~let it happen
Noah Kahan

@theartofmadeline
Misplaced Lens Cap
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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Claire Keane
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Kaledo Art
official daine visual archive

Love Begins
todays bird
Sweet Seals For You, Always

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hello vonnie

titsay
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if i look back, i am lost
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
EXPECTATIONS

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@karramesh
~let it happen
chanel jewelry watch future blue cold vogue uk dez 2003
March 1994 Spring/Summer Fashion Ad for Emporio Armani featuring Great Pyramid of Giza, shot by Christian Moser in Egypt
John Bohl
Dorothee Bis Wool Blend Knit Heart Cutout Top
Habib b. 'Ubayd said:
“Learn knowledge, understand it and benefit from it (live by it); and do not study it in order to decorate yourself with it, for if you live long you will likely see a time when knowledge will be used for beautification like a man beautifies himself with his garments.”
{Ibn Al-Mubarak, Al-Zuhd wa al-Raqā'iq}
Shibuya, Tokyo. November 2019. 10506
(via 2020-01 - Sandman-KK)
At 40, Franz Kafka (1883-1924), who never married and had no children, walked through the park in Berlin when he met a girl who was crying because she had lost her favourite doll. She and Kafka searched for the doll unsuccessfully. Kafka told her to meet him there the next day and they would come back to look for her.
The next day, when they had not yet found the doll, Kafka gave the girl a letter "written" by the doll saying "please don't cry. I took a trip to see the world. I will write to you about my adventures."
Thus began a story which continued until the end of Kafka's life.
During their meetings, Kafka read the letters of the doll carefully written with adventures and conversations that the girl found adorable.
Finally, Kafka brought back the doll (he bought one) that had returned. “It doesn't look like my doll at all," said the girl.
Kafka handed her another letter in which the doll wrote: "my travels have changed me." the little girl hugged the new doll and brought her happy home.
A year later Kafka died. Many years later, the now-adult girl found a letter inside the doll. In the tiny letter signed by Kafka it was written:
"Everything you love will probably be lost, but in the end, love will return in another way."
This article was sourced from Twitter. Happy to acknowledge the original source when I find it again.
“The sweetness of this world is the bitterness of the next world, and the bitterness of this world is the sweetness of the next world.”
Jesus | Kitab az-Zuhd by Imam Ahmad (p. 145, no. 482)
mfGirbaud
Gisele Bündchen, 1998 ph. Jork Weismann