⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️

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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️

⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️

@Katyography

• Antifascist • Industry 🌱• Sheltering In Place 🌎• Fully Hinged • Hygge Life • Totally Radical • Celebrity Chef •

~ In the Woods of Oregon ~ Katılım Haziran 2008
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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️
⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️@Katyography·
Adam Sandler is Rob Schneider’s God so it makes everything he says sound especially crazy.
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Hemant Mehta
Hemant Mehta@hemantmehta·
This is the proper reaction when a pastor tries to work a miracle by pushing your forehead.
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Trisha Paytas
Trisha Paytas@trishapaytas·
Quiet Sundays >>>>>
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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️@Katyography·
We persist. We persevere.
Terry Applegate@CharliesWhiskey

In the spring of 1955, a 67-year-old grandmother from Ohio told her children she was going for a walk. She didn’t say how far. She didn’t say why. She simply kissed them goodbye, packed a cloth bag with the barest essentials, and vanished into the Georgia wilderness. Her name was Emma Rowena Gatewood — and she was about to do something no woman had ever done before. For three decades, Emma had endured unspeakable violence in her Ohio farmhouse. Beatings that broke her ribs, blackened her eyes, and nearly broke her spirit. She had raised eleven children on that farm. She had finally escaped her husband in 1941, but the invisible scars ran deeper than any wound. Then one quiet afternoon, she read an article in National Geographic about the Appalachian Trail — more than 2,000 miles of rugged paths stretching from Georgia to Maine. The writer made it sound peaceful. Achievable. Beautiful. Emma thought: If men can walk it, so can I. But she knew what would happen if she told anyone. Her children would worry. Friends would call her foolish. A grandmother, alone in the wilderness? Impossible. Dangerous. So she kept her plan silent as a prayer. She sewed a simple denim bag and filled it with the absolute basics: a blanket, a plastic shower curtain, a first-aid kit, bouillon cubes. No tent. No sleeping bag. No proper hiking boots — just a pair of Keds sneakers and a cotton dress. On May 3, 1955, she boarded a bus to Georgia and began walking north from Mount Oglethorpe. Alone. The trail was nothing like the magazine promised. It was merciless. Roots caught her feet. Rocks sliced through her thin shoes. Rain turned the path to mud. Insects swarmed relentlessly. At night, she slept on bare ground in abandoned shelters, sometimes shivering too violently to rest. She got lost. She fell, twisting her ankle so severely she could barely stand. Sitting on that rock, pain shooting through her leg, she wondered if this was where her journey would end. But after catching her breath, she wrapped her ankle tight and kept moving. Always moving. Hikers who passed her didn’t know what to make of the small, gray-haired woman in a dress and sneakers, carrying a homemade sack. Some thought she was lost. Others assumed she was crazy. A few offered food or shelter. She thanked them graciously, then continued on. When strangers asked why she was walking, she’d smile softly and say she wanted to see the country. But anyone who looked into her eyes could see something deeper burning there. This wasn’t recreation. This was reclamation. Every mile was a mile farther from the life that had tried to destroy her. Every step was proof she was still here, still strong, still capable of extraordinary things. Weeks became months. Her feet bled. Her back ached. The sun burned her skin raw. But she never stopped. On September 25, 1955, Emma Gatewood stood on the summit of Mount Katahdin in Maine. She had walked 2,168 miles in 146 days. She was the first woman to hike the entire Appalachian Trail alone in a single season. When word spread, reporters flooded in. Newspapers nationwide ran her story. Overnight, she became “Grandma Gatewood,” a household name. Everyone wanted to know how a 67-year-old woman with no training and minimal gear had accomplished what seasoned hikers failed to do. Emma smiled and said it wasn’t that complicated. She mentioned the trail needed better maintenance — too many rocks, not enough signs. She spoke as casually as if discussing her garden, not surviving one of America’s most grueling challenges. But she wasn’t finished. In 1957, she walked the trail again. Then in 1964, at 76 years old, she became the first person ever — man or woman — to complete the Appalachian Trail three times. Each journey with almost nothing. Each journey proving that true strength doesn’t come from equipment or training. It comes from refusing to surrender.

