1. On this bridge,” Lorca warns, “life is not a dream. Beware. And beware. And beware.” And so many think because Then happened, Now isn’t. But didn’t I mention the ongoing “wow” is happening right now? We are all co-authors of this dancing exuberance where even our inabilities are having a roast. We are the authors of ourselves, co-authoring a gigantic Dostoevsky novel, starring clowns. This entire thing we’re involved with called the world, is an opportunity to exhibit how exciting alienation can be. Life is a matter of a miracle that is collected over time by moments, flabbergasted to be in each other’s presence. The world is an exam to see if we can rise into direct experience. Our eyesight is here as a test to see if we can see beyond it. Matter is here as a test for our curiosity. Doubt is here as an exam for our vitality. Thomas Mann wrote that he would rather participate in life than write 100 stories. Giacometti was once run down by a car, and he recalled falling into a lucid faint, a sudden exhilaration, as he realized that at last something was happening to him. An assumption develops that you cannot understand life and live life simultaneously. I do not agree entirely. Which is to say I do not exactly disagree. I would say that life understood is life lived. But the paradoxes bug me, and I can learn to love and make love to the paradoxes that bug me. And on really romantic evenings of self, I go salsa dancing with my confusion. Before you drift off, don’t forget. Which is to say, remember. Because remembering is so much more a psychotic activity than forgetting. Lorca, in that same poem said that the iguana will bite those who do not dream. And as one realizes that one is a dream figure in another person’s dream, that is self awareness.
    – Timothy “Speed” Levitch, Waking Life (via kandiflip)

    2 months ago  /  9 notes  /  Source: kandiflip

  2. paper planes.

    3 months ago  /  0 notes

  3. Indian ‘holy man’ perplexes doctors

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  4. An army bold, whose battle cry is love.

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  5. inbetweenlove:

    eclecticairwaves:

    NEW VIDEO: James Blake - A Case Of You

    this. i think i know her

    4 months ago  /  26 notes  /  Source:

  6. “Tiger in A tropical Storm” by Henri Rousseau
Henri Julien Félix Rousseau (May 21, 1844 – September 2, 1910)was a FrenchPost-Impressionistpainter in the Naïveor Primitivemanner. He was also known as Le Douanier (the customs officer), a humorous description of his occupation as atoll collector.Ridiculed during his life, he came to be recognized as a self-taught genius whose works are of high artistic quality.
[via wiki]

    “Tiger in A tropical Storm” by Henri Rousseau

    Henri Julien Félix Rousseau (May 21, 1844 – September 2, 1910)was a FrenchPost-Impressionistpainter in the Naïveor Primitivemanner. He was also known as Le Douanier (the customs officer), a humorous description of his occupation as atoll collector.Ridiculed during his life, he came to be recognized as a self-taught genius whose works are of high artistic quality.

    [via wiki]

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  7. Henri Rousseau

    Henri Rousseau

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  8. Henri Rousseau

    Henri Rousseau

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  9. Henri Rousseau

    Henri Rousseau

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  10. Henri Rousseau

    Henri Rousseau

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  11.  Antonín Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9 in E Minor “From the New World”

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  12. Edvard Grieg’s Suite No. 1 “Morning Mood” from “Peer Gynt”

    4 months ago  /  1 note

  13. sandmarg:

1908 The King of Porto Nova in Dahomey Presiding over a council of his Ministers

    sandmarg:

    1908 The King of Porto Nova in Dahomey Presiding over a council of his Ministers

    (via )

    4 months ago  /  64 notes  /  Source: sandmarg

  14. Don’t Go Breakin My Heart- Elton John & KiKi Dee

    5 months ago  /  0 notes

  15. I love nature. Partly because “the creations within have no choice but to conform to the will of God.” Every creature carries out its niche, thereby allowing the circle of life to rotate. We ride on these supeficial high horses as the top of the food chain, but we can learn from the life of an ant or a flower. We recklessly destroy immeasurable resources/ life. Still, nature sustains itself or atleast tries. We have the option to choose… that’s what seperates us. I’m currently attempting to effeciently choose.

    5 months ago  /  0 notes