Sun Wukong
I like drawing this self-proclaimed sage

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Belgium
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Belgium
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Russia

seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from Norway

seen from Greece
Sun Wukong
I like drawing this self-proclaimed sage
Ah.. What a wonderful night... It was PERFECT.. All I ever wanted. To see my favorite band in the world live... Ah I cannot even explain how I feel... I am exhausted.....................
ढलती उमर भी ढलती शामों से पाकीज़ा होगी,
कांपते होठ, धीमी धड़कनों का डर भी गुमशुदा होगी,
जिस तरह आज सुबह तुमने सूरज से पहले मुझे चूमा,
क्या उसी तरह , मेरी आखरी नींद में साथ दोगी ?
- अय्यारी
I am pretty excited. Weight was 201.2 today. I hope it isn't up tomorrow. But it is my birthday tomorrow and my husband bought me a sweet treat to celebrate.
source: here
“Młodość to kapryśny przyjaciel. Możesz mu poświęcić wszystko, a i tak Cię porzuci. Prawdziwy przyjaciel to starość. Nie opuści Cię, dając z siebie coraz więcej i więcej, aż do dnia twej śmierci.”
Rani Manicka, Matka ryżu
Read a sample of the book @ https://books2read.com/f-for-philosopher 😉
Excerpt #1: The Waiting Room
Seated in the doctor’s office I peeked over my magazine, causing the collage of perfume bottles to distort until they resembled vague, pastel coloured light-bulbs clustered at the brim of my vision. Across me slouched a woman with a house shaped cage on her lap, a string of drool snailing down her chin as she snored. I made a face at her green-cheeked conure as it inched down its tightrope towards me, bobbing its head. The middle-aged man a few seats down, his cowboy hat flipped over his eyes, fanned himself with a lung disease brochure even though the air conditioning had been set to blast. My eyes followed their thought bubbles as they bounced off the oily walls and popped. The severed letters puffed up to the ceiling in a cloud of confetti, mundane details they’d already forgotten. The parakeet’s thoughts were less entertaining, a string of staccatos that fizzled out before they could even form.
When the secretary, a bullnecked woman with streaked green hair grated down to a pixie cut, waved her faux quill pen at me, I placed my magazine back on the rack and followed her down a hallway tiled with domino doors. She kept glancing back to confirm I was still on her heels and hadn’t wandered off like a sneaky child. Once we reached my cubicle she finally left me alone, her black heels clacking against the shiny floor as she trotted off. I crunched down on the paper spread out over the bed, dizzy from the reek of iodoform. Fortunately the doctor arrived quickly, tapping a clipboard against his palm as he asked why I’d come. I lied that my back had been killing me and we both shrugged and nodded at the hardships of old age.