Literally WHY Would Elizabeth Swann Go Back To Living On Shore As A Fancy Lady Waiting For Will To Come
literally WHY would elizabeth swann go back to living on shore as a fancy lady waiting for will to come home every ten years. why does disney expect me to believe that
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Anna Karenina & Alexei Vronsky in Anna Karenina. Vronsky story (tv mini-series, Russia, 2017)







Some Indigenous superheroes for Indigenous Peoples Day
Supporting Native Organizations on Indigenous Peoples’ Day
It’s Indigenous Peoples’ Day (#f*ckColumbus) - what better way to commemorate the day and show solidarity than to support Native organizations and social media accounts. I’ve put together the following list to help get you started:
Native Roots Farm Foundation (https://www.nativerootsde.org/): A non-profit organization dedicated to “celebrating Native American cultures, protecting open space, cultivating a public garden, and practicing sustainable” founded by fellow alum Courtney Streett ‘09
SLC Air Protectors (@SLCAir): Native-led 501c3 that addresses the air pollution in Utah, while supporting Indigenous stewardship; Venmo: SLC-AirProtectors
Indigenous Peoples Day NYC (https://ipdnyc.org/): A 24 hour celebration of dance, culture, and ceremony on Lanapehoking/Randall’s Island, NYC
Lakota People’s Law Project (IG: @lakotalaw)
Honor the Earth (https://www.honorearth.org/)
Indigenous Food Lab (IG: @indigenousfoodlab): An org focused on creating access to Indigenous education & foods
Tewa Women United (https://tewawomenunited.org/): Located in the Tewa homelands, the org works to grow community and end violence against women, girls, and the earth
Indigenous Women Rising (https://www.iwrising.org/): An org focused on sexual health and reproductive justice accessibility for Native families
Native American Rights Fund (https://www.narf.org/): “Since 1970, the Native American Rights Fund (NARF) has provided legal assistance to Indian tribes, organizations, and individuals nationwide who might otherwise have gone without adequate representation.”
Indian Law Resource Center (https://indianlaw.org/)
Land Rights Now (https://www.landrightsnow.org/): An org that mobilizes and engages active citizens, media, communities and organizations worldwide to promote and secure the land rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities.
American Indian College Fund (https://collegefund.org/)
Indigenous Environmental Network (https://www.ienearth.org/)
Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women (IG: @csvanw; https://www.csvanw.org/)
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women USA (https://mmiwusa.org/)
Partnership with Native Americans (http://www.nativepartnership.org/site/PageServer?pagename=pwna_home): A 501 ©(3) nonprofit organization “committed to championing hope for a brighter future for Native Americans living on remote, isolated and impoverished reservations.”
Native American Heritage Association (https://www.naha-inc.org/): NAHSA is a charitable non-profit organization dedicated to “helping Native American families in need living on Reservations in South Dakota and Wyoming”
Inuit Tapirit Kanatami (https://www.itk.ca/help-inuit-communities-thrive/): Works to improve the health and wellbeing of Inuit in Canada “through research, advocacy, public outreach and education.”
Native Wellness Institute (https://www.nativewellness.com/)
Warrior Women Project (https://www.warriorwomen.org/)
The Redhawk Native American Art Council (https://www.redhawkcouncil.org/): A not for profit organization “founded and maintained by Native American artists and educators serving the tristate [New York] area.”
Indigenous People’s Power Project (https://www.ip3action.org/who-we-are/): A nonviolent direct action training and support network “advancing Indigenous communities’ ability to exercise their inherent rights to environmental justice, cultural livelihood, and self-determination”
Alaska Rising Tide (IG: @alaskarisingtide)
Native Womens Wilderness (IG: @nativewomenswilderness; https://www.nativewomenswilderness.org/): A nonprofit organization with the purpose of “inspiring and raising the voices of Native Women in the Outdoor Realm.”
Sacramento Native American Health Center (https://www.snahc.org/)
here’s some cryptid pevensie headcanons because the idea lives rent free in my head:
🙧 the first year in narnia, peter quickly learns to be careful of his own strength. at thirteen years old, he can summon up the strength of a fully grown man. it’s humorous at first when he accidentally breaks a glass or throws a battle axe through the target, but as he grows older, his strength grows with him; golden hair and a blue-sky smile belie the strength of river-gods and wolf jaws. it is said that he can best the giants in sheer physical strength, and that the bones of narnia’s enemies seem to crack in two in the high king’s grasp.
🙧 it’s little children who first begin to giggle that queen susan can tell what trouble they’re going to get into before they even start it. they talk of how her eyes seem to cloud over like the the sky before a rainshower and her voice turns firm and unfinching as oak wood, giving them a little fright until she shakes her head and laughs her sunshine laugh, reminding them not to swim very far across the river. mothers know the look in her eyes; soldiers learn to watch for it, to mark the moments where disaster may come swiftly and they must trust in the gentle queen’s uncanny vision.
🙧 it starts out as a game, as a wine-drunk faun sends a goblet flying off the table at a feast one night. edmund catches it without looking, without spilling so much as a drop. at first, he favors it as a party trick, something to make his siblings laugh - he can catch anything with ease, even with his eyes closed. but as he grows older, the quiet king’s eagle-keen senses grow ever sharper. soldiers will sit around their campfires and tell tales of the just king who parries the fastest swing of an enemy’s blade and catches flying arrows by the shaft before they hit their mark.
🙧 lucy learns a language that no one in narnia knows besides the land itself; she learns to speak the language of the trees and the rivers and the sea. she does not realize when she switches tongues; when she first learned to speak it, her siblings feared she was going mad. now all of narnia knows that when the little queen hums and trills in strange, wild tones, the very earth will respond; narnia’s enemies become wary of the ground the walk on and the sea that takes them home, lest the valiant queen speak it to life and bid it swallow them whole.













What did we do to deserve Bill Nye