yhbddy:

based-messiah:

A Tribe Called Quest

microphone check one two what is this

(via saraahh94)

ladysatan:

So fucking badass.

(via ceceliaruca)

schisms:

a man in his parisal (indian coracle) in tamil nadu, india (by oochappan)

schisms:

a man in his parisal (indian coracle) in tamil nadu, india (by oochappan)

(via iindia)

curiositycounts:

Gorgeous artichoke paper lanterns made from old books by designer Allison Patrick. 

curiositycounts:

Gorgeous artichoke paper lanterns made from old books by designer Allison Patrick

brianafahey:

The Nepa Lamp is a two-dimensional “lamp silhouette” that stands six feet. It’s wall-mounted and equipped with friction hinges to allow the piece to pivot away from the wall. (via Lamps by Giles Godwin-Brown | Design Milk)

brianafahey:

The Nepa Lamp is a two-dimensional “lamp silhouette” that stands six feet. It’s wall-mounted and equipped with friction hinges to allow the piece to pivot away from the wall. (via Lamps by Giles Godwin-Brown | Design Milk)

melhoneycat:

Third Eye by Cristian Blanxer
“Acrylic on Canvas | 33 x 61 cm

melhoneycat:

Third Eye by Cristian Blanxer

“Acrylic on Canvas | 33 x 61 cm

nationalgeographicdaily:

Sand Dune, NamibiaPhoto: Brynn Bayman
It doesn’t take much to get rolling down a Namibian dune. These students on a geographical field trip find the slop irresistible but end up with sand in every nook and cranny.

nationalgeographicdaily:

Sand Dune, Namibia
Photo: Brynn Bayman

It doesn’t take much to get rolling down a Namibian dune. These students on a geographical field trip find the slop irresistible but end up with sand in every nook and cranny.

iddie:

lykke li

iddie:

lykke li

Reflecting

I feel as though school is getting in the way with what I would really like to be doing. Although I finally enjoy school because I just switched my major to illustration, what am I really doing? After coming back from a mission trip to Honduras that lasted 10 days around New Years, my mind has been elsewhere. It sounds incredibly cliche, but the trip changed me….and I can be pretty stubborn. I felt things that I’ve never dreamt of feeling…overwhelming peace that cannot be described with words. I was ALIVE, truely alive. I feel a fire underneath me, and I need to do something about it. I LOVE the life I was living during those 10 days. Waking up at 6 a.m. every morning to go and serve local communities all day seemed exhausting at first, but then it became normal, and it felt right. Then we would all go to bed each night around 9 p.m., and slept like babies from the long days of manual labor and playing with kids. There was no time to sit and be bored, go on facebook, over analyze things, or worry. We got to work and spend time with some of the most loving people I’ve ever met. I wasn’t aware that people like that existed, that they were real. Seeing what some people devoted and continue to devote their lives to really put things into perspective for me. One of the days we brought food with us to make sandwiches for lunch, and a 13 year old girl from the local village joined us. She made two sandwiches, one for herself, and one for her sister back home. She told me she had many brothers and sisters so she felt bad that she couldn’t bring more back, but at least one of them will have a nice meal. She shouldn’t have to make those kinds of decisions. Despite her poverty ridden circumstances, and being raped a few years back, she was a joyous, enthusiastic, loving girl that couldn’t give out enough hugs. I wanted her to teach me about her life. These are the things that stuck with me and broke me down. Every child that I encountered seemed to have the same joyous and loving disposition. Playing with them was like a different world. The language barrier made things funny, and also a never ending learning experience. I had no idea that Justin Beiber would bring so many people together haha. I could say so much about everything, but one thing that I know is that it felt right. All of it. I know that there is much more to life than what I thought. The ENTIRE world is out there. I can’t just sit here. Yes, I could join the peace corps, but that’s too far off. I need to do something soon. After looking into something called the World Race, I’m convinced that I need to do it. The race involves going to 11 countries in 11 months doing mission work…the only issue is that I would have to raise $15,000. Not impossible, but seems a little daunting. I also have the opportunity to go back to Honduras this coming spring break, but that would mean I have to raise $1000 in one month. AHHHHH I think I’m going to try and do it.

"Rock & roll is dying because people became OK with Nickelback being the biggest band in the world,” he says, blowing cigarette smoke out the window of his rented East Village loft a few days ­before the band heads to L.A. “So they became OK with the idea that the biggest rock band in the world is always going to be shit – therefore you should never try to be the biggest rock band in the world. Fuck that! Rock & roll is the music I feel the most passionately about, and I don’t like to see it fucking ruined and spoon-fed down our throats in this watered-down, post-grunge crap, horrendous shit. When people start lumping us into that kind of shit, it’s like, ‘Fuck you,’ honestly."

The Black Keys drummer, Patrick Carney

carelesspeace:

Sometimes, more often than we think, we need to take a look outside this protective bubble we live in, and remember that there’s places and people in which the happiness for what they do not have is much more real than the happiness for what we could ever buy with any amount of money.
Wake up. Look at your life. Look at your attitude. And try to realize that sometimes having nothing is much, much better than having everything. 

carelesspeace:

Sometimes, more often than we think, we need to take a look outside this protective bubble we live in, and remember that there’s places and people in which the happiness for what they do not have is much more real than the happiness for what we could ever buy with any amount of money.

Wake up. Look at your life. Look at your attitude. And try to realize that sometimes having nothing is much, much better than having everything.