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#juliet inkwell
gothpidgin · 11 months
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Lora had a birthday and nothing changed
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pja-party · 2 months
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I spent alot times explaining to my friends why Victor and Juliet are Walter's biological parents.
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Because they said Walter doesn't look like them.
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-Walter's nose colour is bright as his mom , but same blue tones with his dad.
- Same eyes as dad
- His face shape is from his mother (round)
- Handle like his dad.
- His face colour is mixed (sorta) , Grey
-
So Victor and Juliet, you are his parents!
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ask-cupbros-parents · 10 months
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Athena & Juliet when they were younger ( Athena 15, Juliet 20+)
Athena became a knight of the Calix Order when she was 12.
Outfit reference from "Rider" in Centaurworld
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Congratulations on 200 followers dear! Requesting a Carolina Reaper with Shakespeare and Natasha as Romeo and Juliet
And the last of the follower celebration flash fiction. Word count limit? We don’t need no steenkin’ word count limit.
The gentle patter of soil against the window pulled Natasha’s attention from her journal entry. She laid down her pen and stoppered the inkwell before crossing to open the casement, grinning with anticipation.
“Soft, what light through yonder window breaks?” The tall figure lurked in the shadow of the trees in the garden. His voice was not loud, but pitched to carry to her ears alone. “It is the east, and Natasha is the sun.”
Natasha smothered a giggle behind her hand. “What man art thou, thus bescreened in night?”
“I know not how to tell thee who I am.” William Shakespeare emerged from the shadows to stand in the light spilling from the window. His gold right eye caught the light and gleamed up at her. Natasha leaned on the window skill to smile down at him.
“I know thee, William, and well. How camest thou hither?” The archaic cadence came easily to her lips after weeks of conversation with the man below her. 
Vampiric speed and strength served him well; a running jump and he had caught the sill next to her elbow. A moment’s pull and he swung himself up to sit next to her, feet dangling into the bedroom. “With love’s light wings did I o’erperch these walls, for stony limits cannot hold love out.” He leaned down to brush his lips against hers in chaste greeting, but Natasha had other ideas, sliding her arm over his waist and pushing up against him to deepen the kiss. He was flushed when at last they broke apart, with surprise and yearning.
“Fair lady, thou hast stolen mine initiative and the scene. ‘Tis I who should be the aggressor.”
“William, thinkest thou the only one here who craves the other? Wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied?”
He grinned at her, his hands sliding around her waist as he slid off the sill. “What satisfaction canst thou have tonight?” His fingers twisted in the laces of her corset and pulled tight, forcing a gasp. Natasha knew the lines of the scene they quoted to each other now turned to marriage and commitment, and . . . it wasn’t that she didn’t want those things, exactly, but her goals for this evening were more immediate. From the gleam in his eye, she surmised Will felt the same.
“It depends, my love. Wilt thou permit me to abridge the script?” Natasha could feel her pulse pounding in her temples as Will tugged at her laces. His expression was conflicted, the playwright’s faithful adherence to his story warring with the man’s desire to plunder. She decided to take the decision out of his hands. A flick of her fingers, then another, and the buttons straining over her bosom released, her breasts forced upwards by his tension on her corset. His gaze was dragged down to the newly exposed flesh. His lip twisted; Natasha could see him tongue the tip of a fang.
“My lady, tempt not a desp’rate man,” he whispered hoarsely in her ear and ran his tongue down her throat. Will’s breath came warm on her clavicle before the pinprick of a descending fang sent searing heat through her chest. Natasha clutched at his hair, her own breath coming faster. 
“Will!” He released her laces only to wrap one arm around her and lift her against him, carrying her to the bed as if she weighed no more than a doll. 
“If I profane with my unworthiest hand,” he murmured as he laid her on the bed and began unlacing her corset, “this holy shrine, the gentle sin is this:” Almost delicately he pulled the corset apart and lifted her blouse over her head and arms. “My lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready stand to smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss.” His lips and tongue trailed a fiery path between her breasts and down her stomach; Natasha could feel her abdomen clench under his touch and her fingers still in his hair followed suit, dragging him back up to meet her lips with his own and crush his weight against her.
“Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much,” she panted into his mouth when they broke apart. She could feel him hardening against her thighs, and canted her hips up to press into him. The catch in his breath gave her all the invitation she needed to yank at his vest and shirt until he was bare against her to the waist. They paused in their frantic disrobing for another tumultuous exchange of kisses, Will grinding against her like his last hope of salvation. 
At last he rolled, pulling her on top of him, and Natasha grabbed at the opportunity to divest him of his trousers as well, revelling in the velvety molten press of his erection beneath her skirt. As she slid up his length, Will grabbed her hips and held her, poised motionless at his tip, where he could suckle at her hanging breasts. Each nip made her twitch against his adamant grasp, until she could feel her need dripping onto him, caught in an unending writhing shiver.
Finally, Will took pity on her. “Then move not,” he gasped against her skin, “while my prayer’s effect I take.” His cock slid into her wetness unhurriedly, forcing a moan as she stretched around him. Only when he was fully sheathed did he release her hips, hands sliding down to grip her thighs as she moved against him. 
Natasha shuddered blissfully over him, burying her face in his neck as she adjusted to this most intimate of intrusions. “Sweet, sweet William,” she mumbled into his skin, pressing her hands into his ribs until he caught one and dragged it to his lips. 
