
#extradirty
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Janaina Medeiros

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
styofa doing anything
taylor price

Origami Around
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
One Nice Bug Per Day
$LAYYYTER
🪼
Not today Justin
todays bird
will byers stan first human second

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Sade Olutola

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@omniharbinger
Above him were seraphim, each with six wings: With two wings they covered their faces, with two they covered their feet, and with two they were flying.
Lake Macquarie sunset - By: (Golf33)
Brian Jekel~
It’s okay. Everyone’s survival looks a little bit like death sometimes.
Andrea Gibson, Angels of the Get Through (via ifiwerescience)
Outstare the stars. Infinite foretime and Infinite aftertime: above your head They close like giant wings, and you are dead.
Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire (via rabbitinthemoon)
new aesthetic: divine core
glowing masses of energy behind your head. massive wings grow from your back. optional multiple eyes and heads. ability to grant all that is holy for humankind. being of light. literal angel. divine core
¸.•*¨*•☆¸¸.•*¨*•☆¸¸.•*¨*•☆
you call us beings of light but we have more in common with black holes than the sun. (but our core is nuclear.)
supernova, (s.p)
You were born with potential. You were born with goodness and trust. You were born with ideals and dreams. You were born with greatness. You were born with wings. You are not meant for crawling, so don’t. You have wings. Learn to use them and fly.
Rumi (via wordsnquotes)
moon dust in your lungs stars in your eyes you are a child of the cosmos and ruler of the skies
for em (via parctroopers)
Franz Kadlik, Drei Engel (detail)
1822
Daniele Buetti - Hands
i once saw a scientist on television. and she was speaking generally about science things (being a scientist and knowing science things etc.) and, speaking generally i am not a science person, and while i respect them, i do not have much interest in scientists or science things. so i went to switch the channel at the precise moment that the presenter sitting beside the scientist asked: what, in your opinion, is the most ASTOUNDING fact about the universe ? and this stopped me. because it is not often that television presenters ask such interesting questions, and the scientist was pursing her lips in a thoughtful way that made me think i wanted to her her answer to the interesting question. after a pause, she did not look directly at the camera, but directly at the presenter. did you know, she said, that there are atoms in your body. the presenter laughed. of course, he said. what else would my body be made of? well, said the scientist, and i did not need to look at the television screen to know she was smiling. do you know where those atoms came from? well, said the presenter. and he did not say anything else. i snickered from my place in the armchair and the scientist smiled again. the most ASTOUNDING fact that i have ever known, she said, is not a fact, specifically, but the story of every atom on this planet. the ones that make up the grass and the sea and the sand and the forests and the human body. these atoms came from stars. the presenter sat forward and so did i. stars, continued the scientist, are mortal like humans. they die, and, in their later years, are unstable. it pains me a little to say it, but a star’s death is far more dramatic than a human’s. is it? asked the presenter. the scientist was looking at him still, and i felt strongly as though i was listening in on a very private conversation. it is, the scientist nodded. the stars i am referring to, she said, collapsed and exploded a very long time ago, and scattered their enriched guts across the entire universe. here, she paused, and her words caught in my mind in a way that made me wonder if she was a scientist or a poet. their guts, she said whilst sipping from a glass of water, were splayed across every inch of time and space. these guts were made of the fundamental ingredients of life and existence. carbon and oxygen and nitrogen and hydrogen and all the rest of it. all in the bellies of these stars that flung themselves across the universe in protest when it was their time to die. and then? asked the presenter. the scientist’s lips quirked upwards. and then, she said. it all became parts of gas clouds. ones that condense and collapse and will form our next solar systems - billions of stars with billions of planets to orbit them. and these planets have the ingredients of life sewed into the very fabric of their own lives. so, she said, smile still playing on her lips - where do your atoms come from? from those gas clouds, said the presenter. no, said the scientist. from those stars. every atom, every molecule, every inhale and exhale and beat of your heart, is traceable to the crucibles that cooked life itself. and you are sitting here and so am i and so are your viewers at home, and we’re all in the universe, aren’t we? yes, said the presenter. but i’ll tell you what’s even better, the scientist smiled wider. the universe is in us. your atoms and my atoms and your camera men’s atoms came from those stars. you’re connected and relevant without even having to try. you are made of stardust and the fabric of the universe. that is the most ASTOUNDING fact i can tell you. the presenter smiled and the scientist smiled wider and i smiled too, and later i switched the channel to something less scientific and wondered if i should feel small, tiny and insignificant in relation to the stars that collapsed and exploded and threw themselves everywhere. and that is how my mother found me, sitting on the sofa. and she asked me what was wrong, and i said, nothing. i’m just a lot smaller than stars are. my mother is very literal woman. as such, her natural response was: of course you’re not. don’t you see how small stars are? that’s only from a distance, i said. maybe you’re looking at yourself from a distance too, she said. and she left the room and it is years later now, but i still think about the scientist and what she said and my mother and what she said and i still see the presenter on television. and i still think that the stars are very big but now i think, they are in me. so i am big too.
'the most astounding fact' - j.c., inspired by neil degrass tyson’s talk of the same name (via girlonfired)