoes · 4 years ago
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Special IG Giveaway: We’re giving away three limited edition, *out of print* Harper Perennial Olive editions by Roxane Gay, Linda Hirshman, and Baratunde Thurston to highlight voices that need to be heard! (For US followers, please VOTE!!) This is a special giveaway for macrolit followers who are following on both Tumblr and Instagram.  Enter to win these classics by: 1) following macrolit on Tumblr and on Instagram (yes, we will check. :P), and 2) reblogging this post and adding your Instagram profile as a tag. We will choose a random winner on October 24, so reblog now! And yes, we’ll ship to any country! Easy, right? Good luck! :D For our Tumblr-only followers, here’s our regular giveaway of 15 paperback classics! 
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whereevershegoes · 4 years ago
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Sooo.. not to be That Person, but. The Lost Baby Incident of 2012? 👀
look i am not a perfect babysitter
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whereevershegoes · 5 years ago
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A Home of Amethyst and Rain
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whereevershegoes · 5 years ago
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whereevershegoes · 5 years ago
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ok universe, i’m ready to feel good things. make me feel good things.
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whereevershegoes · 5 years ago
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i dont get offended at white people jokes even though im white because: 
i can recognize white people as a whole have systemically oppressed POC in america, which is where i live 
most people when they make white people jokes only mean the shitty white people and i am not a shitty white person 
im not a pissbaby
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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This is my cat, Brigitte.
24 hours after I brought her home, I got a mindblowing job offer.  Since I adopted her nine years ago, my life has become an amusement park.  She has brought me good luck ever since I took her into my home.
I’m telling you, there’s something about this animal.  Good fortune follows her everywhere.
I don’t want to be selfish.  I have everything I need and then some.  So, I’m sharing her with you.
Reblog Brigitte and you’ll receive fantastic news in the next 24 hours.
And when you do, please remember to help your local SPCA and support them in the difficult work they do for wonder animals like Brigitte.  Any donation helps your SPCA, even if it’s just five bucks.
Kitties like Brigitte are counting on you to give back when they bring you good luck.
Thanks, and congratulations on your good news!
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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pride and prejudice: a summary 
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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Giveaway Contest: We’re giving away fifteen trade-sized paperback classics! Won’t this collection look lovely on your shelf? :D To win these classics, you must: 1) be following macrolit on Tumblr (yes, we will check. :P), and 2) reblog this post. We will choose a random winner on February 24, at which time we’ll start a new giveaway. And yes, we’ll ship to any country. Easy, right? Good luck!
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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Mr. Rogers testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Communications on PBS funding, May 1st, 1969
Senator Pastore: Alright Rogers, you’ve got the floor.
Mr. Rogers: Senator Pastore, this is a philosophical statement and would take about ten minutes to read, so I’ll not do that. One of the first things that a child learns in a healthy family is trust, and I trust what you have said that you will read this. It’s very important to me. I care deeply about children.
Senator Pastore: Will it make you happy if you read it? Mr. Rogers: I’d just like to talk about it, if it’s alright. My first children’s program was on WQED fifteen years ago, and its budget was $30. Now, with the help of the Sears-Roebuck Foundation and National Educational Television, as well as all of the affiliated stations – each station pays to show our program. It’s a unique kind of funding in educational television. With this help, now our program has a budget of $6000. It may sound like quite a difference, but $6000 pays for less than two minutes of cartoons. Two minutes of animated, what I sometimes say, bombardment. I’m very much concerned, as I know you are, about what’s being delivered to our children in this country. And I’ve worked in the field of child development for six years now, trying to understand the inner needs of children. We deal with such things as – as the inner drama of childhood. We don’t have to bop somebody over the head to…make drama on the screen. We deal with such things as getting a haircut, or the feelings about brothers and sisters, and the kind of anger that arises in simple family situations. And we speak to it constructively. Senator Pastore: How long of a program is it? Mr. Rogers: It’s a half hour every day. Most channels schedule it in the noontime as well as in the evening. WETA here has scheduled it in the late afternoon. Senator Pastore: Could we get a copy of this so that we can see it? Maybe not today, but I’d like to see the program. Mr. Rogers: I’d like very much for you to see it. Senator Pastore: I’d like to see the program itself, or any one of them. Mr. Rogers: We made a hundred programs for EEN, the Eastern Educational Network, and then when the money ran out, people in Boston and Pittsburgh and Chicago all came to the fore and said we’ve got to have more of this neighborhood expression of care. And this is what – This is what I give. I give an expression of care every day to each child, to help him realize that he is unique. I end the program by saying, “You’ve made this day a special day, by just your being you. There’s no person in the whole world like you, and I like you, just the way you are.” And I feel that if we in public television can only make it clear that feelings are mentionable and manageable, we will have done a great service for mental health. I think that it’s much more dramatic that two men could be working out their feelings of anger – much more dramatic than showing something of gunfire. I’m constantly concerned about what our children are seeing, and for 15 years I have tried in this country and Canada, to present what I feel is a meaningful expression of care. Senator Pastore: Do you narrate it? Mr. Rogers: I’m the host, yes. And I do all the puppets and I write all the music, and I write all the scripts – Senator Pastore: Well, I’m supposed to be a pretty tough guy, and this is the first time I’ve had goose bumps for the last two days. Mr. Rogers: Well, I’m grateful, not only for your goose bumps, but for your interest in – in our kind of communication. Could I tell you the words of one of the songs, which I feel is very important? Senator Pastore: Yes. Mr. Rogers: This has to do with that good feeling of control which I feel that children need to know is there. And it starts out, “What do you do with the mad that you feel?” And that first line came straight from a child. I work with children doing puppets in – in very personal communication with small groups:
What do you do with the mad that you feel? When you feel so mad you could bite. When the whole wide world seems oh so wrong, and nothing you do seems very right. What do you do? Do you punch a bag? Do you pound some clay or some dough? Do you round up friends for a game of tag or see how fast you go? It’s great to be able to stop when you’ve planned a thing that’s wrong. And be able to do something else instead, and think this song –
‘I can stop when I want to. Can stop when I wish. Can stop, stop, stop anytime….And what a good feeling to feel like this! And know that the feeling is really mine. Know that there’s something deep inside that helps us become what we can. For a girl can be someday a lady, and a boy can be someday a man.’
Senator Pastore: I think it’s wonderful. I think it’s wonderful. Looks like you just earned the 20 million dollars.
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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Watch: Latina journalist Maria Hinojosa epically shuts down a condescending Trump adviser on the word “illegals”
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whereevershegoes · 6 years ago
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