“Finding someone you can really connect with is like winning the lottery — It happens basically never, but if it does, you really shouldn’t blow it.”
— Jessica Verdi, What You Left Behind

roma★
One Nice Bug Per Day
Claire Keane
cherry valley forever
No title available

No title available

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
sheepfilms
No title available
almost home

⁂
will byers stan first human second

@theartofmadeline

pixel skylines
NASA
Monterey Bay Aquarium
styofa doing anything
Not today Justin
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
@mashock
“Finding someone you can really connect with is like winning the lottery — It happens basically never, but if it does, you really shouldn’t blow it.”
— Jessica Verdi, What You Left Behind
At the Boulevard, Last Summer - Toyin Loye, 2018
Nigerian, b.1959 -
Paper Ripped 51 1/5 × 39 2/5 in 130 x 100 cm.
by jenny holzer (+)
[via]
1. Linguistic Intelligence: the capacity to use language to express what’s on your mind and to understand other people. Any kind of writer, orator, speaker, lawyer, or other person for whom language is an important stock in trade has great linguistic intelligence. 2. Logical/Mathematical Intelligence: the capacity to understand the underlying principles of some kind of causal system, the way a scientist or a logician does; or to manipulate numbers, quantities, and operations, the way a mathematician does. 3. Musical Rhythmic Intelligence: the capacity to think in music; to be able to hear patterns, recognize them, and perhaps manipulate them. People who have strong musical intelligence don’t just remember music easily, they can’t get it out of their minds, it’s so omnipresent. 4. Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence: the capacity to use your whole body or parts of your body (your hands, your fingers, your arms) to solve a problem, make something, or put on some kind of production. The most evident examples are people in athletics or the performing arts, particularly dancing or acting. 5. Spatial Intelligence: the ability to represent the spatial world internally in your mind – the way a sailor or airplane pilot navigates the large spatial world, or the way a chess player or sculptor represents a more circumscribed spatial world. Spatial intelligence can be used in the arts or in the sciences. 6. Naturalist Intelligence: the ability to discriminate among living things (plants, animals) and sensitivity to other features of the natural world (clouds, rock configurations). This ability was clearly of value in our evolutionary past as hunters, gatherers, and farmers; it continues to be central in such roles as botanist or chef. 7. Intrapersonal Intelligence: having an understanding of yourself; knowing who you are, what you can do, what you want to do, how you react to things, which things to avoid, and which things to gravitate toward. We are drawn to people who have a good understanding of themselves. They tend to know what they can and can’t do, and to know where to go if they need help. 8. Interpersonal Intelligence: the ability to understand other people. It’s an ability we all need, but is especially important for teachers, clinicians, salespersons, or politicians – anybody who deals with other people. 9. Existential Intelligence: the ability and proclivity to pose (and ponder) questions about life, death, and ultimate realities.
Howard Gardner’s seminal Theory of Multiple Intelligences, originally published in 1983, which revolutionized psychology and education by offering a more dimensional conception of intelligence than the narrow measures traditional standardized tests had long applied. (via explore-blog)
the essence of all beautiful art, all great art, is gratitude
friedrich nietzsche (via visual-poetry)
It’s a most distressing affliction to have a sentimental heart and a skeptical mind.
Nagulb Mahfouz, Sugar Street (via thequotejournals)
Sometimes you have to look around at the life you’ve made and sort of nod at it, like someone moving their head up and down to a tune they like.
Ada Limón, “Oh Please, Let It Be Lightning,” from Bright Dead Things (via bostonpoetryslam)
Everyone has something of beauty about them. But loving let’s you look, and look, and look again. You notice the back of a hand, the turn of a head, the way of a walk. When you first love, you look blind and you see it all as the glorious, beloved whole, or a beautiful sum of beautiful parts. But when you see the one you love as pieces, as why’s, you can love those parts too, and it’s a love at once more complicated and more complete.
Ally Condie, Crossed (via wordsnquotes)
I don’t want to be a product of my environment. I want my environment to be a product of me.
The Departed (2006), Dir. Martin Scorsese (via wordsnquotes)
Virginia Woolf on the needs of the rebellious truthfulness of the “soul” and our elemental human need for communication.
Smirap Designs developed amazing packaging for handmade Greek olive oil soaps.
Sometimes you’re 23 and standing in the kitchen of your house making breakfast and brewing coffee and listening to music that for some reason is really getting to your heart. You’re just standing there thinking about going to work and picking up your dry cleaning. And also more exciting things like books you’re reading and trips you plan on taking and relationships that are springing into existence. Or fading from your memory, which is far less exciting. And suddenly you just don’t feel at home in your skin or in your house and you just want home but ‘Mom’s’ probably wouldn’t feel like home anymore either. There used to be the comfort of a number in your phone and ears that listened everyday and arms that were never for anyone else. But just to calm you down when you started feeling trapped in a five-minute period where nostalgia is too much and thoughts of this person you are feel foreign. When you realize that you’ll never be this young again but this is the first time you’ve ever been this old. When you can’t remember how you got from sixteen to here and all the same feel like sixteen is just as much of a stranger to you now. The song is over. The coffee’s done. You’re going to breathe in and out. You’re going to be fine in about five minutes.
Kalyn RoseAnne (via wordsnquotes)
Robert Frank, Wales, 1953
#TBT: For several weeks in 2000, Creative Time exhibited Cuban artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s last work, Untitled, 1995. Displayed on twenty-four billboards throughout four boroughs in New York City, Gonzalez-Torres’s hauntingly poetic final work featured the image of a bird in flight against an empty grey sky. The billboards ran concurrently with an exhibition at the Andrea Rosen Gallery
On World AIDS Day, we remember artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres, who died from the disease in 1996, and all those we’ve lost. This evocative photograph Gonzalez-Torres took of his own bed is especially poignant given the loss of his partner, Ross Laycock, in the year he produced the work.
[Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Untitled. 1991. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. © The Felix Gonzalez-Torres Foundation, New York. Photo by David Allison]
No new friends