when spending the summer with @medievalanchoress .
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

#extradirty

gracie abrams
occasionally subtle
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
trying on a metaphor

PR's Tumblrdome
Show & Tell

Mike Driver
Today's Document

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

tannertan36
The Bowery Presents
Claire Keane

pixel skylines
almost home

roma★
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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@medievalanchoress
when spending the summer with @medievalanchoress .

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The long pink couch in Cy Twombly's apartment in Rome
@lolmitchiee 🩷
Cy Twombly, Untitled, 1967, Oil on paper, 52,7 x 57,2 cm
daisy edgar-jones, shot by szilveszter mako for british vogue
“When writing comes with difficulty, it simply means that, like the ancient ‘sourcier,’ I have not yet found the sources of water…The personal, if it is deep enough, becomes universal, mythical, symbolic; I never generalize, intellectualize. I see, I hear, I feel. These are my primitive instruments of discovery.”
— Anaïs Nin, Volume IV of her diary

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“Now that all the others have run out of air, it’s my turn to do a little story-making. I owe it to myself. I’ve had to work myself up to it: it’s a low art, tale-telling. Old women go in for it, strolling beggars, blind singers, maidservants, children—folks with time on their hands.”
— Margaret Atwood, The Penelopiad
Max Ernst, The Garden of France 1962
I’ve been thinking a lot ab this
vent
last weekend went for lunch by myself and a walk by the canal and thrifting but at a vintage shop this guy opened the curtain as i was undressing and i of course had no reaction other than to yank it closed again but when i got home developed a stress rash that covered my whole body (#mymoderndayhysteria). and this weekend i had plans with a friend but she ghosted me. :/ :/ :/ i think it's better to retreat back to my small world where ~fun~ weekend plans consist of reading multiple newspapers + magazines and watching a movie at home. i'm tired. i want to take a walk to my local coffee shop for the mood benefit but the air quality is so bad i'm worried i'm poisoning myself.
Selinunte, Sicily by Joe Boyle

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“What, I sometimes ask, could I do without [my books]? I have recourse to them as to friends; they shorten and cheer many an hour that would be too long and too desolate otherwise; even when my tired sight will not permit me to continue reading, it is pleasant to see them on the shelf, or on the table.”
— Charlotte Brontë (letter written in 1850).
Unicorn
Book of hours.
MS M.358, fol. 12v. Morgan Library, ca. 1447.
nothing makes me want to remake my entire blog more than when i encounter a blog with the perfect tagging system. that shit makes me feel like patrick batement.
florence welch for elle magazine russia photography by ina lekiewicz styled by ekaterina mukhina hair and makeup by leigh keats and sarah freyton
Decorative Carousel Birdcage | Early 1900s

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Un Village Français: saison 1 - 1940, Vivre c'est choisir.
« I keep a journal of quotes, lines from songs, poetry. Nothing is my original thought — but all of it struck me as meaningful when I wrote it down.
[…] From my early 20s, there are pages trying to convince myself that friendship, which I had, could be as valuable as romantic love, which I didn’t. (Andrew Sullivan: “If love is about the bliss of primal unfreedom, friendship is about the complicated enjoyment of human autonomy.”) […] Ultimately, when I was no longer so preoccupied with finding romantic love, my shift toward looking more closely at my other relationships is mirrored in my transcriptions: Vivian Gornick on her relationship with her mother; Durga Chew-Bose on the rapturous, fresh intimacy that I miss now.
[…] Thrumming beneath the pages is a shifting self-image. When I read them, I recognize the past me who saw herself in these quotes, but I don’t roll my eyes at her. With others’ words as intermediaries, the harsh light of hindsight softens. If keeping a journal would be a way to look in the mirror and make an honest appraisal of myself, keeping a commonplace book is more like looking at myself out of the corner of my eye.
It’s an admittedly different approach from my generation’s inclination toward full-frontal accountability. Daily diary apps and self-improvement podcasts and confessional Instagram stories evince a belief that to grow as a person you have to be entirely, unflinchingly forthcoming. But I couldn’t catalog my flaws without flinching. And I don’t think I need to. That’s part of the point of reading, I think: When I find myself too earnest, too impatient, too much, I can be in conversation with other minds instead. Keeping a commonplace book feels like a kinder way to grow, by wrestling with the articulations of others in the open as I hopefully adjust myself within. »
— Charley Locke, “Commonplace Books Are Like a Diary Without the Risk of Annoying Yourself”