“How silver-sweet sound lovers’ tongues at night,” he whispered against her wrist and let his fang catch against the fragile vein, sipping at her lifeblood. “Like softest music to attending ears.” As she began to shudder against him, Will rolled again to drive himself into her heat.
It would be the first of many times that night.
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oldtimesart · 5 years
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SO @blackgeekygirl draw some kids of inkwells whit cowboy hats and ma first thoug was cowboy club(OR MARIACHI IN DOLLAS CASE) and @drink-your-bepsicola have filled dolla whit hats
Oc in order
@milich96 Didi dandellion
@inmytimewe Dolla the bella (mine)
@sleepy--dumpden POPPY
The adults
@space-anchor Haziel O'malley(NAANAA BROO)
@drink-your-bepsicola Juliet Ryot
@blackgeekygirl Fran mc fox
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sjuarchives · 5 years
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Objects Tell Our Story: The History of St. John’s University
Student-Curated Exhibition
HIS 510: Material Culture-Spring 2019
Pharmacy Jars from the Carofano Collection
Attributed to Domenico Venizio Workshop, Venice Italy, c.1600
Special Collections of rare books and artifacts are a unique part of a university’s history. St. John’s University’s library existed since the founding of the school in 1870, but there was no formal Special Collections department until after the University Archives began in the 1970s. Even so, donations of unique and rare items have come to the library for much of the university’s history, with the purpose of making primary sources and artifacts available to students and faculty for original research. One of the major collections that came to the libraries early on was the Meyer Accounting Collection c.1929, assembled by Joseph C. Meyer, founder of the School of Business at St. John’s. The Carofano Pharmacy Collection is another example of such a special collection.
The St. John’s University Special Collections department houses a large collection of authentic majolica apothecary and storage jars from c.1600 – c.1900. They were collected by Mr. and Mrs. Carofano and donated starting in 1969. Two of the showpiece jars in the collection, the first pair donated, each stands twelve inches tall, with a width of five inches at the base and top, and a much wider middle. Inside the jars, a lighter opaque glaze betrays the red clay interior. Given their large size and rounded shape, these jars were likely used for storing provisions. These two jars, like many of the earliest pieces in the collection, were manufactured in Italy during the Renaissance period.
First developed around the 1400s, majolica jars are pottery made of ceramic with a tin glaze, giving these wares an opaque white finish. Italian majolica became ubiquitous during this period, used for tableware, tiles, inkwells, candleholders, and storage of medicines. Apothecaries in the early modern period were multipurpose; monastic dispensaries or independent shops that provided medicinal herbs and pigments for painters. Pigments were derived from plant-based materials and minerals, which the artists mixed in their own workshops after they purchased them at the apothecary. It is this long-standing relationship between artists and apothecaries that explains the development of the painterly tradition that led to the beautification of apothecary jars.
These two large, globular majolica jars are painted with multicolored floral motifs on a cobalt blue background, and two portraits in a petal scroll frame on either side. The paint has a glossy sheen to it, which is the reason for their alternate name of lusterware. The artists used rich colors of blue, green, orange, yellow, brown, and white, derived from available metals including cobalt, copper, iron, antimony, manganese, and tin respectively. Among the floral and vegetal motifs are small, white comma-shaped slits that fill every nook of the surface to reveal the white glaze beneath and are a signature feature of jars produced at the Domenico Veneziano workshop in Venice, in the sixteenth century. The portraits on the first jar are of a helmeted warrior and a nobleman [images 1-2], whereas the second jar depicts a turbaned man and a lady with a Juliet cap [images 3-4]. The portraits may be associated with the elite family members of Italy who commissioned these jars or famous individuals of the time.
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sharkpilot · 6 years
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30 Questions
Tagged by: @420broscope
Nickname: Mac
Gender: Female
Sign: Sagittarius
Height: 5'4
Time: 3:04pm
Birthday: November 24
Favorite Band: Fall Out Boy / Ludo
Favorite Solo Artist(s): Regina Spektor
Song Stuck in Head: None at the current moment. I can’t even muster up any lyrics to pretend I do. 
Last Movie Watched: Ghost House on Netflix
Last Show Watched: Paranormal Survivor with @420broscope
Blog Created: 2009
What I Post: Things I find funny or interesting. Lots of X-Files and Scooby Doo. There’s no one theme. Occasionally my art, but I have a different blog for that. 
Last Thing I Googled: Vine Comps
Other Blogs: FuckYeahTheRake, FuckYeahFanboys, MacknzieMDunn, Inkwell Animation, The Mystical Witch
Asks: I have none right now? I don’t get them much anymore now that the hate mail has come to an end. It’s taken 4 years, but we’ve finally reached that point. Good job, team. 
Following: 1,319
Followers: 2,974
Average Amount of Sleep: 3-7 hours
Lucky Numbers: 7 - 11
Instruments I Play: Ukulele 
What I’m Wearing: Pikachu Sweats and a volleyball shirt.
Dream Job: Concept Designer for Cartoon Network
Dream Trip: Canada, Alaska
Favorite Food: Seafood
Nationality: American
Favorite Song: Too Many Dicks on the Dance Floor - Flight of the Concords
Last Book Read: Currently Reading Animal Farm, Disaster Artist, Hemlock Grove, and Romeo and Juliet. Also reading some textbooks and such. Just ordered two books on the history of the calendar that I started when I was in college but didn’t finish before I graduated and had to give it back. 
