ねむいの…… 2018年 ソフトパステル、色鉛筆、紙 150×150mm https://ift.tt/3k80JNN #動物 #animal #pastel #猫 #cat #thisisgallery #作品価格の10%募金 #国境なき医師団
Illustration for the New York Times.
I keep thinking about this video. All 3 contestants heard the question as “who does America owe money to for its crimes?” and they all gave correct answers. But the question was actually about a “bad country” for something incredibly tame in comparison.
bold of my professors to assume i can read
t-shirt that says "i rely on pharmaceutical drugs to preform routine tasks"
From: Lawrence, S., (2020), Witch’s Garden, Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, p.133:
“Goblins’ thimbles, fairy weed, snoxums, snompers, fairy’s petticote - the local nicknames for Digitalis have to be some of the most evocative of all plants.
“It’s a clever plant; the female flowers at the bottom of the stems contain the most nectar, persuading the bees to visit there first and then work their way up the flower spike to the male flowers, pollinating as they go…
“…It was unlucky to bring foxgloves, especially white ones, into the house, as it encouraged witches. they could be useful, however, in a somewhat risky method of identifying a changeling. The child was given three drops of foxglove juice, put on a shovel and swung out of the front door three times, the parents crying, “If you are a fairy, away with you!” If the child was a changeling, it would die. If it was a human, it would be traumatised for the rest of its life. The child would be ill, at the very least. Digitalis contains toxins, including cardiac glycosides, which increase heart rate. Nausea, headaches, diarrhoea and visual, heart and kidney problems are just some of the symptoms caused by ingesting the plant. Nevertheless, the leaves were useful to bind around fresh wounds. Placed in a child’s shoes, they were said to guard against scarlet fever.
“While those cardiac glycosides could be fatal, others have been developed into pharmaceutical drugs. it’s possible the Egyptians knew about foxglove’s ability to stimulate the heart - but in 1775, Dr. William Withering, searching for treatments for dropsy (oedema), began systematic trials using Digitalis. The resulting An Account of the Foxglove and some of its Medical Uses (1785) proved a game changer in the treatment of certain heart conditions. His memorial, in St. Bartholomew’s churchyard in Edgbaston, is carved with foxgloves.”
(These plants are extremely dangerous. Do not attempt to use them in any kind of home remedy, and use gloves if you do have to handle them)
When your friends are ur muses
take me to the lakes
where all the poets went to die
i don't belong and my beloved neither do you
those windermere peaks
look like a perfect place to cry
i’m setting off, but not without my muse
t.s. - the lakes.
Susan Sontag, Reborn: Journals and Notebooks, 1947-1963
sleepy girls club™