trying on a metaphor

Kiana Khansmith

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

#extradirty
No title available
Jules of Nature

⁂
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

ellievsbear
almost home
dirt enthusiast
$LAYYYTER
Three Goblin Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Discoholic 🪩
Misplaced Lens Cap
Mike Driver
No title available
ojovivo
KIROKAZE

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Poland
seen from South Africa

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Poland

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from South Africa

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
@eleanornimbly
honestly, he may be the best looking man who ever lived.
Daydreaming session will commence after work with the viewing of every alain delon film available on hulu, except maybe Le Samourai and Rocco and His Brothers which I just watched.
charles henri ford
charles henri ford
charles henri ford
Spending the next couple days exclusively daydreaming of beautiful men wanting to talk to me for hours...
I’ll strike my best three-quarters for you, just you wait.
I’m in love with a shadow. I can’t touch him, and I can’t shake him either.
7 track album
IT’S FINALLY HERE Y’ALL!!!!
physical copies available aug 21st via sisterpolygonrecords.bigcartel.com
-OR-
at our show the same day at above the bayou. we also play tomorrow at union arts with frau, puff pieces, polio club, and cryptojocks. not to be missed!
xxdd
😍😍😍
TFW
...your mind is just barely holding onto reality like a ledge, and the arms of your mind are so tired you can barely hang on any longer. But you know if you let go, it’s a free fall. A free fall into something terrible and frightening, so you just expend all the energy you have into being nothing. A nothing so light that you’re a cloud, a cloud that can let go and float, not fall.
Some people are opaque objects. They cast a shadow over the parts of your life that they touch, so that when you look back those moments appear in darkness, indiscernible.
me, rn.
theme song rn.
The Weed
I dreamed that dead, and meditating, I lay upon a grave, or bed, (at least, some cold and close-built bower). In the cold heart, its final thought stood frozen, drawn immense and clear, stiff and idle as I was there; and we remained unchanged together for a year, a minute, an hour. Suddenly there was a motion, as startling, there, to every sense as an explosion. Then it dropped to insistent, cautious creeping in the region of the heart, prodding me from desperate sleep. I raised my head. A slight young weed had pushed up through the heart and its green head was nodding on the breast. (All this was in the dark.) It grew an inch like a blade of grass; next, one leaf shot out of its side a twisting, waving flag, and then two leaves moved like a semaphore. The stem grew thick. The nervous roots reached to each side; the graceful head changed its position mysteriously, since there was neither sun nor moon to catch its young attention. The rooted heart began to change (not beat) and then it split apart and from it broke a flood of water. Two rivers glanced off from the sides, one to the right, one to the left, two rushing, half-clear streams, (the ribs made of them two cascades) which assuredly, smooth as glass, went off through the fine black grains of earth. The weed was almost swept away; it struggled with its leaves, lifting them fringed with heavy drops. A few drops fell upon my face and in my eyes, so I could see (or, in that black place, thought I saw) that each drop contained a light, a small, illuminated scene; the weed-deflected stream was made itself of racing images. (As if a river should carry all the scenes that it had once reflected shut in its waters, and not floating on momentary surfaces.) The weed stood in the severed heart. "What are you doing there?" I asked. It lifted its head all dripping wet (with my own thoughts?) and answered then: "I grow," it said, "but to divide your heart again."
-Elizabeth Bishop