ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
Staying at the most epic cabin I’ve come across for a few days…the only access is a suspension bridge! It’s way up at 11,500ft…so good.
It took me hours of scouring to find this little gem but it’s on AirBnB listing #11391254 😬
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
Source: we-love-short-videos
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
“The things they see in me, I cannot see myself. When you get bored of me, I’ll be back on the shelf. And when the ocean rises up above the ground. Baby I’ll drown in…” — Grimes // California
Source: rooneyrmara
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
your son doesn’t know where the clitoris is happy mother’s day
— so sad today (@sosadtoday) May 8, 2016
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
BOW DOWN
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
ooeygooeychewyhooey
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
Greg Laswell - Comes and Goes (In Waves)
sealionsealion
current theme song
i’m ready to stop feeling this way jfc
My kink is not opening messages and pretending theyre not there
ourcirclesconcentric reblogged
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984)
Movies are made out of darkness as well as light; it is the surpassingly brief intervals of darkness between each luminous still image that make it possible to assemble the many images into one moving picture. Without that darkness, there would only be a blur. Which is to say that a full-length movie consists of half an hour or an hour of pure darkness that goes unseen. If you could add up all the darkness, you would find the audience in the theater gazing together at a deep imaginative night. It is the terra incognita of film, the dark continent on every map. In a similar way, a runner's every step is a leap, so that for a moment he or she is entirely off the ground. For those brief instants, shadows no longer spill out from their feet, like leaks, but hover below them like doubles, as they do with birds, whose shadows crawl below them, caressing the surface of the earth, growing and shrinking as their makers move nearer or farther from that surface. For my friends who run long distances, these tiny fragments of levitation add up to something considerable; by their own power they hover above the earth for many minutes, perhaps some significant portion of an hour or perhaps far more for the hundred-mile races. We fly; we dream in darkness; we devour heaven in bites too small to be measured.
Rebecca Solnit, A Field Guide to Getting Lost