@8tm7ndwpnj@Pro__Trading@TMZ And are you in support of the social services and federal financial aid needed for the parents to care for these disabled children or is it just pro-birth with you simple lots and then leave the parents and children to struggle on their own after?
@Pro__Trading@TMZ advocating for bringing a disabled child into this world so he can call them retarded. Republicans’ arrested developments never get old.
@elonmusk put the audio post feature back on this app. Thanks, you hairless no-neck havin, chimpanzee. Face look like it was drawn from memory. When u swim on ur back at the beach shit look like a man o’ war. Hourglass ankles. Not tryna be mean though sorry.
Somewhere today, someone you barely remember is describing you to a person you'll never meet. They built a whole version of you out of one afternoon, and they still carry it around. You live inside hundreds of these little stories. You'll never hear one.
A researcher named Charles Cooley worked this out back in 1902. You build your entire sense of who you are by imagining how other people see you. Other people are the mirror. So the truest version of you has never really sat inside your own head. It has been living in theirs.
Your brain runs a quiet system for this. Get to know someone, and you build a small copy of them that you carry everywhere. You can hear their voice and guess what they'd say before they even say it. Everyone who knows you is doing the same thing with a copy of you. That copy keeps running after you leave the room. It keeps going after you leave their life, and sometimes after you leave the world.
And those copies stay busy. Scientists once recorded what people talk about all day. About two-thirds of it was other people who weren't even in the room. So at this exact moment, in a kitchen or a group chat you'll never see, someone is telling a story with you in it.
A 2018 study found something gentler. Almost everyone underestimates how much other people like them. We get so busy picking apart how we came across that we miss the other person walking away glad they met us. In their memory, you are the warm one. The cold version mostly lives in your own head.
Even dying does not switch this off. For most of the last hundred years, experts thought the job of grief was to slowly let the person go. In 1996, researchers found the opposite was healthier. We keep the people we lose alive inside us. We go on talking to them and telling their stories for years. About 1,500 years ago, a Roman writer named Boethius wrote that being forgotten is its own kind of death. People later put it plainer. You die twice. Once when your body stops, and once more, much later, the last time someone says your name.
So that ache you felt reading the phrase was pointing at something true. It never fully goes away. You spend a whole life leaving small pieces of yourself inside other people, and you never get to read a single one. The stories with your name in them will always outnumber the ones you hear. And they keep going after you stop.
Details on the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art
• Cost ~$1B to build
• Co-founded by George Lucas and his wife Mellody Hobson
• Entire campus is 11 acres
• Has ~700 trees
• Holds more than 40K works
• Has a life-size Naboo starfighter
• Has rare manga and comics including DC & Marvel
• 2 theaters
• 35 galleries
• 6x Oscar-nominated cinematographer Caleb Deschanel worked on the lighting
• Been in development for over a decade
• Opening to the public on September 22
“This is a museum of the people’s art—the images are illustrations of beliefs we live with every day. For that reason, this art belongs to everyone" — Mellody Hobson
📷 @voguemagazine
tudo nela é iconic porque é equilibrado: tem vida social e é ativa na medida certa nas redes, aproveita a vida fora das telas mas registra o suficiente a ponto de ficar aesthetic, faz turnês mundiais enquanto concilia seu relacionamento e, ainda por cima, aproveita pra viajar…