3 Fictional Universes I’d Like to Live in: that’s some weeb shit
Tagging @aslanthelioness answer their 30 questions so I don’t bother anyone else
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flipheckle · 7 years
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there are things i’d sooner discuss with a chunk of ceiling tile that just fell on my head than i’d ever reveal to you or anyone associated with you. yes, it is true that the past extends shaky offerings of olive branches, former glory days reek of trust that could have sailed a thousand ships, but every poem is stitched with revelation. i dipped my pen in a tar filled inkwell and wrote you highways so cluttered with nonsense symbolism that i became a piece of poetry myself.
at least, that’s what you thought i was.
you, who spoke my words with unwritten pretense, and you, who sang the songs i’d composed with the very blood from my veins as if your voice had written them.
the future at one time seemed only blissful continuity of every smudge of peach flavored chapstick i’d left smeared on your cheek when i kissed you in greeting, but now it’s the back of your hand that wiped it off when you thought i’d looked away.
we existed in a tragedy in three parts:
The Lovers As But Lonely Humans
The Lovers As Lovers
The Lovers As Anything But
while my naivete strung sonnets in the backyard from clothespins, yours pondered the affectation of romance and plucked petals from my garden.
i hadn’t planted roses so that you might debate the affections of a new Juliet, but then again, i never planned on being Rosaline.
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The Different Things You’re Doing That Steal Time—And How to Stop
Many of us lament that we don’t have time for the things we’d like to do—catch a movie on a weeknight, take a fun dance class on a Saturday, start a creative project, go for a run, read, take a weekend getaway.
But the reality is that many of us are doing things we don’t actually need to be doing. And when we eliminate those things, space suddenly opens up, and we naturally create more time.
According to time management expert and bestselling author Laura Vanderkam, knowing what to eliminate can be tricky because “a lot of things that waste time don’t necessarily look like wasting time.”
“Most of us understand that spending 3 hours reading snarky comments on Twitter is not advancing us toward our larger goals,” said Vanderkam, author of the new book Juliet’s School of Possibilities: A Little Story About the Power of Priorities.
But what about email?
“I’d argue that responding to everything quickly wastes tons of time….Being ‘on top’ of email, rather than checking it a handful of times per day, cuts out space for all kinds of other more important things.”
Technology also can steal our time in other ways. Social media is a tired—but true!—example. As professional speaker and time management coach Jones Loflin noted, “‘Who hasn’t thought, ‘I’ll just check my ______ (insert any social media feed) for a minute,’ and then spent at least 15-20 minutes getting lost in the lives of others?”
Similarly, trying to have complex or difficult conversations over text can be incredibly inefficient—and “exacerbate the situation, increasing the frustration of everyone involved,” said Loflin, author of the book Juggling Elephants: An Easier Way to Get Your Most Important Things Done–Now!
“More time is taken trying to explain the misunderstanding you created earlier when a simple phone call or face-to-face interaction could have handled the situation much more quickly… and effectively.”
Housework is another example of a potential time waster. As Vanderkam said, the problem is that housework expands to fill in whatever available space we have. In other words, we can easily clean the whole day, because there’s always something to wash, wipe, organize, and tidy.
This doesn’t mean living in filth, Vanderkam said. “Rather than constantly picking up, designate a short amount of time to get the most obvious things done. If it doesn’t happen then, it wasn’t that important.”
Overthinking and over-researching also waste time, said Tonya Dalton, a productivity expert and founder of inkWELL Press. We can do over-do big decisions—like starting a business—or small decisions—like what pants to buy, she said.
Relationships can make or shrink time. That is, “strong, healthy relationships with friends and family give us the much needed mental and emotional energy we need to tackle the difficult things in our life,” Loflin said. However, when we spend too much time with toxic people—who drain us—the opposite happens: We don’t have any energy for ourselves.
Ultimately, because everyone is different, what constitutes as a time waster will vary according to each person. Which is why we asked experts to share how each of us can identify whether we’re focusing on tasks we don’t even need to be doing.
Revise your stories. One of the reasons we spend a lot of our time doing things we don’t necessarily need to be doing is because we construct our identities around these activities, according to Vanderkam, host of the time management-focused podcast Before Breakfast. We create and cling to stories that keep us shackled to certain tasks.
That is, you think to yourself, I’m the kind of person who has a tidy, sparkling clean home. I’m the kind of person who gets back to someone right away. I’m the kind of person who’s always available to others.
If you find yourself doing something that takes a lot of time, or is causing resentment and frustration, Vanderkam suggested exploring why you’re doing it. “If your answer takes the form of ‘well, everyone knows you have to…’ or ‘you can’t just…,’ then push a little harder. Do you know this is true? Can you find a counter-example?”
You also can consider the worst thing that could happen if you spend less time on that activity. Is that worst-case scenario even likely to happen? “Maybe, but often not,” Vanderkam said.
Ellen Faye, COC®, CPO ®, a productivity leadership coach, suggested exploring these additional questions: “Would anyone notice if I didn’t do [this task]? Is there an easier way to do it? Can someone else do it?”
When we challenge our stories, Vanderkam noted that we can free up a whole lot of time. As she said, no one is coming to your house at 11 p.m. to make sure you picked up all the toys before going to bed. “So go ahead and read a novel and then go to sleep.” 
Focus on your feelings. Dalton stressed the importance of paying attention to your emotions and reactions after you complete certain activities.
She suggested asking yourself: “How do I feel when I’m finished with this activity? Do I feel happier and content, or do I feel frustrated and even irritable?”
