Nº. 1 of  55

the library of infinite fog

this is a pile of seeds.

reggie watts

is so on

at sxsw

theartofgooglebooks:
“Scribble.
From the back matter of Lullaby Land: Songs of Childhood by Eugene Field (1897). Original from Princeton University. Digitized September 18, 2008.
”

theartofgooglebooks:

Scribble.

From the back matter of Lullaby Land: Songs of Childhood by Eugene Field (1897). Original from Princeton University. Digitized September 18, 2008. 

“ Beaver Chief Falls Arun Yenumula
The falls are also known as Diamond Falls (because as the water falls, it splits into two channels, then converges before it reaches the floor of the valley, forming a jagged diamond shape in the cliff)
”

Beaver Chief Falls Arun Yenumula

The falls are also known as Diamond Falls (because as the water falls, it splits into two channels, then converges before it reaches the floor of the valley, forming a jagged diamond shape in the cliff) 

(via lordholdme-deactivated20130710)

mylips-missyours:
“ hnnhslvs:
“ “ “
Slow Motion: Camera Flash Bulb Shot at 1052 FPS
” ”
that’s the most beautiful thing i’ve ever seen
”
This is new most favorite gif omg.
”

mylips-missyours:

hnnhslvs:


Slow Motion: Camera Flash Bulb Shot at 1052 FPS

that’s the most beautiful thing i’ve ever seen

This is new most favorite gif omg.

(Source: axist, via lordholdme-deactivated20130710)

nirvikalpa:

Questioner: Why is it that we naturally seem to think of ourselves as separate individuals?

Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj: Your thoughts about individuality are really not your own thoughts; they are all collective thoughts. You think that you are the one who has thoughts; in fact thoughts arise…

(Source: caeropore, via nirvikalpa-deactivated20130416)

lindsaydobbin:

Michael Meade is one of my favourite thinkers. Here’s an enlightening article just in time for all you doomsayers. Bring the light on the 21st. Don’t go underground.

Even a word that seems to announce the end of everything has to have a beginning and “apocalypse” begins with ancient Greek terms like “apocalypsis,” meaning “to reveal, to uncover; to lift the veil.” The ancient notion of apocalypsis refers to what happens when the web of life loosens, when the veils lift and the underlying tensions and oppositions of life become more evident and transparent. Apocalyptic conditions tend to involve of revelations of the underside of creation and a “return of the repressed,” as raw emotions and ancient energies erupt and can overwhelm the rational mind.

(via )

Nº. 1 of  55