Elements
By KcD Studios - on tumblrThese are the characters that illustrate the comic book of life, one chemical at a time.
(via divertingdiversions)
Elements
By KcD Studios - on tumblrThese are the characters that illustrate the comic book of life, one chemical at a time.
(via divertingdiversions)
boreout
+ Boreout consists of three elements: boredom, lack of challenge, and lack of interest.
+ Those suffering from boreout are “dissatisfied with their professional situation” in that they are frustrated at being prevented, by institutional mechanisms or obstacles as opposed to by their own lack of aptitude, from fulfilling their potential (as by using their skills, knowledge, and abilities to contribute to their company’s development) and/or from receiving official recognition for their efforts.
Time to die.
(Source: fhlostonsparadise, via merlin)
- There are no green stars. (more)
- While there aren’t green stars, there *are* green objects in space! (more)
- When 3 celestial bodies align, like in an eclipse, it’s called a “syzygy”.
- Earth has aurorae, but other planets do too. For Jupiter, its moons play a role: (more)
- It would take almost 9 years to walk to the Moon. If there were a road 400,000 km long.
- There are 88 official constellations, the same number as keys on a piano.
- There’s no real definition of how far over your head the sky starts.
- On the surface of a neutron star, the gravity is so strong you’d weigh several *billion* tons.
- There are hundreds of billions of planets in our galaxy. (more)
- Four planets in the solar system have rings: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. (more)
- Mars is red due to the presence of large amounts of iron oxide: rust! (more)
- Over 500 people have flown into space - about 0.000007% of the world’s population.
- Where “space” starts - the Kármán line - is 100 km above Earth’s surface.
- The first stars in the Universe formed about 400 million years after the Big Bang. (more)
- The Earth is warming up. (more)
- Every time a comet goes around the Sun, it dies a little bit. (more)
- The Earth is 3.7x the Moon’s diameter, 50x its volume, and 81x its mass.
- A green aurora is due to electrons recombining with oxygen atoms high in the air. (more)
- Brown dwarfs aren’t brown. They’re red. Really, really red. (more)
- If you stand on your tiptoes, the horizon is about 5 km (3 miles) away. (more)
- Pluto is smaller than our own Moon, yet has (at least) four moons of its own. (more)
- The core of the Sun is 15 million degrees Centigrade - that’s 27 million degrees F.
- By combining three equations, you can describe the overall evolution of the Universe. (more)
- The Moon orbits the earth at a velocity of about 1 km/sec, roughly as fast as a rifle bullet.
I live on Earth at present,
and I don’t know what I am.
I know that I am not a category.
I am not a thing—a noun.
I seem to be a verb,
an evolutionary process—
an integral function of the universe.
—R. Buckminster Fuller (via nevver)
(via nevver)
I really, REALLY wish you could read this article about a father who started wearing skirts because his son likes to wear skirts and dresses and he wants his son to feel stronger
Like, holy shit, the end made me feel so happyI took the liberty to translate the text.
Please note that it’s not a word to word translation.
Sometimes men simply have to be role models.
Because his son likes to wear skirts Nils Pickert started with it as well. After all, the little one needs a role model. And he thinks long skirts with elastic bands suit him quite well anyways. A story about two misfits in the Province of southern Germany.
My fife year old son likes to wear dresses. In Berlin Kreuzberg that alone would be enough to get into conversation with other parents. Is it wise or ridiculous? „Neither one nor the other!“ I still want to shout back at them. But sadly they can’t hear me any more. Because by now I live in a small town in South Germany. Not even a hundred thousand inhabitants, very traditional, very religious. Plainly motherland. Here the partiality of my son are not only a subject for parents, they are a town wide issue. And I did my bit for that to happen.
Yes, I’m one of those dads, that try to raise their children equal. I’m not one of those academic daddies that ramble about gender equality during their studies and then, as soon as a child’s in the house, still relapse into those fluffy gender roles: He’s finding fulfilment in his carrier and she’s doing the rest.
Thus I am, I know that by now, part of the minority that makes a fool of themselves from time to time. Out of conviction.
In my case that’s because I didn’t want to talk my son into not wearing dresses and skirts. He didn’t make friends in doing that in Berlin already and after a lot of contemplation I had only one option left: To broaden my shoulders for my little buddy and dress in a skirt myself. After all you can’t expect a child at pre-school age to have the same ability to assert themselves as an adult. Completely without role model. And so I became that role model.
We already had skirt and dress days back then during mild Kreuzbergian weather. And I think long skirts with elastic bands suit me quite well anyways. Dresses are a bit more difficult. There was either no reaction of the people in Berlin or it was positive. In my small town in the south of Germany that’s a little bit different.
Being all stressed out, because of the moving I forgot to notify the nursery-school teachers to have an eye on my boy not being laughed at because of his fondness of dresses and skirts. Shortly after moving he didn’t dare to go to nursery-school wearing a skirt or a dress any more. And looking at me with big eyes he asked: “Daddy, when are you going to wear a skirt again?”
To this very day I’m thankful for that women, that stared at us on the street until she ran face first into a street light. My son was roaring with laugher. And the next day he fished out a dress from the depth of his wardrobe. At first only for the weekend. Later also for nursery-school.
And what’s the little guy doing by now? He’s painting his fingernails. He thinks it looks pretty on my nails, too. He’s simply smiling, when other boys ( and it’s nearly always boys) want to make fun of him and says: “You only don’t dare to wear skirts and dresses because your dads don’t dare to either.” That’s how broad his own shoulders have become by now. And all thanks to daddy in a skirt.
I hope it’s alright like this.
Translated version for y’alls liking
ohhh my little black heart
(via mrsexsmith)
“Find a passing spaceship, get rescued by it.” - Ford Prefect
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