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Jamie Bonkiewicz
Jamie Bonkiewicz@JamieBonkiewicz·
Omg. Who did this?! 🤣🤣🤣
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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 2002, Quentin Tarantino, one of the most influential film directors in the world, walked into a secondhand clothing store in Tokyo, Japan. A track was playing over the speakers. He asked the man behind the counter if he could buy the CD right then and there. The man refused. Tarantino offered twice the retail price. The man eventually gave in. The band was The 5.6.7.8's. Two sisters, Yoshiko and Sachiko Fujiyama, had been playing raw 1960s-influenced garage rock in Tokyo since 1986. They had a small but devoted following. Almost nobody outside Japan had heard of them. Within a year they were performing in Kill Bill: Volume 1, one of the most talked about films of 2003, playing to millions of people in cinemas around the world. Their song Woo Hoo, a cover of a 1959 American track they had never considered particularly important, became one of the most recognised opening riffs of a generation. It hit the top thirty in the United Kingdom. It appeared in television commercials around the world. Their tours went from Tokyo to North America, Europe and Australia. Jack White of The White Stripes, who became a fan, helped release their back catalogue through his Third Man Records label in the United States. Interestingly, back home in Japan, almost nothing changed. Their profile there remained almost exactly the same. They are still together. Still playing.
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Bev 🇨🇦
Bev 🇨🇦@Garnet_2203·
This woman spent 10 years reading every holy book. The Bible, Quran, Torah, Vedas. Same verdict: they all oppress women. They all push racism. They all lock in class. These aren't ‘spiritual’ books, they're political books. Control bodies, bloodlines, power. Read them yourself. The truth's right there in the text. So when you see these Conservatives Politicians like Jamil Jivani pull these kind of stunts, remember what they stand for.
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Kia 🧸ྀི
Kia 🧸ྀི@xevekiah·
These dress were kept in exhibition to prove that dress is not the reason for the r@pes.
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"Alex"
"Alex"@alexinquotes·
just paid $5 to photobucket to recover my personal photos of Fergie peeing her pants at the 2005 san diego street scene music festival
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Maria Kovac
Maria Kovac@MKovac_Writer·
Curious to know, if you’d spent a couple of hours cooking up a curry for your family who are visiting from out of town and they turn up saying they are disappointed as they’d hoped you’d have made them a roast dinner instead, is this rude? Kind of wish I hadn’t bothered.
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Culture
Culture@notgwendalupe·
the Spice Girls shoes
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nxthompson
nxthompson@nxthompson·
The US has canceled hundreds of millions in science grants and driven thousands of Ph.D.s out of the federal workforce. China, meanwhile, has poured evermore resources into its research efforts. If they pass us as a scientific superpower, we shouldn't act surprised. theatlantic.com/science/2026/0…
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DRUSKI
DRUSKI@druski·
How Conservative Women in America act 😂🇺🇸
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Dorinda Deadly
Dorinda Deadly@dorindadeadly·
Do you want to see Dorit back for Season 16? #RHOBH 🤔
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Citizens for Ethics
Citizens for Ethics@CREWcrew·
DOGE is once again trying to prevent discovery (that lower courts already ruled we're entitled to) by appealing to the Supreme Court. What are they hiding from the public? citizensforethics.org/news/press-rel…
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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️
⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️@Katyography·
Melon Husk & his poorly done Nazi Lover Haircut out here screaming to the world that he’s very insecure & has a very tiny penis.
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Four Seasons Total Landscaping
That’s not a haircut, it’s a lawnmower accident. We would know.
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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️
⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️@Katyography·
Morgan may have me muted, so if anyone else could also kindly send the link to him, I would be very grateful.
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⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️
⭕️ Katyisms ⭕️@Katyography·
@mjfree Time to step up Morgan. Please send this GoFundMe along to Dia Sokol Savage & every single person @ 11th Street Productions who has profited from this child’s lifetime of neglect, abandonment, gaslighting & outright physical abuse. gofundme.com/f/help-bring-j…
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