Use tools to limit time. Use technology to your advantage. For instance, you can try the apps Moment and QualityTime “to monitor how long you are spending on different apps and even limit how many browser windows are open,” Dalton said.
As author Chris Bailey noted, we shouldn’t rely on self-control; rather, we should be strategic and intentional in creating a tangible plan that specifically targets common distractions that steal time—time that can be spent on meaningful activities.
Try the 80/20 rule. According to Faye, this rule entails getting 80 percent of the work done with 20 percent of the effort, and using 80 percent of your effort for the remaining 20 percent of work. She said it’s the same for time, because some tasks truly deserve excellence, while others are good with good enough.
“If my email responses were 100 percent excellent, I would do nothing else in my life but email. I make the 80 percent good and save a ton of time.” 
Assess your day as a whole. In the evenings, Dalton spends several minutes examining how she worked toward her goals and how she felt about the activities she did throughout the day (along with a focus on gratitude). (You can do the same with this 5-minute exercise.)
Similarly, Loflin suggested coming up with your own list of simple questions to guide your choices throughout the day, an idea inspired by Marshall Goldsmith’s book Triggers. (An example is: “Did I do my best to read 20 minutes today?” he said.)
“At the end of day, you rate yourself on how well you did, and reflect on the choices you made that helped or hindered your ability to do it.” This gives you the opportunity to make adjustments the next day to make that activity happen.
Re-evaluate routines regularly. “So much changes in life and we don’t stop to consider how this impacts our routines,” said Faye, past president of the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals.
For instance, for years, Faye did her meal planning and grocery shopping on Sundays. “If I didn’t plan what I was going to cook, and have those ingredients in the house, dinner time would be a total time suck.” After Faye’s now adult sons moved out, it took her several years to change this habit, even though it was no longer helpful. “I kept buying for four when there was only two of us, and I was wasting a lot of food. Now it’s a much less formal process, and it’s just fine.”
Using your time well doesn’t mean hustling and grinding and accounting for every single minute. Rather, it means filling your days with the activities that you want to do, with the activities that are meaningful and fun and inspiring and enjoyable to you. As Dalton said, “productivity isn’t about doing more; it’s doing what’s most important.”
And we’re able to do that when we stop doing the things we don’t really need to do.
from World of Psychology https://psychcentral.com/blog/the-different-things-youre-doing-that-steal-time-and-how-to-stop/
0 notes
The Different Things You’re Doing That Steal Time—And How to Stop
Many of us lament that we don’t have time for the things we’d like to do—catch a movie on a weeknight, take a fun dance class on a Saturday, start a creative project, go for a run, read, take a weekend getaway.
But the reality is that many of us are doing things we don’t actually need to be doing. And when we eliminate those things, space suddenly opens up, and we naturally create more time.
According to time management expert and bestselling author Laura Vanderkam, knowing what to eliminate can be tricky because “a lot of things that waste time don’t necessarily look like wasting time.”
“Most of us understand that spending 3 hours reading snarky comments on Twitter is not advancing us toward our larger goals,” said Vanderkam, author of the new book Juliet’s School of Possibilities: A Little Story About the Power of Priorities.
But what about email?
“I’d argue that responding to everything quickly wastes tons of time….Being ‘on top’ of email, rather than checking it a handful of times per day, cuts out space for all kinds of other more important things.”
Technology also can steal our time in other ways. Social media is a tired—but true!—example. As professional speaker and time management coach Jones Loflin noted, “‘Who hasn’t thought, ‘I’ll just check my ______ (insert any social media feed) for a minute,’ and then spent at least 15-20 minutes getting lost in the lives of others?”
Similarly, trying to have complex or difficult conversations over text can be incredibly inefficient—and “exacerbate the situation, increasing the frustration of everyone involved,” said Loflin, author of the book Juggling Elephants: An Easier Way to Get Your Most Important Things Done–Now!
“More time is taken trying to explain the misunderstanding you created earlier when a simple phone call or face-to-face interaction could have handled the situation much more quickly… and effectively.”
Housework is another example of a potential time waster. As Vanderkam said, the problem is that housework expands to fill in whatever available space we have. In other words, we can easily clean the whole day, because there’s always something to wash, wipe, organize, and tidy.
This doesn’t mean living in filth, Vanderkam said. “Rather than constantly picking up, designate a short amount of time to get the most obvious things done. If it doesn’t happen then, it wasn’t that important.”
Overthinking and over-researching also waste time, said Tonya Dalton, a productivity expert and founder of inkWELL Press. We can do over-do big decisions—like starting a business—or small decisions—like what pants to buy, she said.
Relationships can make or shrink time. That is, “strong, healthy relationships with friends and family give us the much needed mental and emotional energy we need to tackle the difficult things in our life,” Loflin said. However, when we spend too much time with toxic people—who drain us—the opposite happens: We don’t have any energy for ourselves.
Ultimately, because everyone is different, what constitutes as a time waster will vary according to each person. Which is why we asked experts to share how each of us can identify whether we’re focusing on tasks we don’t even need to be doing.
Revise your stories. One of the reasons we spend a lot of our time doing things we don’t necessarily need to be doing is because we construct our identities around these activities, according to Vanderkam, host of the time management-focused podcast Before Breakfast. We create and cling to stories that keep us shackled to certain tasks.
That is, you think to yourself, I’m the kind of person who has a tidy, sparkling clean home. I’m the kind of person who gets back to someone right away. I’m the kind of person who’s always available to others.
