Sheree BoydⓋ

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Sheree BoydⓋ

Sheree BoydⓋ

@ShereeBoyd

illustrator | children's book artist | textile design | volunteer shelter dog walker

New York Beigetreten Ekim 2011
989 Folgt890 Follower
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Wayne Hsiung
Wayne Hsiung@waynehhsiung·
Ridglan wrote to @MarkPocan asking for security to help with "animal rights extremists." He responded by saying their abuse of dogs is "alarming" and tells them to "rehome ever beagle" instead. History was always on our side. Soon, Congress will be, too.
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Basil🧡
Basil🧡@LinkofSunshine·
I like this guy. Seems like a cool dude
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Daily Garfcast
Daily Garfcast@DailyGarfcast·
Garfield by Jim Davis for Sun, 05 Apr 2026
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Archaeology & Art
Archaeology & Art@archaeologyart·
In 1445, a Flemish painter painted a hovering angel almost entirely in black. With dark robes and dark wings, it presses its hands to its face, crying. The contrast with the pale background sky is deliberate: the figure is engulfed in darkness, but its agony is clearly visible. Rogier van der Weyden, Crucifixion Triptych, detail.
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The Walt Disney Family Museum
An elephant never forgets, and we'll never forget this Bruce Bushman concept art of "Dumbo the Flying Elephant"! 🐘🩷 Fly into The Walt Disney Family Museum to see our latest special exhibition Happiest Place on Earth: The Disneyland Story—on view through September 13, 2026.
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Old Media
Old Media@oldmedia·
The Little Mermaid (1968)
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Gibran’s Ghost
Gibran’s Ghost@gibransghost·
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Richard Morris
Richard Morris@ahistoryinart·
In 1938, Evelyn Dunbar was commissioned by Country Life magazine to produce drawings (and later oils) for its Gardener’s Diary and made witty personifications of each month. The month of April sees a figure wearing a striped smock, holding a coldframe with a cuckoo in her hat.
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Nancy Rommelmann
Nancy Rommelmann@NancyRomm·
.@bendreyfuss followed this tweet with several others, including, "When you call the company and say 'I need to talk about this' they say, 'Well you aren’t on the file so though you have the card and details, no.' Which makes sense in some world but also is a pretty convenient way to avoid letting a 77-year-old women’s children advocate for her!" I immediately DM'ed Ben: "It's a f***ing odyssey... Call if you feel like screaming." Even if you think of yourself as a rational person, chances are you will find yourself screaming at someone while trying to protect your failing parent or grandparent. I screamed at the Eastern European man who kept calling my mother demanding her banking information. My boyfriend screamed at the phone rep who'd scammed his 82-year-old father into taking out a loan on a paid-for timeshare. It's possible that Ben is at this moment screaming at the hospital admin who told him his mother, for some arcane insurance proviso they would not share with him, would not be admitted to the recovery level of the hospital. All of this screaming will not change the system, will not help your blood pressure, will not aide your parent, powerless to get either of you off the dystopic ride you are now both locked into, a ride 300,000 Americans over 65 take a year, also known as The Hip Fracture. Here is how it happens: You get the call that your parent has fallen; he or she has broken a hip. You remember reading that it’s not that old people fall and break their hip, it’s that they break their hip and then they fall. You ask the doctor - a doctor you have never met and who has only met your mother that morning in the emergency room - about this, but he’s not interested in semantics. What has to happen, he says, is your mother needs a hip replacement or she will never walk again. Which doesn’t sound like a great outcome and so you say, sure, do the hip replacement, not knowing that your mother will never walk again regardless, that a hip replacement for someone who is already failing physically and mentally sets off a cascade of eventualities that will drain the life out of your mother and hundreds of thousands of dollars from her savings. “We transfer our parents’ wealth to the Medical Industrial Complex,” your accountant tells you. And you do. You pay for the surgeries and the hospitalizations; the rehabs and the physical therapists, the home health aides and the drug makers and the companies that make adult diapers. Two years in, you wonder whether your mother has become a host for these entities to feed on, and whether this is by design, and whether, by having supported these entities, you have in essence laid your mother upon the feasting table, where you watch them scavenge over smaller and smaller bits until there is nothing left and you think, stupidly, "at least we will get some peace now" but no, it's simply a changeover, the institutional carrion replaced by individuals, the little birds who will see your mother, not much more than bones now, unto death. After being so mistreated for so long, you are immeasurably grateful to these caretakers, still, do not let your guard down. This, too, is part of the ride, a part where, if you are not careful, different entities will strap you in for another spin.
Ben Dreyfuss@bendreyfuss

