tim etchells (+) at kunstmuseum basel

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noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap

Love Begins
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Peter Solarz

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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roma★

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Show & Tell

Janaina Medeiros

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shark vs the universe
tumblr dot com
DEAR READER
dirt enthusiast

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@sussural
tim etchells (+) at kunstmuseum basel
“Many people remember exactly where they were when that ecstatic feeling of oneness washed over them, and feel a special intimacy with that place. We return to these places, physically or in our minds, for centering, as renewal for our values, and are reminded that, far from being alone in a sick and evil world, we are beloved by a divine and beautiful one.”
—from a piece I wrote about mystical or ecstatic experiences in nature. That’s how this whole blog got started, as a collection of quotations I was storing for that article. Then I decided to add some pictures.
Marina Tsvetaeva, from Poem of the End: V (tr. by Elaine Feinstein)
from “a hunger like no other” || sk osborn
horse horse horse horse
good news I went back and horse cardigan was still there!
Oh you are amazing, look at that thing.
remembering the time i ate an entire loaf of pumpkin bread and my mom got so enraged she called me a “little loaf eating freak”
“Understanding knowledge as an essential element of love is vital because we are bombarded daily with messages that tell us love is about mystery, about that which cannot be known. We see movies in which people are represented as being in love who never talk with one another, who fall into bed without ever discussing their bodies, their sexual needs, their likes and dislikes. Indeed, the message is received from the mass media is that knowledge makes love less compelling; that it is ignorance that gives love its erotic and transgressive edge. These messages are brought to us by profiteering producers who have no clue about the art of loving, who substitute their mystified visions because they do not really know how to genuinely portray loving interaction.”
bell hooks
what if it’s all black baby, all the time?
We’ve got one down here. Come on, I’ll show you. [pic] Twitter | VK | Leave a tip
A dream soul that wanders.
Sheryl Lee, Michael Horse, Kyle MacLachlan | Twin Peaks
allow me to slip into something a little more… comfortable *is enveloped in fog and disappears never to be seen or heard from again*
Hey, I was wondering if you have any poetry, lyrics, and stuff about mother’s and daughters? It’s a very confusing and complicated relationship and I love reading things about it.
hi, i have this compilation about mothers and daughters, but you could also check out jeanette winterson’s why be happy when you could be normal, rebecca solnit’s the faraway nearby, anne carson’s the glass essay. here a few more:
Olga Broumas, from Beginning with O; “Little Red Riding Hood”
Christa Wolf, Cassandra: A Novel and Four Essays (tr. Jan van Heurck)
“My mother boils seawater. It sits all afternoon simmering on the stovetop, almost two gallons in a big soup pot. The windows steam up and the house smells like a storm. In the evening, a crust of salt is all that’s left at the bottom of the pot. My mother scrapes it out with a spoon. We each lick a fingertip and dip them in the salt and it’s softer than you’d think, less like sand and more like snow. We lay our fingertips on our tongues, right in the middle. It tastes like salt but like something else, too—wide, and dark. It tastes like drowning, or like falling asleep on the shore and only waking up when the tide has come up to your feet and you wonder if you’d gone on sleeping, would you have sunk?”
Carri Thurman, from The Alchemy
Noor Mallouh x Kim Kang Hee (x)
“Most nights, I dream of my mother’s face, by turns harsh and tender / In a nightmare, I shouted at her: Neither you nor I are the enemy! / What do mothers ask their own daughters, everywhere in the world? / Is there a question? Ask me something”
Mary Jean Chan, in Flèche
Bethany Webster, from Mother Wound Healing: Why It’s Crucial for Women
“sometimes i open my mouth and my mother’s silences come / tumbling out of me”
Rita Wong, from “value chain”
“I know what it means to break apart. I observed it in my mother, in myself, in many women. The process of fragmentation in a woman’s body interests me very much from the narrative point of view. It means telling the story of a present-day female I that suddenly perceives itself disintegrating, it loses the sense of time, it’s no longer in order, it feels like a vortex of debris, a whirlwind of thoughts-words. It stops abruptly and starts again from a new equilibrium, which–note–isn’t necessarily more advanced than the preceding or even more stable. It serves only to say: now I’m here and I feel like this.”
Elena Ferrante, Frantumaglia: A Writer’s Journey
Bettina Simon, from “Visit to the Home” (tr. Kristina Herber)
“We broke our mother’s heart and became ourselves. We proceeded to breathe and therefore to leave, drunken, astonished, each of us a god.”
Patti Smith, from The Long Road