If you find yourself doing something that takes a lot of time, or is causing resentment and frustration, Vanderkam suggested exploring why you’re doing it. “If your answer takes the form of ‘well, everyone knows you have to…’ or ‘you can’t just…,’ then push a little harder. Do you know this is true? Can you find a counter-example?”
You also can consider the worst thing that could happen if you spend less time on that activity. Is that worst-case scenario even likely to happen? “Maybe, but often not,” Vanderkam said.
Ellen Faye, COC®, CPO ®, a productivity leadership coach, suggested exploring these additional questions: “Would anyone notice if I didn’t do [this task]? Is there an easier way to do it? Can someone else do it?”
When we challenge our stories, Vanderkam noted that we can free up a whole lot of time. As she said, no one is coming to your house at 11 p.m. to make sure you picked up all the toys before going to bed. “So go ahead and read a novel and then go to sleep.” 
Focus on your feelings. Dalton stressed the importance of paying attention to your emotions and reactions after you complete certain activities.
She suggested asking yourself: “How do I feel when I’m finished with this activity? Do I feel happier and content, or do I feel frustrated and even irritable?”
Use tools to limit time. Use technology to your advantage. For instance, you can try the apps Moment and QualityTime “to monitor how long you are spending on different apps and even limit how many browser windows are open,” Dalton said.
As author Chris Bailey noted, we shouldn’t rely on self-control; rather, we should be strategic and intentional in creating a tangible plan that specifically targets common distractions that steal time—time that can be spent on meaningful activities.
Try the 80/20 rule. According to Faye, this rule entails getting 80 percent of the work done with 20 percent of the effort, and using 80 percent of your effort for the remaining 20 percent of work. She said it’s the same for time, because some tasks truly deserve excellence, while others are good with good enough.
“If my email responses were 100 percent excellent, I would do nothing else in my life but email. I make the 80 percent good and save a ton of time.” 
Assess your day as a whole. In the evenings, Dalton spends several minutes examining how she worked toward her goals and how she felt about the activities she did throughout the day (along with a focus on gratitude). (You can do the same with this 5-minute exercise.)
Similarly, Loflin suggested coming up with your own list of simple questions to guide your choices throughout the day, an idea inspired by Marshall Goldsmith’s book Triggers. (An example is: “Did I do my best to read 20 minutes today?” he said.)
“At the end of day, you rate yourself on how well you did, and reflect on the choices you made that helped or hindered your ability to do it.” This gives you the opportunity to make adjustments the next day to make that activity happen.
Re-evaluate routines regularly. “So much changes in life and we don’t stop to consider how this impacts our routines,” said Faye, past president of the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals.
For instance, for years, Faye did her meal planning and grocery shopping on Sundays. “If I didn’t plan what I was going to cook, and have those ingredients in the house, dinner time would be a total time suck.” After Faye’s now adult sons moved out, it took her several years to change this habit, even though it was no longer helpful. “I kept buying for four when there was only two of us, and I was wasting a lot of food. Now it’s a much less formal process, and it’s just fine.”
Using your time well doesn’t mean hustling and grinding and accounting for every single minute. Rather, it means filling your days with the activities that you want to do, with the activities that are meaningful and fun and inspiring and enjoyable to you. As Dalton said, “productivity isn’t about doing more; it’s doing what’s most important.”
And we’re able to do that when we stop doing the things we don’t really need to do.
from World of Psychology https://ift.tt/2WrZ4Gd via IFTTT
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gothpidgin · 11 months
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women love women
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techbloga · 7 years
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New Post has been published on TechBloga
New Post has been published on http://techbloga.com/list-disney-movies-released-dates/
List of Disney Movies and Released Dates
List of Disney Movies and Released Dates
Hi, here is the complete list of Disney movies. These movies where released under the Walt Disney Pictures. Scroll down to view them (There are really tons of them). Enjoy!
 Disney Future Releases
2018
Mary Poppins Returns                                                                            December 25
Ralph Breaks the Internet: Wreck-It Ralph 2                                     November 21
Mulan                                                                                                          November 2
Untitled Disney live-action fairy tale film                                           August 3
The Incredibles 2                                                                                      June 15
Dolphins                                                                                                     April 20
Magic Camp                                                                                               April 6
A Wrinkle in Time                                                                                    March 9
2017
Coco                                                                                                             November 22
Cars 3                                                                                                          June 16
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales                           May 26
List of Disney Movies 2017
Born in China                                              April 21
Beauty and the Beast                                 March 17
List of Disney Movies 2016
Dangal
Moana
Doctor Strange
Queen of Katwe
The Light Between Oceans
Pete’s Dragon
The BFG
Finding Dory
Alice Through the Looking Glass
Captain America: Civil War
The Jungle Book
Zootopia
The Finest Hours
List of Disney Movies 2015
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
The Good Dinosaur
Bridge of Spies
Ant-Man
ABCD2
Inside Out
Tomorrowland
Avengers: Age of Ultron
Monkey Kingdom
Cinderella (PG)
McFarland
Tinker Bell and the Legend of the Never Beast
Strange Magic
List of Disney Movies 2014
Into the Woods
Big Hero 6
Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
Khoobsurat
The Hundred-Foot Journey (Touchstone/DreamWorks)
Guardians of the Galaxy (Marvel)
Planes: Fire and Rescue
Maleficent
Million Dollar Arm
Bears
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Muppets Most Wanted
Need for Speed
The Pirate Fairy
List of Disney Movies 2013
Saving Mr. Banks
Frozen
Delivery Man
Thor: The Dark World
The Wind Rises
The Fifth Estate
Planes
The Lone Ranger
Monsters University
Iron Man 3
Wings of Life
Oz the Great and Powerful
List of Disney Movies 2012
Lincoln
Wreck-It Ralph
Frankenweenie
Barfi!