My mom fell and broke her hip last week and I have spent the last seven days dealing with every part of the American health care system. The doctors and nurses at St Luke’s have been so kind, but her Medicare Advantage with @uhc has been obstinate.

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David Perell Clips
David Perell Clips@PerellClips·
If you're dreaming up a story, start by imagining where it takes place. Lee Child compares it to how a musician chooses a key: G-major is cheerful and upbeat, while E-flat minor is dark and melancholy. The equivalent for a writer is the setting of your story. For example, the West of Texas where it's baking hot and arid sets up a completely different story than the Atlantic Coast of Maine where it's gray and cold and misty. As Lee Child puts it: "The place and the temperature dictates the story. It gives you a stage on which certain actions are inevitable and others are implausible."
David Perell@david_perell

Lee Child is the man behind the Jack Reacher series. He's sold more than 200 million books, and two of his books were adapted into movies starring Tom Cruise. How popular are his books? In the UK, his series has sold more copies than J.K Rowling did with Harry Potter on Amazon. So at this point, you basically can't talk about contemporary crime and thriller books without talking about Lee Child. This interview is all about how he wrote that Jack Reacher series. To the best of my knowledge, it's the deepest interview he's ever done about his writing process. Timestamps: 0:30 Writing stories in America 7:26 You don't need an outline 12:50 Writing one book per year 17:57 Why the 60s were so creative 18:56 The business of writing 23:05 The key to page-turner books 38:25 How to write good dialogue 43:15 Where to start / end a book 52:18 Writing a violent scene 56:56 Using clothes to reveal character 1:00:43 Why the UK has so many good writers I've shared the full conversation below. If you'd rather watch on YouTube, or listen on Apple / Spotify, check out the links in the first reply tweet. Enjoy!

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𝓔𝓶 ♡
𝓔𝓶 ♡@emkenobi·
Trump has authorized the removal of permits that were put in place to protect endangered species and now workers are allowed to kill these animals so they can drill the oceans for oil. There are only 50 of these whales left in the wild and they may all die because of this. They are trying to find loop holes in the endangered species act to do this and it will result in the deaths of innocent animals and may even lead to an entire species’ extinction. Please contact your representatives and demand action be taken to stop this. These animals do not have a voice to advocate for themselves. We must be their voice and protect our planet. Please share this!!!!!!
Natural Resources Democrats@NRDems

There are 50 Rice's whales left alive on Earth. They live nowhere else but the Gulf of Mexico. The admin’s own scientists said *last year* oil & gas drilling would drive the species to extinction. Today, Trump's cabinet removed every protection standing between the oil industry and these animals’ deaths.

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David Perell Clips
David Perell Clips@PerellClips·
What's wrong with writing with AI? Alain deBotton says: "I don't just write to produce a certain numbers of words. I write in order to honor certain feelings, and AI can't know those feelings because it's not me. It doesn't know what I want to say. And if I simply give my writing over to AI, it will crush my nascent sense about what it is I really want to say."
David Perell@david_perell

