Soey Milk, from her collection “Pida” (”Flowering”)
2015
Acquired Stardust

Discoholic 🪩

ellievsbear
Cosimo Galluzzi
noise dept.
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

Kiana Khansmith
NASA
cherry valley forever
🪼
Keni
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Andulka
Cosmic Funnies
tumblr dot com
i don't do bad sauce passes
Today's Document
taylor price
YOU ARE THE REASON

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
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@delein
Soey Milk, from her collection “Pida” (”Flowering”)
2015
Only plants had consciousness. Animals got it from them.
Dale Pendell
Pharmako/Poeia
(via entheognosis)
Sarah Meyohas, Pink With Yellow, 2017
Zdislav Beksinski
Hieronymus Bosch - The Garden of Earthly Delights, right panel: Hell
Princesse Albert de Broglie by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Oil painting reproductions - https://www.chinaoilpaintinggallery.com
“Nec Mergitur” (It Will Not Sink)
Ferdynand Ruszczyc (Polish, 1905).
Mushroom Pieces by Eveline Tarunadjaja, one of my absolute favorites
Adult Swim
B*DMT
-B*
source: 3 image merge, 12 mirrors & 1 filter, 2016.
I can’t explain you would not understand This is not how I am. I have become comfortably numb. Pink Floyd
A Mushroom a Day
Fly agaric has been a popular icon for the Midwinter and Christmas festivities in central Europe for a long time and is found on Christmas cards and as replica decorations for tree and wreath. Our current concept of Santa Claus can be traced back as an amalgamation of several characters of popular European folklore, such as a more pagan Scandinavian house goblin who offered protection from malevolent spirits in return for a feast at midwinter, and the fourth century Byzantine archbishop who became St Nicolas and was renowned for his kindness to children. More recently it has been suggested that the Siberian use of fly agaric may have played a part in the development of the legend of Santa Claus too. At midwinter festivals the shaman would enter the yurt through the smoke hole and down the central supporting birch pole, bringing with him a bag of dried fly agaric. After conducting his ceremonies he would leave the same way he had come. Ordinary people would have believed the shaman could fly himself, or with the aid of reindeer which they also knew to have a taste for fly agaric. Santa is now dressed in the same colours as the fly agaric, carries a sack with special gifts, comes and goes via the chimney, can fly with reindeer and lives in the ‘Far North’.
(Source: Treesforlife.org.uk)
Simon Teigeiro