Secret of the Wings
The Odd Life of Timothy Green
People Like Us
Mad Buddies
Brave
Marvel’s The Avengers
Chimpanzee
Arjun: The Warrior Prince
John Carter
The Secret World of Arrietty
List of Disney Movies 2011
War Horse
The Muppets
Real Steel
Fright Night
The Help
Winnie the Pooh
Cars 2
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Prom
Zokkomon
African Cats: Kingdom of Courage
Mars Needs Moms
I Am Number Four
Gnomeo & Juliet
Once Upon a Warrior
List of Disney Movies 2010
Tron: Legacy
The Tempest
Tangled
Secretariat
You Again
Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue
The Switch
Tales from Earthsea
Step Up 3D
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
Toy Story 3
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time
Oceans
The Last Song
Waking Sleeping Beauty
Alice in Wonderland
When in Rome
List of Disney Movies 2009
Old Dogs
Disney’s A Christmas Carol
Kniga Masterov
Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure
Surrogates
Walt & El Grupo
X-Games 3D: The Movie
Ponyo
G-Force
The Proposal
Up
The Boys: The Sherman Brothers’ Story
Trail of the Panda
Earth
Hannah Montana the Movie
Race to Witch Mountain
Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience
Confessions of a Shopaholic
List of Disney Movies 2008
Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert
Step Up 2 the Streets
College Road Trip
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
WALL•E
Swing Vote
Tinker Bell
Miracle at St. Anna
Beverly Hills Chihuahua
Morning Light
High School Musical 3: Senior Year
Roadside Romeo
Bolt
Bedtime Stories
List of Disney Movies 2007
Primeval
Bridge to Terabithia
Wild Hogs
Meet the Robinsons
The Invisible
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
Ratatouille
The Secret of the Magic Gourd
Underdog
The Game Plan
Dan in Real Life
Enchanted
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
List of Disney Movies 2006
Glory Road
Annapolis
Roving Mars
Eight Below
The Shaggy Dog
Stay Alive
The Wild
Stick It
Goal! The Dream Begins
Cars
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Step Up
Invincible
The Guardian
The Prestige
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
Déjà Vu
Apocalypto
List of Disney Movies 2005
Aliens of the Deep
Pooh’s Heffalump Movie
The Pacifier
Ice Princess
A Lot Like Love
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Howl’s Moving Castle
Herbie: Fully Loaded
Dark Water
Sky High
Valiant
Flightplan
The Greatest Game Ever Played
Shopgirl
Chicken Little
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
Casanova
List of Disney Movies 2004
Teacher’s Pet
Miracle
Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
Hidalgo
The Ladykillers
Home on the Range
The Alamo
Sacred Planet
Raising Helen
Around the World in 80 Days
America’s Heart & Soul
King Arthur
The Village
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement
3000
The Last Shot
Ladder 49
The Incredibles
National Treasure
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
List of Disney Movies 2003
The Recruit
Shanghai Knights
The Jungle Book 2
Bringing Down the House
Piglet’s Big Movie
Ghosts of the Abyss
Holes
The Lizzie McGuire Movie
Finding Nemo
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Freaky Friday
Open Range
Hope Springs
Cold Creek Manor
Under the Tuscan Sun
Veronica Guerin
Brother Bear
The Haunted Mansion
Calendar Girls
The Young Black Stallion
List of Disney Movies 2002
Snow Dogs
The Count of Monte Cristo
Return to Never Land
Sorority Boys
The Rookie
Big Trouble
Frank McKlusky, C.I.
ESPN’s Ultimate X
Bad Company
Lilo & Stitch
Reign of Fire
The Country Bears
Signs
Spirited Away
Moonlight Mile
Sweet Home Alabama
Tuck Everlasting
Santa Clause 2
Treasure Planet
The Hot Chick
25th Hour
List of Disney Movies 2001
Double Take
Recess: School’s Out
Just Visiting
Pearl Harbor
Atlantis: The Lost Empire
crazy/beautiful
The Princess Diaries
Bubble Boy
New Port South
Max Keeble’s Big Move
Corky Romano
High Heels and Low Lifes
Monsters, Inc.
Out Cold
The Royal Tenenbaums
List of Disney Movies 2000
Fantasia
Play It to the Bone
Gun Shy
The Tigger Movie
Mission to Mars
Whispers
High Fidelity
Keeping the Faith
Dinosaur
Shanghai Noon
Gone in 60 Seconds
Disney’s The Kid
Coyote Ugly
The Crew
Duets
Remember the Titans
Playing Mona Lisa (no label)
Unbreakable
102 Dalmatians
The Emperor’s New Groove
Brother, Where Art Thou?
List of Disney Movies 1999
A Civil Action
Rushmore
My Favorite Martian
The Other Sister
Doug’s 1st Movie
10 Things I Hate About You
Endurance
Instinct
Tarzan
Summer of Sam
Inspector Gadget
The Sixth Sense
The 13th Warrior
Breakfast of Champions
Mumford
Mystery Alaska
The Hand Behind the Mouse: The Ub Iwerks Story
The Straight Story
The Insider
Toy Story 2
Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo
Cradle Will Rock
Bicentennial Man
List of Disney Movies 1998
Kundun
Deep Rising
Krippendorf’s Tribe
An Alan Smithee Film: Burn, Hollywood, Burn
Meet the Deedles
He Got Game
The Horse Whisperer
Six Days, Seven Nights
Mulan
Armageddon
Jane Austen’s Mafia!
