Nevada, USA
Unfearing Hand Prints
Dejenee Shiflet
United States
Jajuan Kelley of Atlanta wears a Skittles wrapper over his mouth during a rally in memory of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed 17-year-old who was killed by a Florida neighborhood watch captain while returning from a convenience store with a bag of Skittles and an iced tea.
David Goldman/AP
Source: TIME
United States
Friends Jasmine, 6, and Amy, 8, outside a migrant worker motel in downtown Fresno, California. Amy’s mother makes about $8 an hour on a nearby farm.
Joakim Eskildsen/Time
Source: TIME
Washington DC, USA
“Hi, my name is Lorenzo and I live on Girard St. in North America. I am five-years-old, and I loooove gardening. I like to plant plants so that other people can have plants. Did you know that plants need water? It’s true, they get real thirsty just like people.
I love to cook big, giant steaks and popcorn. We don’t grow any steaks or popcorn at the garden yet.
“I am a great waterer and I just got an award for watering the plants so good. I want to make sure that they have what they need, so they can grow up big and tall. When the plants grow, we can have more to eat, and share our plants with all the people who come to the garden.
“If you come here, you can see all of the plants that I done watered, like the eggplant and the grapes. I like to cook that stuff, but I love to cook big, giant steaks and popcorn. We don’t grow any steaks or popcorn at the garden yet.”
I asked Lorenzo to share a recipe from the garden.
Lorenzo’s anchovies, eggplant, and sweet leaves popcorn
- ”Get some anchovies, you know them fishy things from a can”
- “Pick some sweet leaves from the garden, like mint or other sweet stuff”
- ”Take an eggplant from the garden when it is purple and cook it up”
- ”Pop some popcorn”
- ”Mix everything together in a big bowl until you make it taste real good. It is the best, and everyone is going to like my recipe.”
Learn more about and/or consider donating your time and money to City Blossoms here.
From The People’s District
Source: peoplesdistrict.com
Maine, USA
Canoeing down the Androscoggin River
All rights reserved by Rose Gill
Submitted by: capturetheworldinaninstant
Illinois, USA
Chicago marathon. This adorable little girl was cheering on her “dadda.” She was actually past the area that the cheerers were supposed to be, but no one stopped her.
Allison Hilger
Source: samilice
Washington DC, United States
“My adopted parents brought me to D.C. when I was two years old from Baltimore. My adopted father was a cement finisher and my adopted mother cleaned houses for a living. We lived a nice life up in NE until I realized that I was adopted when I was about 12. When I learned that, I dropped out of school and ran away from home to find my birth parents. I needed to know who they were and understand why they abandoned me. I took off to Baltimore knowing only my grandfather’s name.
“In Baltimore, I was alone and hungry and stole some food from a store. When the cops caught me and asked me where I lived, I gave them my grandfather’s name. They took me to his house and that was the first time I met him. I didn’t know what I was going to find when I met him. I had all of these grand ideas that my parents were rich and would take me back into their loving family.
I’ll be 60 in November, but I feel like I am getting younger as time moves forward. The music keeps me young.
“My family was not rich, but my grandfather was very warm towards me and he introduced me to my aunt and eventually to my Mom. Turns out that my Mom had seven kids after me and kept them all. I was so angry that of all of the kids, she decided to give me away. My real mother was happy to see me, but never offered to take me back and never did anything for me, so I was back on my own at 12. I have no hard feelings towards her. She is who she is and I need to accept that. As for my father, I didn’t meet him until I was 47. He found me.
“As I was abandoned by one family and ran away from another, I was pretty much by myself since the age of 12. After running around Baltimore for a bit, I came to D.C. and joined a motorcycle gang and lived in a runaway house. I then ended up leaving D.C. and drifting around for a long time. I spent a good part of that time drinking and drugging and dealing with my own issues. That was the size of it for a long time. The thing is that everywhere I went, I took me with me. I could never escape who I was and the things that I had been through. Eventually, I understood that living like that was not normal and I needed to change. I finished school and went to college to be a social worker. I wanted to help people who were down and out, especially those struggling with addiction. I went into alcohol counseling and worked in the same recovery house that I went through when I had my problem with alcohol.
“While there were dark periods, one of the things that always helped me in my life was music. Ever since I was very small, I knew that I wanted to play music. My foster parents did not allow me to play. When I was nine, I entered into a song writing contest in Nashville and won. When I approached my parents with that, they did not let me accept the prize and told me to stay away from the music business. I ended up giving the song away and it went on to make a lot of money for someone else. That’s why when I was 12 and living alone, I taught myself how to play guitar on 18th and Riggs. I taught myself right handed and then I turned my guitar over and played left handed. After that, I had the same dream every day for about 15 years that I was on the stage playing music. The stages and lighting would change, but I was always performing. I thought that was a sign that music and I were made for each other.
“Since I have been back in D.C., I have been playing music all over. I have played in clubs and on the street and have even had a recording contract. There are ups and down, but I know that I am meant to play music here. I’ll be 60 in November, but I feel like I am getting younger as time moves forward. The music keeps me young.”
Bill is in the band, Bill C and the B’s. Hear some of their music here.
Source: peoplesdistrict.com
San Francisco, California, USA
“She goes by ‘Zombie’, but there’s still a spark. With her crew she’s the one people notice. When they notice.
But mostly, they don’t see that she’s sad. And maybe not so comfortable being pretty. Or herself. And that she doesn’t quite feel alive when she’s still.
Or maybe that’s just a girl she reminds me of.
But her guy’s been watching and figures she’s talked too much. So she takes the bottle.” - Tom Stone
Source: flickr.com
New York, USA
These photos are from an ongoing project where people draw a self portrait (how they see themselves, how they want to appear, or literally how they look), and then are photographed with the drawing as a comparison.
M. Herrington
Source: meh9585.cias.rit.edu
United States
Jamie, 9, lives with his parents and younger twins brother and sister in a penthouse on 5th Avenue, New York. Jamie goes to a prestigious school and is a good student. In his spare time he takes judo and goes for a swim. He loves to study finance. When he grows up, he wants to become a lawyer like his father.
From Where Children Sleep
Source: amusingplanet.com
United States
Joey, 11, lives in Kentucky, USA, with his parents and older sister. He regularly accompanies his father on hunts. He owns two shotguns and a crossbow and made his first kill – a deer – at the age of seven. He is hoping to use his crossbow during the next hunting season as he has become tired of using a gun. He loves the outdoor life and hopes to continue hunting into adulthood. His family always cook and eat the meat from the animal they have shot. Joey does not agree that an animal should be killed just for sport. When he is not out hunting, Joey attends school and enjoys watching television with his pet bearded dragon lizard, Lily.
From Where Children Sleep
Source: amusingplanet.com
United States
Jasmine (‘Jazzy’), four, lives in a big house in Kentucky, USA, with her parents and three brothers. Her house is in the countryside, surrounded by farmland. Her bedroom is full of crowns and sashes that she has won in beauty pageants. She has entered more than 100 competitions. Her spare time is taken up with rehearsal. She practises her stage routines every day with a trainer. Jazzy would like to be a rock star when she grows up.
From Where Children Sleep
Source: amusingplanet.com













