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I like to think that this two, and the grown up version of these kids (but obviously all grown up, and moved from NZ to Paris....

 

www.flickr.com/photos/lebit/277130155/

After a break up the best thing you can do it's to change the look of your room. Now you'll have plenty of free time to spend with yourself and you can do fun things. So what you're not having sex now you're going to have an amazing room.

The question of “what if I haven’t” comes in almost everyone’s mind. However, regretting over a breakup will not let you undo that decision. You need to get over that agonizing and nagging feeling of regret that you might take the wrong decision by separating your ways. Believe the fact that those bargaining of arguments and sleepless nights were not something that you deserved. Stop worrying about the wrong or the right decision. It is better to focus on how to get out of this situation of regret by taking the wrong decision. The obsessiveness on regrets can chew up all the happiness of your life. But how do you leave all the regrets behind and move on with your life? Here are some tips with which you can deal with the regret of breaking up with someone.

askopinion.com/how-to-deal-with-the-regret-of-breaking-up...

Someone gave me the topic of a hard breakup... this is what I came up with. I don't think there's too much else to say here, so I'll leave it at that. :)

 

Strobist:

580EX II fired into an umbrella, 2nd curtain, camera right.

Shaun, Burgess and Abbott

Breakup Art at The River Music Experience, Davenport, IA 12/14/12

From "Flowers and Falling" a series.

The ice on its way out

Breakup Art at The River Music Experience, Davenport, IA 12/14/12

As long as you append "... in bed" to the end

I always love watching ice floating down the Grand -- a photograph really doesn't do it justice, as it's the sound of the ice and the speed it all moves that really attract me.

 

198/365?

Collage from recycled art calendar. 5" x 7", 2022

Cast and Crew of Break Up, Baby. 2021 Woodstock Film Festival. Photo by Jason F. Vasquez

The Breakups at Pehrspace on 04.03.2009

Shaun, Burgess and Abbott

PUT YOUR HANDS UP.

 

Dictionary: love (lŭv)

 

1. A deep, tender, ineffable feeling of affection and solicitude toward a person, such as that arising from kinship, recognition of attractive qualities, or a sense of underlying oneness.

2. A feeling of intense desire and attraction toward a person with whom one is disposed to make a pair; the emotion of sex and romance.

  

I lost it all.

I lost myself.

I lost everything.

I lost the most important person to me.

Bishkek (Kyrgyz: Бишке́к, بىشکەک; IPA: [biʃˈkek]; Russian: Бишке́к, tr. Biškék, IPA: [bʲɪˈʂkʲek]), formerly Pishpek and Frunze, is the capital and largest city of Kyrgyzstan (Kyrgyz Republic). Bishkek is also the administrative centre of the Chuy Region. The province surrounds the city, although the city itself is not part of the province, but rather a province-level unit of Kyrgyzstan.

 

In 1825 Khokand authorities established the fortress of "Pishpek" in order to control local caravan-routes and to collect tribute from Kyrgyz tribes. On 4 September 1860, with the approval of the Kyrgyz, Russian forces led by Colonel Apollon Zimmermann destroyed the fortress. In 1868 a Russian settlement was established on the site of the fortress under its original name, "Pishpek". It lay within the General Governorship of Russian Turkestan and its Semirechye Oblast.

 

In 1925 the Kara-Kirghiz Autonomous Oblast was established in Russian Turkestan, promoting Pishpek to its capital. In 1926 the Communist Party of the Soviet Union renamed the city as Frunze, after the Bolshevik military leader Mikhail Frunze (1885–1925), who was born there. In 1936, the city of Frunze became the capital of the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic, during the final stages of the national delimitation in the Soviet Union.

 

In 1991 the Kyrgyz parliament changed the capital's name to "Bishkek".

 

Bishkek is situated at an altitude of about 800 meters (2,600 ft), just off the northern fringe of the Kyrgyz Ala-Too range, an extension of the Tian Shan mountain range. These mountains rise to a height of 4,855 meters (15,928 ft) and provide a backdrop to the city. North of the city, a fertile and gently undulating steppe extends far north into neighboring Kazakhstan. The Chui River drains most of the area. Bishkek is connected to the Turkestan-Siberia Railway by a spur line.

 

Bishkek is a city of wide boulevards and marble-faced public buildings combined with numerous Soviet-style apartment blocks surrounding interior courtyards. There are also thousands of smaller privately built houses, mostly outside the city centre. Streets follow a grid pattern, with most flanked on both sides by narrow irrigation channels, watering innumerable trees to provide shade in the hot summers.

 

Bishkek

Kokhand rule

 

Originally a caravan rest stop (possibly founded by the Sogdians) on one of the branches of the Silk Road through the Tian Shan range, the location was fortified in 1825 by the Uzbek khan of Kokhand with a mud fort. In the last years of Kokhand rule, the Pishpek fortress was led by Atabek, the Datka.

 

Tsarist era

 

In 1860, the fort was conquered and razed by the military forces of Colonel Zimmermann when Tsarist Russia annexed the area. Colonel Zimmermann rebuilt the town over the destroyed fort and put field Poruchik Titov as head of a new Russian garrison. The site was redeveloped from 1877 onward by the Russian government, which encouraged the settlement of Russian peasants by giving them fertile land to develop.

 

Soviet era

 

Frunze statue near the railway station

In 1926, the city became the capital of the newly established Kirghiz ASSR and was renamed "Frunze" after Mikhail Frunze, Lenin's close associate who was born in Bishkek and played key roles during the revolutions of 1905 and 1917 and during the Russian civil war of the early 1920s.

 

Independence era

 

The early 1990s were tumultuous. In June 1990, a state of emergency was declared following severe ethnic riots in southern Kyrgyzstan that threatened to spread to the capital. The city was renamed Bishkek on 5 February 1991 and Kyrgyzstan achieved independence later that year during the breakup of the Soviet Union. Before independence, the majority of Bishkek's population were ethnic Russians. In 2004, Russians made up approximately 20% of the city's population, and about 7–8% in 2011.[6]

 

Today, Bishkek is a modern city with many restaurants and cafes, and with many second-hand European and Japanese cars and minibuses crowding its streets. However, streets and sidewalks have fallen into disrepair since the 1990s. At the same time, Bishkek still preserves its former Soviet feel with Soviet-period buildings and gardens prevailing over newer structures.

 

Bishkek is also the country's financial center, with all of the country's 21 commercial banks headquartered there. During the Soviet era, the city was home to a large number of industrial plants, but most have been shut down since 1991 or now operate on a much reduced scale. One of Bishkek's largest employment centers today is the Dordoy Bazaar open market, where many of the Chinese goods imported to CIS countries are sold.

Tableland Country rowing Club Breakup 2013

The Breakups at Pehrspace on 04.03.2009

Here, we call it break up

 

Walking down the trail

through the crunch of

refrozen frost

 

Spring is springing

I heard the birds this morning

Time for my thaw.

 

and all the mud and slush

makes my world slippery

and wet

-- Hellcat Hollingsworth

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