But you, you’re special to me. When I’m with you I feel something is just right. I believe in you. I like you. I don’t want to let you go.
Haruki Murakami, Norwegian Wood (via thelovejournals)
I remember reading this book. I want to read it again.

if i look back, i am lost
Monterey Bay Aquarium
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
cherry valley forever
YOU ARE THE REASON

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Xuebing Du
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kiana Khansmith

PR's Tumblrdome
Sade Olutola
Acquired Stardust

Discoholic 🪩
Peter Solarz

JBB: An Artblog!
occasionally subtle
wallacepolsom
styofa doing anything


seen from Brazil

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@creativelythinkingkaty
But you, you’re special to me. When I’m with you I feel something is just right. I believe in you. I like you. I don’t want to let you go.
Haruki Murakami, Norwegian Wood (via thelovejournals)
I remember reading this book. I want to read it again.

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VALLEY OF LOVE (2015): A NOTE ON INCONCLUSIVENESS, ABSENCE AND GEOGRAPHIES OF GRIEF Gerard Depardieu and Isabelle Huppert reuniting in Guillame Nicloux’s new feature film offering was too tempting to resist. Fantastically, the Wimbledon Curzon cinema had only one other person in the auditorium – either me and this one other person knew better, or everyone else had read the reviews had decided to give it a miss…Telling the story of an estranged husband and wife whose 25 year old son Michael has recently killed himself, the pair meet in Death Valley after receiving cryptic and chillingly-written letters from their son requesting them to do so. They visit a series of landmarks each day as mapped out in the letter, in order that Michael might reappear to them. The first thing to say is that visually, it is beautifully produced. And of course as a Geographer I should mention the landscapes which are – of course – stunning. However, in terms of the more subtle geographies I would want to highlight, they are of a more spectral kind.The atmosphere, one of oppressive, unyielding, desert heat is almost palpable, but more distressing than that is the almost visceral sense of loss. Unlike films which show flashbacks to the childhood of someone recently lost, or the happy relationship pre-breakdown, the film actively constructs its two protagonists using the bare minimum of resources. This is no melodrama. No overblown emotions (for example, when Depardieu announces he has cancer; Huppert replies: ‘I’m sorry that’s happening to you’). Neither of the characters are particularly likeable, and they don’t need to be. The emotional geography of grief is delicately negotiated: through the template of a kind of anti-pilgrimage. It is in some sense reminiscent of Avril Maddrell’s work on mapping grief, in which she posits that there are three genres of grieving space(s): physical spaces, embodied-psychological spaces, and virtual spaces. Whilst obviously located in a specific landscape, the grieving is done in-place, but through Depardieu and Huppert’s ability to ‘convey an aspect of phenomenological rue’ – arguably helped by Charles Ives’ rather unsettling (or, disorientating ?) score.In terms of the physical ‘pilgrimage’ element, neither of the protagonists really understands why they have found themselves where they have, or have much reason to believe there will be some kind of absolution at the end; thus, it is not a pilgrimage of hope in the conventional sense. (This is echoed by a conversation they have about relationships: In a kind of circular pattern, they head out to different landscapes daily, returning to the motel at night to their darkened rooms and their own isolated grief. There is a contrast between the profundity of the landscape – well, at least a suggestion of the profound, often quite humorously interrupted by their bickering and the occasional overweight, boorish tourist passing through – and the depressing social architecture of the deserted motel swimming pool and tackily-decorated American bar with its artificially cheerful waiting staff. As Depardieu announces near the beginning of the film: ‘this place is full of assholes’.The film’s main failing, I think, is that it invites the audience into a heart-wrenchingly realist representation of two grieving parents, whose lives seemed already to be falling apart before their son’s death. However, it simultaneously requests the audience to buy into the possibility of the supernatural. The sense of confusion over whether Michael has come back, whether he could come back is a directorial gamble which seems to distract from the emotional drama at the heart. However, there is an unsettling sense of absent, spectral presence, which is never ‘fleshed out’ (if you’ll excuse the pun). This is to say: it was incredibly frustrating to have a sense of something you were unable to understand or grasp. But it was also, I realised, really, really effective. The consistent lack of clarity at pivotal moments – one of the key scenes, where Michael apparently reappears to his father – is not shown. In the vein of classically ‘realist’ film making so characteristic of Nicloux, there is no artifice, no tidy endings, no resolution. Only a deep sense of loss and confusion, and – actually – futility. I arrogantly felt that I deserved more from the film once it ended (it’s definitely one of those ones where the film ends and its hard not to let out an audible sigh of frustration or disappointment) but on reflection, this actually made the film so, so much better. Through the persistent sense of implied inner-turmoil, physical absence and the template of the anti-pilgrimage – the film recreates in its viewer the numbness and emptiness that is inherent in grieving. The verdict: well worth seeing, if only for the sense of confusion and disorientation.
Jean Rhys: ladygoals

