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illuminatizeitgeist:

“The whole play of existence is so beautiful that laughter can be the only response to it.
Only laughter can be the real prayer, gratitude. 
Laughter is a flowering.”
— Osho

illuminatizeitgeist:

“The whole play of existence is so beautiful that laughter can be the only response to it.

Only laughter can be the real prayer, gratitude.

Laughter is a flowering.”

Osho

"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, than that of blind-folded fear."
— Thomas Jefferson (via samsaranmusing)
"Death is a sleep that ends our dreaming. Oh, that we may be allowed to wake before death wakes us."
— Petrarch (via larmoyante)
"People seldom do what they believe in. They do what is convenient, then repent."
— Bob Dylan (via riseabovethemadness)

(Source: themiddlepane)

"A desire not to butt into other people’s business is at least eighty percent of all human wisdom."
— Robert A. Heinlein (via samsaranmusing)
"She waited for the train to pass. Then she said, “I sometimes think that people’s hearts are like deep wells. Nobody knows what’s at the bottom. All you can do is imagine by what comes floating to the surface every once in a while."
— Haruki Murakami  (via langleav)

(Source: langleav.com)

"We travel for romance,
we travel for architecture,
and we travel to be lost."
— Ray Bradbury (via darwink)

(Source: rabbitinthemoon)

"I think the big mistake in schools is trying to teach children anything, and by using fear as the basic motivation. Fear of getting failing grades, fear of not staying with your class, etc. Interest can produce learning on a scale compared to fear as a nuclear explosion to a firecracker."
— Stanley Kubrick (via nezua)

(Source: quotes-shape-us)

"When we feel love and kindness toward others, it not only makes others feel loved and cared for, but it helps us also to develop inner happiness and peace."
— The Dalai Lama (via lazyyogi)
"We’re stronger in the places that we’ve been broken."
— Ernest Hemingway  (via c-ulo)

(Source: larmoyante)

"

1. Run away to Brooklyn. Rent an apartment with a claw footed bathtub. Commute to Manhattan during the week and put in hours at a menial publishing job. Drive home to New Jersey on weekends to swim in the pool and cry to your mother. Smoke Gauloises on the fire escape. Let yellowing issues of Rolling Stone and Vogue pile into a protective fortress around your bed. Listen to Cat Power. Fall asleep mostly naked beneath the duvet watching Sportscenter and drinking earl grey. Date a Yankees fan and kiss his hands on the 4 Train into the Bronx.

2. Run away to Barcelona. Eat milk chocolate magnum bars and drink cheap champagne. Burst into charming fits of laughter whenever you get embarrassed about butchering the Catalan language. Wear denim cutoffs, Dr. Pepper chapstick, and very little else. Go dancing at 3 a.m. Whiten your teeth. Tan your shoulders. Braid feathers into your hair. Perpetually wake up with sand caught in the thin cotton sheets of your tiny bed. Listen to the Rolling Stones and kiss all the longhaired boys you can get your hands on without ever having to apologize.

3. Run away to Los Angeles. Sublet a studio in Venice three blocks from the beach. Listen to top 40 radio. Go to Chateau Marmont and charge drinks you can’t afford to a long-dormant credit card. Sleep with a television actor who lives in the valley. Sleep with a musician who lives in Bel Air. Break things off with both of them when gas prices begin to rise. Find Gilda Radner’s star on the Walk Of Fame and swallow a sob when you see the filthy cement around her name is cracked. Walk through the Venice Canals until the sun sets and you forget your own name. Call your mother crying from the parking lot of a 24-hour Ralph’s supermarket. Tell her you want to come home.

4. Run away to Paris. Gaze at the pink and pistachio glow of macarons in the window on Boulevard Saint-Germain. Listen to Joni Mitchell. Meet an Argentinean man in the Latin Quarter for drinks. Melt into his accent and kiss him goodnight, but return to your apartment alone because his face doesn’t look enough like the man’s you are trying to forget. Get lost in the Richelieu Wing of the Louvre, admiring Napoleon’s fine red damask. Walk alone along the Seine in an old dress, ten-dollar shoes, and an Hermes scarf. Fumble with the locks on the fence overlooking the river. They all have lovers’ names etched into them and the girl who left the red heart-shaped lock has the same name as you.

5. Run away to Martha’s Vineyard. Write heartbroken stories during the day in front of a large fan that blows curls of humid hair across your tired face. Take a waitress job at The Black Dog at night and try hard not to drop too many trays. Learn to ride a moped. Pretend you’re a Kennedy. Listen to Carly Simon. Eat hand-churned ice cream out of waffle cones. Visit the flying horses and consider how many girls just like you have sat on the same horse clutching for the same brass ring. Get stoned and dance barefoot down the length of the eroded Jaws beach. Date a Red Sox fan. Yell at each other during baseball games, and then kiss and make up between tangled sheets.

"
— 5 Exit Strategies    (via tilthe)

(Source: 472239364)

(Source: silenthill)

(Source: adorabubblr)

psych-facts:

spiritualseeker:

  1. Boxes: desire to be constructive (synonyms: helpful, effective, practical, useful, positive)
  2. 3-D Boxes: ability to see all sides of an issue
  3. Triangles: one who’s mind is logical/rational, desire to see things come to a head
  4. Arrows: feelings of ambition, drive, motivation
  5. Aimless lines that form no shape or go in all directions: feeling undirected, without structure/purpose, irritated, frustrated
  6. Stars: feelings of hopelessness, looking forward or up to things, and optimism
  7. Circles: feeling passive rather than aggressive, circles are associated with sociable, talkative, and friendly, desire to be flexible and loving

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