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So It Goes...

@mehahu / mehahu.tumblr.com

writer/artist
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It is so strange to me how much my life has changed. It amazes me how I’ve cultivated my life to the point where I love my everyday. I’ve put together a home with books, records, art, and comfort. I’ve brought friends together and fed them with food I make with my own hands. I take photographs of my time with my friends while we adventure in the wild. I rock climb, kayak, scuba dive, hike, camp, and travel, things me 10 years would only dream of. I’m doing a masters in something I love. I’ve worked on myself, my relationships, my health, my love. Oh my love. The love I’ve found and held is the comfiest of all. Alhumdulilah.

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I don't know why we are here, but I'm pretty sure that it is not in order to enjoy ourselves.

Ludwig Wittgenstein.

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Americans can't deal with death unless they own it. If they own it, they will celebrate it, like in the air force base museum of the atom bomb, where whole families of camera-toting tourists gather after the required i.d. security checks. In the gray-carpeted rooms, they walk the mazes of portable screens and platforms and enlarged photographs of death and incineration as seen from a discreet distance. The distance is far enough so you can't see the bodies, only the architecture.

David Wojnarowicz. "In the Shadow of the American Dream: Soon All This Weill Be Picturesque Ruins" from Close to the Knives: A Memoir of Disintegration.

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amandaearl
“I asked Tuli Kupferberg once, “Did you really jump off of The Manhattan Bridge?” “Yeah,” he said, “I really did.” “How come?” I said. “I thought that I had lost the ability to love,” Tuli said. “So, I figured I might as well be dead. So, I went one night to the top of The Manhattan Bridge, & after a few minutes, I jumped off.” “That’s amazing,” I said. “Yeah,” Tuli said, “but nothing happened. I landed in the water, & I wasn’t dead. So I swam ashore, & went home, & took a bath, & went to bed. Nobody even noticed.‘”

“Memorial Day 1971” written by Ted Berrigan and Anne Waldman

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“And when I turned to face grief, I saw that it was just love in a heavy coat.”

-Shannon Barry

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‘The Sentence’ by Anna Akhmatova as seen in The Ecco Anthology of International Poetry edited by Ilya Kaminsky & Susan Harris

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