The Parent Trap
Firelight
Simon Birch
Holy Man
Beloved
The Waterboy
I’ll Be Home for Christmas
Enemy of the State
A Bug’s Life
Mighty Joe Young
List of Disney Movies 1997
Evita
Metro
Prefontaine
Shadow Conspiracy
That Darn Cat [remake]
Jungle 2 Jungle
The Sixth Man
Grosse Pointe Blank
Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion
Gone Fishin’
Con Air
Hercules
George of the Jungle
Nothing to Lose
Air Bud
I. Jane
A Thousand Acres
Washington Square
RocketMan
Playing God
Flubber
An American Werewolf in Paris
Magoo
List of Disney Movies 1996
Holland’s Opus
White Squall
Wrong
Muppet Treasure Island
Before and After
Up Close and Personal
Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco
Two Much
Little Indian, Big City
James and the Giant Peach
Celtic Pride
Last Dance
Boys
Spy Hard
Eddie
The Rock
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Phenomenon
Kazaam
Jack
1966 First Kid
1966 The Rich Man’s Wife
D3: The Mighty Ducks
The Associate
Ransom
The War at Home
101 Dalmatians [live action]
The Preacher’s Wife
List of Disney Movies 1995
Houseguest
Bad Company
Miami Rhapsody
The Jerky Boys
Heavyweights
Man of the House
Roommates
Tall Tale
Funny Bones
Jefferson in Paris
A Goofy Movie
While You Were Sleeping
A Pyromaniac’s Love Story
Crimson Tide
Mad Love
Pocahontas
Judge Dredd
Operation Dumbo Drop
Dangerous Minds
A Kid in King Arthur’s Court
The Tie that Binds
Unstrung Heroes
The Big Green
Dead Presidents
Feast of July
The Scarlet Letter
Frank and Ollie
Powder
Toy Story
Father of the Bride, Part II
Nixon
Tom and Huck
List of Disney Movies 1994
Cabin Boy
The Air Up There
Iron Will
My Father the Hero
Blank Check
Angie
The Ref
D2: The Mighty Ducks
Holy Matrimony
White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf
The Inkwell
When a Man Loves a Woman
Renaissance Man
The Lion King
I Love Trouble
Angels in the Outfield
In the Army Now
Color of Night
It’s Pat
Camp Nowhere
A Simple Twist of Fate
Quiz Show
Terminal Velocity
Ed Wood
Robert A. Heinlein’s The Puppet Masters
Squanto: A Warrior’s Tale
The Santa Clause
A Low Down Dirty Shame
Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book
List of Disney Movies 1993
Alive
Aspen Extreme
The Cemetery Club
Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey
Swing Kids
A Far Off Place
Born Yesterday
Adventures of Huck Finn
Indian Summer
Bound by Honor
Super Mario Bros.
Guilty as Sin
Life with Mikey
What’s Love Got to Do with It
Son-In-Law
Hocus Pocus
Another Stakeout
My Boyfriend’s Back
Father Hood
The Joy Luck Club
Money for Nothing
The Program
Cool Runnings
The Nightmare Before Christmas
The Three Musketeers
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit
Tombstone
List of Disney Movies 1992
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle
Medicine Man
Blame It On The Bellboy
Noises Off
Straight Talk
Newsies
Passed Away
Encino Man
Sister Act
Honey, I Blew Up the Kid
A Stranger Among Us
3 Ninjas
The Gun in Betty Lou’s Handbag
Crossing the Bridge
Sarafina!
Captain Ron
The Mighty Ducks
Consenting Adults
Aladdin
The Distinguished Gentleman
The Muppet Christmas Carol
List of Disney Movies 1991
White Fang
Run
Scenes from a Mall
Shipwrecked
The Marrying Man
Oscar
One Good Cop
What About Bob?
Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken
The Rocketeer
The Doctor
I. Warshawski
True Identity
Paradise
Deceived
Ernest Scared Stupid
Billy Bathgate
Beauty and the Beast
Father of the Bride
List of Disney Movies 1990
Stella
Where the Heart Is
Pretty Woman
Ernest Goes to Jail
Spaced Invaders
Fire Birds
Dick Tracy
Betsy’s Wedding
Arachnophobia
Ducktales: the Movie, Treasure of the Lost Lamp
Taking Care of Business
Destiny
The Rescuers Down Under
Three Men and a Little Lady
Green Card
List of Disney Movies 1989
Three Fugitives
New York Stories
Disorganized Crime
Dead Poets Society
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
Turner & Hooch
Cheetah
An Innocent Man
Gross Anatomy
The Little Mermaid
Blaze
List of Disney Movies 1988
Shoot to Kill
O.A.
