Saw these luvers at the New Orleans Botanical Garden
Not today Justin
Today's Document
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

tannertan36
Stranger Things
$LAYYYTER
we're not kids anymore.

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KIROKAZE
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todays bird

ellievsbear

pixel skylines
NASA

JVL
RMH

izzy's playlists!

seen from Germany

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seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
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@kiddomb
Saw these luvers at the New Orleans Botanical Garden
This is not unregulated chaos; it is a dynamic but ordered pattern.
Hans Jenny (16 August 1904, Basel – 23 June 1972) was a natural scientist and physician who coined the term cymatics to explain the acoustic impacts of sound wave phenomena. To this field have contributed a number of scholars, that believed sound plays a major role in human life.
Hans Jenny took previous studies on sound and defined a new science, Cymatics, developing devices and machines that generated frequencies on different types of mediums. In Cymatics: A Study of Wave Phenomena and Vibration he concluded that these frequencies are not part of unregulated chaos, but rather from a dynamic and balanced system.
Kelvin-Helmholtz clouds
are also known as “rotor clouds” and their spiraling pattern is the effect of a cloud generating a billowing wave pattern, which is a very rare occurrence. They happen when there is a severe vertical shear between two air streams, producing the upper-level winds to blow faster than the lower-level winds. Images © WSLS 10, Dave Throup, Vivian Knezevich
ʟɪꜱᴛᴇɴ ᴛᴏ ᴛʜᴇ ʀʜʏᴛʜᴍ ᴏꜰ ᴛʜᴇ ꜰᴀʟʟɪɴɢ ʀᴀɪɴ.
This reminds me of rainy bike rides down bayou bend
Somewhere along the Eastern Coast of Iceland. [OC][1816X4032] - Author: gulasch_man on reddit
Forrest Gump
Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie during the filming of Girl, Interrupted, 1999
me n my plant gf
me:bby ur hand is so thin
her:that me leaf
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
if ur gonna date me u gotta be comfortable with a lot of casual silence bc i just never fucking talk
I swing wildly between never shutting the hell up and turning into a stump
@sadxxangel
“There’s good in all of us and I think I simply love people too much, so much that it makes me feel too fucking sad.”
Kurt cobain (via uaintnopunkk)
Are you ever so overwhelmed by the thought of going out to socialize that you just stay home instead? And then once you stay home, you’re bummed out at yourself for not leaving the house in the first place? Is your typical party maneuver to hang out in the corner pretending to text someone? Is the slow march of time a crippling experience that can only be made bearable by drinking alcohol and seeking out progressively more dangerous experiences?
Oh. Whew. Us too!
Seems that anxiety and depression are taking a bigger stranglehold of our culture and there are actually some statistics to back that up. Suicides are at a 30 year high, drinking is at a 25 year high, rates of depression are up 800 percent over 70 years and prescriptions for antidepressants were up 400 percent between 1988 and 2011. That’s some grim shit. But we have a theory as to why this may be happening.
Around some 200,000ish years ago, the human brain stopped evolving, but our culture hasn’t. Rigorous jobs, ever-expanding social networks, complex societal problems have all made our lives more convoluted, but our brains were only designed to handle things like, “where’s the fire?” and, “hey, there are some deer over there.” Evolution has left us hanging and we don’t know how to cope.
THIS WEEK: For a multi-tiered deep-dive into this subject, Jack O'Brien is first joined by Cracked executive editor Jason Pargin (aka David Wong) to discuss the increasing role of anxiety in our population. Later, Jono Zalay, the world’s foremost comedian with a PhD in neuroscience, joins the conversation to talk about the role of drugs in this equation and some of the scientific reasons for why our brain needs anxiety.
The Evolutionary Case for Religion and Schizophrenia