I AM SO PROUD OF BARCA ❤💙❤💙
As someone that hasn't watched a game since 2017 when we were like at our prime- this tonight reminded me of them. The few games I did watch in those years we were struggling and I heard all kind of insults and hurls thrown at Barca. To see them coming back makes me happy.
People: stick with your clubs it is worth it. 🥰
I love this club.
I love Xavi as our coach.
I love the youngsters and I am thankful for our seniors.
I WANT TO SCREAM AND CRY
And I love them
SY Tour [The Final] Seoul Merch making film (BTS Memories of 2019)
as a barca and bvb fan these 1st halves are going great tonight 🥲🥲🥲
we can wish that rashford had more common sense than to play through the pain barrier & put his body on the line for this stupid club but is anyone really shocked about it? he’s been at man utd since he was 7 & the only other team he’s been on is the england team. it’s quite literally the essence of manchester united and english football to put your mind body and soul on the line for club & country bc football players can’t possibly be trying hard enough unless they’re bleeding & falling apart on the pitch. it doesn’t even take long to find other examples of this (wayne rooney). & instead of blaming this toxic mindset that is drilled into players since they’ve been young, they decide to blame his off field activities instead? like apparently there’s no way this warrior mindset can be the problem it has to be fact he’s trying to bring awareness and find solutions to deep socioeconomic problems in this country. i hate football sm
we’ve all heard of polio, a disabling and life-threatening disease caused by poliovirus, that ran rampant through the world before it was eradicated (in the west) with the introduction of a vaccine in the 1950s. enough time has passed that most of us, and most of our parents, have grown up without knowing people who survived polio.
what I bet you didn’t know about is something called Post-Polio Syndrome. it occurs in more than half of people who survive poliovirus, and it occurs decades later. year after people have lived through polio, years after they have “recovered,” they begin to struggle. they begin to decline. they experience pain and weakness and loss of function. they develop new disabilities, and see old disabilities worsen. and there is no cure, only management.
That’s what happens post poliovirus. It happens bc poliovirus causes lifelong damage, the extent of which is only revealed decades later. We are among the first generations to grow up not knowing people who live with the longterm consequences of poliovirus.
We will be among the first to find out what Post-Corona Syndrome looks like.
If they don’t get confused and fight each other during training or a match, then what’s the point of having them in the same team
they’re not even trying to hide the parallels anymore
Happy International Women’s Day! Here’s a list of TED-Ed Lessons to watch as you celebrate all of the world’s women, past and present.
The genius of Marie Curie: Marie Skłodowska Curie’s revolutionary research laid the groundwork for our understanding of physics and chemistry, blazing trails in oncology, technology, medicine, and nuclear physics, to name a few. But what did she actually do? Shohini Ghose expounds on some of Marie Skłodowska Curie’s most revolutionary discoveries.
The contributions of female explorers: During the Victorian Age, women were unlikely to become great explorers, but a few intelligent, gritty and brave women made major contributions to the study of previously little-understood territory. Courtney Stephens examines three women – Marianne North, Mary Kingsley and Alexandra David-Néel – who wouldn’t take no for an answer (and shows why we should be grateful that they didn’t).
Equality, sports and Title IX: In 1972, U.S. Congress passed Title IX, a law which prohibited discrimination against women in schools, colleges, and universities — including school-sponsored sports. Before this law, female athletes were few and far between, and funding was even scarcer. Erin Buzuvis and Kristine Newhall explore the significance and complexity of Title IX.
The true story of Sacajawea: In the early 19th century, a young Agaidika teenager named Sacajawea was enlisted by explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to aid her husband Toussaint Charbonneau as a guide to the Western United States. Karen Mensing debunks some of the myths that surround the familiar image of the heroic woman with a baby strapped to her back and a vast knowledge of the American wilderness.
Why should you read Virginia Woolf?: How best can we understand the internal experience of alienation? In both her essays and her fiction, Virginia Woolf shapes the slippery nature of subjective experience into words, while her characters frequently lead inner lives that are deeply at odds with their external existence. Iseult Gillespie helps make sense of these disparities to prepare you for the next time you read Virgina Woolf.
The pharaoh that wouldn’t be forgotten: Hatshepsut was a female pharaoh during the New Kingdom in Egypt. Twenty years after her death, somebody smashed her statues, took a chisel and attempted to erase the pharaoh’s name and image from history. But who did it? And why? Kate Green investigates Hatshepsut’s history for clues to this ancient puzzle.
the six greek loves
donnarumma the whole match
I mean...
Just look... 🙄
...At this! 😍👌
psychology student • football fan • bookworm • wannabe artist/photographer/writer • animal lover • and a bunch of other things. • welcome. 🌱
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