Alain de Botton has written ~17 books and runs the School of Life YouTube channel, which now has almost 10 million subscribers. And this is a rare interview for him. Some highlights: 1. A clear night sky is a challenge to everything we think we know. 2. If we really took on board what that night sky is telling us, we'd have to lie down and just question absolutely everything. 3. Writer's block is a conflict between shame and the desire for honesty. 4. The effect of mass media is to industrialize and commercialize our thinking, which leaves no room for the free thinker, the honest thinker, and the authentic thinker. 5. You've got to be attentive to your own sensations and thoughts. That's the real work of writing. 6. Every person is an incredible library of sensations but so often, particularly in the academic world, people think: “Let’s ignore ourselves as a source of data and find out what Cicero said, or what Socrates said, or what Michel Foucault said." 7. Writing can be revenge for the silenced person, which is why so many writers are meek in person but fierce on the page. 8. A work of art is the best thing you can do with your dislocation and distress, and sometimes, it’s even an alternative to losing your mind. 9. Emerson said: "In the minds of geniuses, we find our own neglected thoughts." 10. The thoughts of geniuses aren’t fundamentally different from others. It’s just that they’re able to put words to sensations we’ve long felt but couldn’t articulate. 11. Writing prompt: If there were no rules, if you couldn't fail, if no one was going to laugh, if you were going to be dead tomorrow, what would you actually do and say? How would you write, let's say? That's the thing you should write. I've shared the full conversation with Alain de Botton below. You can watch here or on YouTube, and listen on Apple or Spotify. You'll find the links in the reply tweets.

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*꿈사냥꾼
*꿈사냥꾼@Vulpes_No9·
동화 일러스트의 거장 Errol Le Cain의 작품들...싱가폴에서 태어나 인도에서 자라고 영국으로 이주한 삶의 배경이 이렇게 과감한 색채와 힘있는 라인을 갖게 해 준 것 같다...그림책의 노벨상인 케이트 그리너웨이 메달 수상자...
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art4cc
art4cc@ArtForCC·
By the brilliant Steve Cutts @Steve_Cutts Industrial civilization is incompatible with the living world.
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Folklore of Scotland
Folklore of Scotland@StephenGeoRae·
Four unpublished illustrations by Peter Klúcik for J. R. R. Tolkien’s "The Hobbit".
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Went down the rabbit hole on this. Your brain treats a good story the same way it treats something happening to you. Not metaphorically. On a brain scan, reading about someone running fires up the same motor regions as actually running. A Harvard study found we spend 47% of waking hours lost in things that aren’t real. Your brain is wired to crave fiction. And there’s a reason. Keith Oatley, a psychologist at the University of Toronto, calls fiction a “flight simulator for the mind.” I love that framing because it’s exactly right. When you read the word “coffee,” the part of your brain that processes real smells lights up. A 2006 study had people read scent words like “perfume” and neutral words like “chair” in a brain scanner. The smell regions only activated for scent words. Your brain didn’t care that the coffee wasn’t real. It gets weirder. Paul Zak, a researcher at Claremont Graduate University, drew blood from people before and after they watched short videos. One told a story with an arc, a father and his dying son. The other was the same pair at a zoo. No storyline. The story version caused a spike in oxytocin, the chemical your brain releases when you bond with someone. The zoo version? Nothing. Zero oxytocin. And after the story ended, the high-oxytocin group voluntarily gave money to a stranger in the lab. Zak could predict who would give with 82% accuracy just from their blood. A story changed how generous people were for the next hour. In 2013, a team at Emory University scanned people’s brains every morning for 19 straight days while they read a novel each night. The changes were still visible the next morning, hours later, with nobody reading during the scan. Gregory Berns, who led the study, called it “shadow activity, almost like a muscle memory.” The changes showed up in the regions that handle physical touch and body sensation. The readers’ brains were rehearsing what it felt like to be inside someone else’s body. I went looking for the evolutionary angle and found a 2017 study in Nature Communications that floored me. Researchers studied the Agta, a hunter-gatherer group in the Philippines going back over 35,000 years. They asked nearly 300 Agta across 18 camps to name their best storytellers, then measured cooperation. Camps with more skilled storytellers were measurably more cooperative. When the Agta were asked who they’d most want to live with, storytellers beat out the best hunters. Skilled storytellers had about 0.53 more living children on average. Across 89 stories from seven hunter-gatherer groups, 70% were specifically about how to cooperate and get along. We didn’t invent fiction because we were bored. Groups that told stories survived. Groups that didn’t were worse at working together. The planet has plenty going on. Your brain just evolved to need more worlds than one.
@yducknow

what a boring planet… no fairies, no elves, no mermaids, no dragons, no vampires, no ware wolves….. just bills, stress, gossip, and insufferable people

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