goda_go

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goda_go

@_Goda_Go

🪶 multimedia designer///// traveler ////// I do and write what I feel like

Planet Earth Beigetreten Kasım 2011
258 Folgt89 Follower
El Eremita
El Eremita@dinamittEros·
Francine van Hove.
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
@AllieJade1 I encountered silence. They don’t speak just stare. No ‘hej’ or ‘bye’ . Probably they have conversations in their heads at the same time… very interesting people
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AllieJade
AllieJade@AllieJade1·
I've read about this Gen Z stare and up til now, I'd never encountered it. That was until today. I walked into a local take out shop. 2 cash registers, 2 people ready to take your order. The first girl was busy with customers, so I look at the girl at the 2nd cash. She just stares at me. Her face never moved, she didn't blink, she just stared at me like I was invisible. It was like she didn't know how to acknowledge or give basic social cues. I'm looking at her thinking, usually people behind the counter say hello first as a cue to advance to their wicket. She just stared at me! So I ask: Hi, do you want to take my order? Her: Sure. That's all she initially said. Honestly it was the oddest thing I've ever encountered, it was like she was on auto pilot. Once I started speaking to her, it was like her batteries kicked in and then she smiled became friendly. Has anyone else ever encountered that stare?
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
@hutdesigns this is probably the most minimal house I have ever seen. beautiful pool
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HOUSE LOVERS
HOUSE LOVERS@hutdesigns·
Dream pool at Casa no Tempo, a minimalist villa located in Portugal
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Ely
Ely@Elyvanaa·
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
@Natursee i like the tree staircase situation
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ReNature🦋
ReNature🦋@Natursee·
Traditional Iranian Brick Architecture. Tehran, İran 🇮🇷
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
@0ccultbot artists creates from reality. if they like it or not thats individual
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occultbot
occultbot@0ccultbot·
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
no war
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
no bullshit
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goda_go
goda_go@_Goda_Go·
No, you can’t be me
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Art Basel
Art Basel@ArtBasel·
Waiting for the start of the weekend like... 🔪 Shown here: Torbjørn Rødland, 'Boy with a Japanese Knife', 2019–23, shown here at the artist's solo exhibition 'Old Shep' at Galerie Eva Presenhuber Zurich.
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Poo Crave
Poo Crave@Poo_Crave·
Marina Abramović claims she gets most of her inspiration from day drinking with gay guys.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
The people in this photo aren't friendlier than you. Their apartments are just smaller. So small that Parisians basically gave up on living indoors and moved their living rooms onto the sidewalk. And that was the whole plan. In the 1850s, a city planner named Baron Haussmann tore apart medieval Paris and rebuilt it. He widened streets into boulevards, capped every building at five stories, and added one rule that explains this entire photo: the ground floor of every building had to be a café, a bakery, or a shop. The apartments above were intentionally tiny. Some were single rooms carved out of old mansions. No garden. Barely any sunlight. A private balcony was something most Parisians would never have. So the café became home. You ate breakfast there. Held meetings there. Received your mail there. By the late 1700s, Paris already had close to 2,000 of them. In 2002, there were still 1,907. Even now, after years of closures brought that number to about 1,410, the coverage is absurd: a 2020 city study found 94% of Parisians live within a five-minute walk of a bakery. When COVID shut indoor dining in 2020, Paris ripped out parking spaces, turned them into outdoor terraces, and let 9,800 cafés and restaurants keep them permanently. An American sociologist named Ray Oldenburg wrote a book in 1989 called The Great Good Place. He had a name for spots like the Parisian café: "third places." Not your home, not your office, but the casual in-between spots where you actually get to know people. Cafés, pubs, barbershops, the corner store where the owner knows your name. His whole argument was that American suburbs were built with only two zones, your house and your job, connected by a car. No sidewalk café, no place to bump into a neighbor by accident. The U.S. Surgeon General declared loneliness a national health epidemic in 2023. Being alone all the time is as bad for your body as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Half of American adults say they feel lonely. Weekly socializing dropped from 5.5 hours in 2003 to just 4 hours in 2023, and it never bounced back after COVID. Americans between 15 and 29 now spend 45% more time alone than they did in 2010. The scene in this tweet looks like a personality trait. It is a 170-year-old engineering project that works exactly as designed.
France Safety Travel@francesafetytra

What is stopping humanity from living peacefully together?

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Nothing kills you faster than chronic worry. When you stay trapped in constant anxiety over things you can’t change, you’re not just losing your peace of mind—you’re quietly injuring your physical health. Persistent worry keeps your stress-response system permanently switched on, flooding your body with cortisol and adrenaline. Over time, this chronic activation grinds down essential systems: it suppresses immune function, leaving you more prone to infections and possibly even cancer; it drives up blood pressure and hardens arteries, sharply raising the odds of heart attack and stroke. The fallout continues. Excess cortisol throws digestion into chaos, sparks frequent headaches, and locks muscles in painful tension. On top of that, many people cope by overeating, smoking, or drinking—habits that pile on even more damage. Letting go of what’s beyond your control isn’t just good emotional advice; it’s one of the most powerful things you can do to protect your long-term health. [American Psychological Association. (2023). Stress effects on the body]
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