Aww, she sounds amazing! 🎵 Yesterday, artist and actress Willow Smith (@willowsmith), arguably best known as the daughter of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith, shared a one-minute cover of @fawnwood’s Singing and Praying to her Instagram story. Fawn reshared Willow’s cover, captioning it: “The beautiful and talented @willowsmith 🥹❤️🙌🏽🙏🏽,” followed by another story expressing her admiration for the record, which she recorded with her cousin, Charles Wood III. This isn’t the first time Willow has paid homage to the Cree and Salish artist. She recently shared kind words about Fawn and Indigenous culture in an interview with @service95 back in May of last year. What do you think—Are you a fan of Willow Smith and her music?! Should more artists celebrate and cover traditional Indigenous music, like Powwow and Round Dance songs?! 💭⤵️ (via @fawnwood, @willowsmith) #FawnWood #WillowSmith
Aww, she sounds amazing! 🎵 Yesterday, artist and actress Willow Smith (@willowsmith), arguably best known as the daughter of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith, shared a one-minute cover of @fawnwood’s Singing and Praying to her Instagram story. Fawn reshared Willow’s cover, captioning it: “The beautiful and talented @willowsmith 🥹❤️🙌🏽🙏🏽,” followed by another story expressing her admiration for the record, which she recorded with her cousin, Charles Wood III. This isn’t the first time Willow has paid homage to the Cree and Salish artist. She recently shared kind words about Fawn and Indigenous culture in an interview with @service95 back in May of last year. What do you think—Are you a fan of Willow Smith and her music?! Should more artists celebrate and cover traditional Indigenous music, like Powwow and Round Dance songs?! 💭⤵️ (via @fawnwood, @willowsmith) #FawnWood #WillowSmith
Aww, she sounds amazing! 🎵 Yesterday, artist and actress Willow Smith (@willowsmith), arguably best known as the daughter of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith, shared a one-minute cover of @fawnwood’s Singing and Praying to her Instagram story. Fawn reshared Willow’s cover, captioning it: “The beautiful and talented @willowsmith 🥹❤️🙌🏽🙏🏽,” followed by another story expressing her admiration for the record, which she recorded with her cousin, Charles Wood III. This isn’t the first time Willow has paid homage to the Cree and Salish artist. She recently shared kind words about Fawn and Indigenous culture in an interview with @service95 back in May of last year. What do you think—Are you a fan of Willow Smith and her music?! Should more artists celebrate and cover traditional Indigenous music, like Powwow and Round Dance songs?! 💭⤵️ (via @fawnwood, @willowsmith) #FawnWood #WillowSmith
Aww, she sounds amazing! 🎵 Yesterday, artist and actress Willow Smith (@willowsmith), arguably best known as the daughter of Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith, shared a one-minute cover of @fawnwood’s Singing and Praying to her Instagram story. Fawn reshared Willow’s cover, captioning it: “The beautiful and talented @willowsmith 🥹❤️🙌🏽🙏🏽,” followed by another story expressing her admiration for the record, which she recorded with her cousin, Charles Wood III. This isn’t the first time Willow has paid homage to the Cree and Salish artist. She recently shared kind words about Fawn and Indigenous culture in an interview with @service95 back in May of last year. What do you think—Are you a fan of Willow Smith and her music?! Should more artists celebrate and cover traditional Indigenous music, like Powwow and Round Dance songs?! 💭⤵️ (via @fawnwood, @willowsmith) #FawnWood #WillowSmith
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
like a ray of light to the sun
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
OH MY GOD I’M REALLY THAT GUY
Recently, I’ve been exploring the concept of vulnerability through an ecological lens. Seeing it more as a holistic system that protects the life balance by fostering a direct and mindful relationship with the environment, not just a psychological state. Early humans were naked and barefoot in prehistoric times, forcing them to be acutely aware of their surroundings. Carelessness was a one-way ticket to death. This deep understanding kept them cautious and balanced. Their vulnerability wasn’t a weakness but a feedback loop that demanded care and respect for the world they moved through. The healthy fear of protecting our bare feet would prevent us from stepping on sharp objects and living beings alike. The protection of shoes allows us to tread carelessly through the world, facing little to no consequence when stepping on a sharp rock or a scarab beetle. This shift reflects a larger pattern in human progress—each technological “advancement” is powered by the desperate desire to be exempt from nature’s moods, further insulating us from her will and interrupting the natural systems of “essential vulnerability” that once kept us in harmony. The more we demonize vulnerability (in all forms), the easier it becomes to act without care and to exploit ecosystems without feeling remorse. We don’t feel remorse for the insect that perishes under our shoe; we most likely were unaware it was there. Progress itself isn’t inherently harmful, but things become precarious when the intention behind it severs us from the sensitivity that vulnerability fosters. The challenge is finding a way to rewrite that powerful narrative of denial coiled at the center of modern progression—a way to protect ourselves without forgetting the ground beneath our feet.