Return to Snowy River
Big Business
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
Cocktail
The Rescue
Heartbreak Hotel
The Good Mother
Ernest Saves Christmas
Oliver & Company
Beaches
List of Disney Movies 1987
Outrageous Fortune
Tin Men
Ernest Goes to Camp
Benji the Hunted
Adventures in Babysitting
Stakeout
Can’t Buy Me Love
Hello Again
Three Men and a Baby
Good Morning, Vietnam
List of Disney Movies 1986
Down and Out in Beverly Hills
1886 Off Beat
Ruthless People
The Great Mouse Detective
Flight of the Navigator
Tough Guys
The Color of Money
List of Disney Movies 1985
Baby…Secret of the Lost Legend
Return to Oz
The Black Cauldron
My Science Project
The Journey of Natty Gann
One Magic Christmas
List of Disney Movies 1984
Splash
Tiger Town
Country
List of Disney Movies 1983
Trenchcoat
Something Wicked This Way Comes
Never Cry Wolf
List of Disney Movies 1982
Night Crossing
Tron
Tex
List of Disney Movies 1981
The Devil and Max Devlin
Amy
The Fox and the Hound
Condorman
The Watcher in the Woods
List of Disney Movies 1980
Midnight Madness
The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark
Herbie Goes Bananas
List of Disney Movies 1979
The North Avenue Irregulars
The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again
Unidentified Flying Oddball
The Black Hole
List of Disney Movies 1978
Candleshoe
Return from Witch Mountain
The Cat from Outer Space
Hot Lead and Cold Feet
List of Disney Movies 1977
Freaky Friday
The Littlest Horse Thieves
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
The Rescuers
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo
Pete’s Dragon
List of Disney Movies 1976
Ride a Wild Pony
No Deposit, No Return
Gus
Treasure of Matecumbe
The Shaggy D.A.
List of Disney Movies 1975
The Strongest Man in the World
Escape to Witch Mountain
The Apple Dumpling Gang
One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing
The Best of Walt Disney’s True-Life Adventures
List of Disney Movies 1974
Herbie Rides Again
The Bears and I
The Castaway Cowboy
The Island at the Top of the World
List of Disney Movies 1973
The World’s Greatest Athlete
Charley and the Angel
One Little Indian
Robin Hood
Superdad
List of Disney Movies 1972
The Biscuit Eater
Napoleon and Samantha
Now You See Him, Now You Don’t
Run, Cougar, Run
Snowball Express
List of Disney Movies 1971
The Wild Country
The Barefoot Executive
Scandalous John
The $1,000,000 Duck
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
List of Disney Movies 1970
King of the Grizzlies
The Boatniks
The Aristocats
List of Disney Movies 1969
The Love Bug
Smith!
Rascal
The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
List of Disney Movies 1968
Blackbeard’s Ghost
The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band
Never a Dull Moment
The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit
List of Disney Movies 1967
Monkeys, Go Home!
The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin
The Happiest Millionaire
The Gnome-Mobile
The Jungle Book
Charlie, The Lonesome Cougar
List of Disney Movies 1966
The Ugly Dachshund
Robin Crusoe U.S.N.
The Fighting Prince of Donegal
Follow Me, Boys!
List of Disney Movies 1965
Those Calloways
The Monkey’s Uncle
That Darn Cat!
List of Disney Movies 1964
The Misadventures of Merlin Jones
A Tiger Walks
The Moon-Spinners
Mary Poppins
Emil and the Detectives
List of Disney Movies 1963
Son of Flubber
Miracle of the White Stallions
Savage Sam
Summer Magic
The Incredible Journey
The Sword in the Stone
The Three Lives of Thomasina
List of Disney Movies 1962
Moon Pilot
Bon Voyage
Big Red
Almost Angels
The Legend of Lobo
In Search of the Castaways
List of Disney Movies 1961
One Hundred and One Dalmatians
The Absent-Minded Professor
The Parent Trap
Nikki, Wild Dog of the North
Greyfriars Bobby
Babes in Toyland
List of Disney Movies 1960
Toby Tyler, or Ten Weeks with a Circus
Kidnapped
Pollyanna
The Sign of Zorro
Jungle Cat
Ten Who Dared
Swiss Family Robinson
List of Disney Movies 1959
Sleeping Beauty
The Shaggy Dog
Darby O’Gill and the Little People
Third Man on the Mountain
List of Disney Movies 1958
The Light in the Forest
White Wilderness
Tonka
List of Disney Movies 1957
Johnny Tremain
Perri
Old Yeller
List of Disney Movies 1956
The Great Locomotive Chase
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates
Secrets of Life
Westward Ho the Wagons!
List of Disney Movies 1955
Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier
Lady and the Tramp
The African Lion
The Littlest Outlaw
List of Disney Movies 1954
Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue
The Vanishing Prairie
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
List of Disney Movies 1953
Peter Pan
The Sword and the Rose
The Living Desert
List of Disney Movies 1952
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men
List of Disney Movies 1951
Alice in Wonderland
List of Disney Movies 1950
Cinderella
Treasure Island
List of Disney Movies 1949
So Dear to My Heart
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad
List of Disney Movies 1948
Melody Time
List of Disney Movies 1947
Fun and Fancy Free
List of Disney Movies 1946
Make Mine Music
Song of the South
List of Disney Movies 1945
The Three Caballeros
List of Disney Movies 1943
Saludos Amigos
Victory Through Air Power
List of Disney Movies 1942
Bambi
List of Disney Movies 1941
The Reluctant Dragon
Dumbo
List of Disney Movies 1940
Pinocchio
Fantasia
List of Disney Movies 1937
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
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Athena and Juliet
(Utena's mom & Walter's mom)
They used to be friends, but one went for the rich, and the other one went for love, so they went their separate ways in the end.
Pose Reference
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*Please do not repost or trace my artwork!
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gothpidgin · 1 year
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mawwaige
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gothpidgin · 11 months
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That’s all folks!
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gothpidgin · 11 months
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Birthday boy!
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