Install this theme
dysphorism:

wir-sind-unsterblich:

The Infinite Corridor

it’s kind of scary

dysphorism:

wir-sind-unsterblich:

The Infinite Corridor

it’s kind of scary

mermaid-lada:

“I remember one day sitting at the pool and suddenly the tears were streaming down my cheeks. Why was I so unhappy? I had success. I had security. But it wasn`t enough. I was exploding inside”-Ingrid Bergman.

mermaid-lada:

“I remember one day sitting at the pool and suddenly the tears were streaming down my cheeks. Why was I so unhappy? I had success. I had security. But it wasn`t enough. I was exploding inside”-Ingrid Bergman.

mydarkenedeyes:

Bill Viola - Tristan’s Ascension (2005)

hifas:

Citrus Series by Dennis Wojtkiewicz

mudwerks:

six daisies dance in the runaway 1903 (by Captain Geoffrey Spaulding)

mudwerks:

six daisies dance in the runaway 1903 (by Captain Geoffrey Spaulding)

wmagazine:

Photo by Michael Thompson

wmagazine:

Photo by Michael Thompson

therhumboogie:

By Jeremy Miranda, each of these beautifully done paintings has such a dreamy sense of layers, and worlds within worlds. The thread connecting each piece, using ladders, really is a sharp focus for the work linking different dimensions to one another, mesmerising stuff. 

nefermaathotep:

THIS IS HOW WE LOST OUR CULTURE…Converts to Christianity marked their adherence to a new religion by changing the way they dressed. They adopted westernized clothes that signaled them as Christians, as did this Catholic woman in Dakar, Senegal.1935They laughed at your clothes; and made you change your clothes, they laughed at your names; and made you change your names; but most importantly they laughed at your God; and made you change your God.” - John Henrik Clarke

nefermaathotep:

THIS IS HOW WE LOST OUR CULTURE…Converts to Christianity marked their adherence to a new religion by changing the way they dressed. They adopted westernized clothes that signaled them as Christians, as did this Catholic woman in Dakar, Senegal.1935

They laughed at your clothes; and made you change your clothes, they laughed at your names; and made you change your names; but most importantly they laughed at your God; and made you change your God.” - John Henrik Clarke