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Frank Worsley, captain of the Endurance on Shackleton’s 1914 Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. One of the most incredible survival stories. Read more here: http://mashable.com/2015/10/10/the-endurance/?utm_cid=lf-toc#oYxXF4wJEkqr
I’m back!
But this time I’m 22, and looking to re-find the inspiration that drove this blog when I started it 5 years ago. So much has changed, and time has moved on but I have this feeling I may have lost something along the way. It’s time to start doing what I want to do, being who I want to be, and mainly just getting some shit done (not my forte, generally speaking). I've really started realising that we’re only here for a moment - or, as Will Varley (an amazing folk singer who I've seen a few times) says: “we all just drop in for a while”. And it’s true, and it sucks, but let’s make this count. Let’s stop settling for less and get out there, and stop shrinking ourselves down. I’m ready! I realise I may have been flaring my nostrils in this photo but overall it’s quite a good representation of who I am right now (yes, when I get nervous I seem to flare my nostrils. Why do you get nervous having your photo taken? I literally have no idea. It’s scary seeing yourself printed out on paper, ok?)
Danger – Portrait de William S. Burroughs devant le Théâtre de l’Odéon, Paris, 1959

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Stop Saying "I Have A Boyfriend"
I enjoy “going out.” I like dancing, I like music, I like drinking, I like spending time with friends. And I like meeting new people, chatting with them and making friends. I also understand that many people (men and women) go to bars and clubs in hopes of meeting a romantic/sexual partner, and of course, there is nothing wrong with this, in theory.
That’s why, if someone attempts conversation with me, I try not to immediately write them off as a “creep.” I welcome conversation and believe that the more people in my life with whom I can converse, the better off I’ll be.
However (as most women know) there sometimes comes a point in a conversation with a man where it becomes necessary to draw the line and indicate that you are in no way, by any means, at all interested in pursuing anything further. There are also times when it is clear that friendly conversation is not in the cards (i.e., those men who substitute grabbing your hips and attempting to “dance” with you for a polite introduction). This is about those times.
If you do a Google search for “How to avoid being hit on at a bar,” you’ll get several articles with “helpful” tips on skirting conversation with men you are not interested in. The majority of these list pretending to have (or actually having) a boyfriend/fiance/husband as the number one method for avoiding creeps (second to “pretending to be a lesbian” or “pretending to be crazy,” a la Jenna Marbles).
In response to my complaints about men creeping on me at dance clubs in college, an ex-boyfriend of mine used to get cranky that I refused to whip out this cure-all excuse (one of many reasons he is an ex).
Yes, this may be the easiest and quickest way to get someone to leave you alone, but the problems associated with using this excuse far outweigh the benefits. There is a quotation that I’ve seen floating around Tumblr recently (reblogged by many of my amazing feminist Tumblr-friends) that goes as follows:
Male privilege is “I have a boyfriend” being the only thing that can actually stop someone from hitting on you because they respect another male-bodied person more than they respect your rejection/lack of interest.
This amazingly puts into one sentence what I have been attempting to explain to ex-boyfriends and friends (male and female) for years, mostly unsuccessfully. The idea that a woman should only be left alone if she is “taken” or “spoken for” (terms that make my brain twitch) completely removes the level of respect that should be expected toward that woman. It completely removes the agency of the woman, her ability to speak for herself and make her own decisions regarding when and where the conversation begins or ends. It is basically a real-life example of feminist theory at work–women (along with women’s choices, desires, etc.) being considered supplemental to or secondary to men, be it the man with whom she is interacting or the man to whom she “belongs” (see the theory of Simone de Beauvoir, the story of Adam and Eve, etc.).
And the worst part of the whole situation is that we’re doing this to ourselves. by Alicia Lynn Eberhardt read full article here: http://www.eberhardtsmith.com/stop-saying-i-have-a-boyfriend
Put down the pen someone else gave you. No one ever drafted a life worth living on borrowed ink.
Get to San Francisco. Get to San Francisco in defiance of your geography, your ancestry, and the lonely change rattling sad excuses in your pocket.
Fuel up on pie and diner coffee and mystic visions and the freedom of not knowing what’s coming next except that you’re burning the road to outrun it.
Get going. - Jack Kerouac BUT JACK I AM SO SCARED OF UNCERTAINTY! A friend said to me yesterday "fear is a pointless emotion" I agree, but how, how HOW to get past it?
^ This is the cover and acknowledgements page of my recently submitted dissertation. My Dad gets a special mention mainly for suggesting that I title my project 'Pass the Bong, Man: Jack Kerouac as Massive Pot-Head Loser'. How is he so funny?
Neal Cassady being a dude, as usual. SO MUCH JOY!

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The best couple. Gary Snyder and Joanne Kyger... They both go onto my list of people who I think could see the world in a clearer, somehow brighter and more inspiring way. These two, John Lennon, Lisa Bonet and Amanda Sage.
What You Should Know to Become a Poet
all you can know about animals as persons.
the names of trees and flowers and weeds. the names of stars and the movements of planets and the moon. your own six senses, with a watchful elegant mind. at least one kind of traditional magic: divination, astrology, the book of changes, the tarot;
dreams. the illusory demons and the illusory shining gods. kiss the ass of the devil and eat sh*t; fuck his horny barbed cock, fuck the hag, and all the celestial angels and maidens perfum’d and golden-
& then love the human: wives husbands and friends children’s games, comic books, bubble-gum, the weirdness of television and advertising.
work long, dry hours of dull work swallowed and accepted and lived with and finally lovd. exhaustion, hunger, rest.
the wild freedom of the dance, extasy silent solitary illumination, entasy
real danger. gambles and the edge of death.
- Gary Snyder