Dying star, Konstantin Korobov

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YOU ARE THE REASON
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@passivemanipulations
Dying star, Konstantin Korobov
April, 1932 The diary of Anaïs Nin [Volume One: 1931-1934]
abandoned space elevator
dia al-azzawi. iraqi, b. 1939. source
“In a 1994 Harvard study that examined people who had radically changed their lives, for instance, researchers found that some people had remade their habits after a personal tragedy, such as a divorce or a life-threatening illness. Others changed after they saw a friend go through something awful, the same way that Dungy’s players watched him struggle.
Just as frequently, however, there was no tragedy that preceded people’s transformations. Rather, they changed because they were embedded in social groups that made change easier. One woman said her entire life shifted when she signed up for a psychology class and met a wonderful group. “It opened a Pandora’s box,” the woman told researchers. “I could not tolerate the status quo any longer. I had changed in my core.” Another man said that he found new friends among whom he could practice being gregarious. “When I do make the effort to overcome my shyness, I feel that it is not really me acting, that it’s someone else,” he said. But by practicing with his new group, it stopped feeling like acting. He started to believe he wasn’t shy, and then, eventually, he wasn’t anymore. When people join groups where change seems possible, the potential for that change to occur becomes more real. For most people who overhaul their lives, there are no seminal moments or life-altering disasters. There are simply communities⏤sometimes of just one other person⏤who make change believable.
One woman told researchers her life transformed after a day spent cleaning toilets⏤and after weeks of discussing with the rest of the cleaning crew whether she should leave her husband.
“Change occurs among other people,” one of the psychologists involved in the study, Todd Heatherton, told me. “It seems real when we can see it in other people’s eyes.”
The precise mechanisms of belief are little understood. No one is certain why a group encountered in a psychology class can convince a woman that everything is different, or why Dungy’s team came together after their coach’s son passed away. Plenty of people talk to friends about unhappy marriages and never leave their spouse; lots of teams watch their coaches experience adversity and never gel.
But we do know that for habits to permanently change, people must believe that change is feasible. The same process that makes AA so effective⏤the power of a group to teach individuals how to believe⏤happens whenever people come together to help one another change. Belief is easier when it occurs within a community.”
⏤ The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg
neil hilborn, a place where someone loves you / dylan dog, le notti della luna piena / @filmnoirsbian / anne sexton / sonnet by neil gaiman / caitlyn siehl, start here
Now THIS is art. 😍
“When I first saw the original painting, I began to do some research on that little boy. I could find everything I wanted about every other detail in the painting, but there was nothing about him. No history. And so I wanted to find a way to imagine a life for this young man that the historical painting had never made space for in the composition: his desires, dreams, family, thoughts, hopes. Those things were never subjects that the original artist wanted the viewer to contemplate. In order to reframe the discussion, I decided to physically take action to quiet [and crumple] the side of the painting that we’ve been talking about for a very long time and turn up the volume on this kid’s story. And that’s the reason why I started that painting.” Via Artnet News 2019/03/27
CHORUS: HOW IS A GREEK CHORUS LIKE A LAWYER THEY’RE BOTH IN THE BUSINESS OF SEARCH FOR A PRECEDENT FINDING AN ANALOGY LOCATING A PRIOR EXAMPLE SO AS TO BE ABLE TO SAY THIS TERRIBLE THING WE’RE WITNESSING NOW IS NOT UNIQUE YOU KNOW IT HAPPENED BEFORE OR SOMETHING MUCH LIKE IT WE’RE NOT AT A LOSS HOW TO THINK ABOUT THIS WE’RE NOT WITHOUT GUIDANCE THERE IS A PATTERN WE CAN FIND AN HISTORICALLY PARALLEL CASE AND FILE IT AWAY UNDER
ANTIGONE BURIED ALIVE FRIDAY AFTERNOON COMPARE CASE HISTORIES 7, 17 AND 49
NOW I COULD DIG UP THOSE CASE HISTORIES, TELL YOU ABOUT DANAOS AND LYKOURGOS AND THE SONS OF PHINEAS PEOPLE LOCKED UP IN A ROOM OR A CAVE OR THEIR OWN DARK MIND IT WOULDN’T HELP YOU IT DIDN’T HELP ME IT’S FRIDAY AFTERNOON THERE GOES ANTIGONE TO BE BURIED ALIVE IS THERE ANY WAY WE CAN SAY THIS IS NORMAL RATIONAL FORGIVABLE OR EVEN IN THE WIDEST DEFINITION JUST
Anne Carson, Antigonick
Next stop, Instagram foto shoot - The Gothamist
The Human Condition & Serbian Mythology (book illustrations) by Dragan Bibin
another random epiphany I had on my drive home from the store was that things that are the most obvious often feel the most profound. I was looking at the sunset through my window. I was like “this is beautiful and it changes all the time so every sunset is a little different and also beautiful.” Which led me to think “if you look at the earth from space, the clouds are never pink or blue or yellow or orange, they are just white and grey all the time. In space perhaps the sunsets are not very different or very beautiful.” Which led me to think “the sunsets are only beautiful because i am so small.” Which led me to think “so many things are only beautiful because i am so small, or if not only then they are at least much more beautiful than they might otherwise be, either because my vantage point of smallness allows me to see details that big things wouldn’t see, like when I see the flash of the sun at sunset with my little eyes on this big planet, or because my briefness finds vastness so incredible cuz it’s so much bigger than me, like when I sit under a very very old and very very tall tree.” And this was all somewhat obvious but it didn’t make the feeling of epiphany go away or diminish at all
Everything Everywhere All At Once (2022) dir. Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert
Mark Rothko, No. 3 (Bright Blue, Brown, Dark Blue on Wine), 1962
© 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko/Artists Rights Society
Teach your children how to deal with emotions in a constructive way. I wish I had done this with my children.
Opal and glass gold-mounted pendant by René Lalique, c. 1900.
iris van herpen x dutch national ballet 2021
The corps of the Royal Ballet in Swan Lake (2022)
- photo by londonlivingdoll