Birth Month:
- Jan – The weathered bone
- Feb – The stained glass window
- Mar – A wolf’s howl
- Apr – The fog on the moors
- May – The sanctuary of the abandoned cathedral
- June – The bloodied locket
- July – A scream from within the forest
- Aug – The churning sea
- Sept – The fire’s last embers
- Oct – An old clocktower
- Nov – A mountain’s wind
- Dec – A saint’s weeping
Color of The Top You’re Wearing*:
- Red – smells strongly of flesh and rot.
- Orange – is set afire when you look toward it.
- Yellow – causes a ringing in your head that grows as you approach it.
- Green – offers to make a pact.
- Blue – demands a sacrifice.
- Violet – causes blood to drip from your eyes.
- White – whispers hymns of the old gods gently in your ears.
- Grey – hums with grief.
- Black – pardons you of your sins.
*if patterned/multicolored, choose the closest base colour, or most prominent.
based off this post
The sanctuary of the abandoned cathedral demands a sacrifice.
What a good writing prompt. I need to do something with that.
Tag: i love this.
put in the tags the first thing that comes up when u type “i am,” “i’m not,” “i love,” “i hate,” and “i wish”
Kintsugi objects
Kintsugi
(golden joinery) or Kintsukuroi (golden repair) is the Japanese art of
repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered
gold, silver, or platinum. As a philosophy it treats breakage and repair
as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.
The story behind the viral photo of Muslim and Jewish children protesting at O’Hare
Bendat-Appell brought his son to the airport after his weekly swimming lesson to help show the boy how to stand up for what they believe in. The boy’s maternal grandparents were Holocaust survivors who spent time in refugee camps, Bendat-Appell said. And as a rabbi at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality in New York, Bendat-Appell said he believes strongly in using history to guide actions.
Yildirim, a store manager from Schaumburg, had come to the airport with his wife and four children to bring cookies to the lawyers offering pro bono services to immigrants that had been detained.
[…]
When the children jumped off their father’s shoulders, Adin happily approached the little girl and asked her name. Meryem, a bit shy, managed a “hello” before the fathers exchanged phone numbers.
When they started hearing from hundreds of friends and acquaintances, they texted each other, in awe of the way the small moment became momentous.
As the response grew, they spoke on the phone and finalized plans for a Shabbat dinner at the Bendat-Appells’ home next week.
The story behind the viral photo of Muslim and Jewish children protesting at O’Hare