Be a true representative of the goodness in your heart, and don’t expect it to be easy or even noticed.
Adyashanti (via lazyyogi)
The Earth is 4.6 billion years old. Scaling to 46 years, we’ve been here 4 hours and our Industrial Revolution began just 1 minute ago. In that time we’ve destroyed more than 50% of the world’s forests. This is NOT sustainable.
(via epiphanyexplores)
...
Should I summon sw33test stasis Under quiet silver shine With gentle fingertip traces Drinking tangy clementine... Should I discover perfect poise Over unfurled carnation flow Symphonic gardens from noise Where peach painted rose bushes grow... If there existed Δ True Balance, between desires and austerity Would you give fantasy another chance To become reality...? til the cat nips, Brian =)
David Zinn ~ chalkart Sluggo's Adventures www.cubebreaker.com
Support independent media.
Amy Goodman, DemocracyNow.org
I have peopled the silence with names. Have I ripped mind and heart to pieces To fall into servitude to words? O dry leaves, Soul carried here and there …
Giuseppe Ungaretti, “Mercy,” Selected Poems. (via literarymiscellany)
and the results will be spontaneous!! ❤👍💪
Raw Food Tech
4 a sweet beetle. ヾ(¯∇ ̄๑)
If I am worth anything later, I am worth something now.
Vincent Van Gogh (via lullabysounds)
church!!!
absolutely enchanted.
Etsy | elspethmclean | Facebook
Elspeth McLean, an Australian artist based in Canada, creates hypnotizing paintings of mandalas on smooth and perfectly round ocean stones that will soothe your soul and fill your wold with color. She paints her beautiful explosions of color with tiny dots, which makes her works even more symmetrical and soothing.
Her rocks are insanely popular, and sell out of her Etsy shop very quickly! But she also has tons of other artwork, so be sure to take a look!
Via:http://www.boredpanda.com/stone-art-mandala-elspeth-mclean-canada/
N2S, look up additional Chernobyl "Diaries"
Jane and Louise Wilson 303 Gallery
Oddments Room
Internationally acclaimed artists Jane and Louise Wilson are known for their film and photographic works, often exploring states of consciousness and the experience of place. This summer a series of large-scale photographs from their ongoing investigation into the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster premieres at the John Hansard Gallery. The exhibition also features a number of other works, many previously unseen in the UK.
Atomgrad (Nature Abhors a Vacuum), 2010 is a suite of eight photographic prints depicting deserted interiors from the abandoned town of Pripyat, situated within the 30km wide Exclusion Zone around the site of the disaster. Books remain on shelves and desks, bed frames remain intact and once-exquisite parquet flooring lies on the ground like rubble. A yardstick appears within each image and is a recurring motif throughout the exhibition. These objects of measurement – functional yet obsolete – act as a marker of scale and order, alluding to the tensions between association and analysis, memory and material fact.
...its never really over...... A kingdom, for a kiss upon my shoulder... ~d(。ŏ__ŏ)b~
89 posts