View allAll Photos Tagged CSLewis
“But I remember more dearly autumn afternoons
in bottoms that lay intensely silent under old great trees.”
~ C.S. Lewis ~
* It took us a little time to find this remote site but when we arrived we had 5,000 years of history to ourselves and a magnificent view too.
Arthur's Stone is a Neolithic chambered tomb, or dolmen, in Herefordshire. It is situated on the ridge line of a hill overlooking both the Golden Valley and the Wye Valley. The tomb dates from 3,700 BC – 2,700 BC.
The Golden valley is very green rather than golden. The name Golden Valley probably derives from a confusion of the name of the River Dore with the French d'or, meaning 'of gold'. The Normans might have confused the Welsh word dŵr, meaning 'water', with ‘d'or'.
There are strong literary connections to Arthurs stone .When the author C.S. Lewis was a boy in Belfast, he thought a painting of Herefordshire’s Golden Valley was a picture of heaven. The scene appears in the 1993 film, Shadowlands, starring Anthony Hopkins as Lewis.
When he came to write The Chronicles Of Narnia, Lewis was inspired by Arthur’s Stone in the Golden Valley. The 5,500-year-old tomb, is fancifully named after King Arthur . It’s the origin of the Stone Table on which Aslan is sacrificed in The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe.
THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT TO MY STREAM.
I WOULD BE VERY GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD NOT FAVE A PHOTO
WITHOUT ALSO LEAVING A COMMENT .
unless they really mean what they say...
C.S. Lewis, The Last Battle
Stuff
CURELESS[+] Incubus&Succubus / Lilim Wings BENTO / RARE
CURELESS[+] Incubus&Succubus / Diabolus Tail BENTO / BLACK
CURELESS[+] Incubus&Succubus / M / Satyr Boots /
CURELESS[+] Galaxias Cinched Bodysuit
CURELESS[+] Incubus&Succubus / M / Diabolus Gloves
Violetility - Khnum Horns
ZIBSKA Eyemakeup Noir #5
MMMA Pose
Bento Mesh Head: Catwa Blueberry
Bento Mesh Body: Maitreya Lara
Face/Body Applier, Ears & Whiskers: Malkia Lioness by ND/MD now @ The Fantasy Faire - Faireholm sim and main store
Bento Tail, Dainty Paws, & Furry Hand Paws by Catseye now @ The Fantasy Faire - Faireholm sim and ND/MD store
Hair: Proud Mary by Analog Dog
Ensemble: Argollas (incl. bra, belt, shoulder pads, & arm cuffs) by Pucca Firecaster Creations (PFC)
Bones Choker: Pucca Firecaster Creations
Cats Eyes Applier: [POUT]
POSE: Sit on the Beach by Artis Poses
Jinx : Aslan Gacha - Snow Laying now @ The Fantasy Faire 2019 - Faireholm Sim
SIM: Urafiki, The Fantasy Faire 2019 @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/FF%20Urafiki/138/174/65
Last year we were lucky enough to visit C S Lewis' house in Oxford. Limited tours by appointment are available to The Kilns (his home for many years with his brother and wife).. An american charity manage the house and the tours are given by students that live and work in the premises. Its a very strange but friendly set up.
One of the few original items in the house is this typewriter, what a wonderful thing to survive.
Certainly worth a visit along with The Eagle and Child pub if it ever reopens.
The choice of life is not between fame and fortune, nor wealth and poverty, but between good and evil.
Boyd K. Packer
False words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil.
Plato
Good people know about both good and evil: bad people do not know about either.
C.S. Lewis
Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! xo💜💜 💕💕💕❤️❤️❤️
"This must be a simply enormous wardrobe!" thought Lucy, going still further in and pushing the soft folds of the coats aside to make room for her. Then she noticed that there was something crunching under her feet. "I wonder is that more moth balls?" she thought, stooping down to feel it with her hands. But instead of feeling the hard, smooth wood of the floor of the wardrobe, she felt something soft and powdery and extremely cold. "This is very queer," she said, and went on a step or two further."
- The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis
Taken @ Mystical Fae Forest
The little man sometimes likes to travel through his wardrobe and talk with his friend Aslan...
Skippy was inspired by the amazing Pewpew! Wardrobe Hideout!
Available at the cool LTD The Event!
Keep shining bright everyone!
Purely Art Symbolism... Only in fairytales and dreams.
"I have found a desire within myself that no experience in this world can satisfy; the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -C.S Lewis
When humans should have become as perfect in
voluntary obedience as the inanimate creation is
in it's lifeless obedience
Then they will put on it's glory,
or rather that glory of which
Nature is only the first sketch...
~C.S. Lewis
“Meanwhile,' said Mr Tumnus, 'it is winter in Narnia, and has been for ever so long, and we shall both catch cold if we stand here talking in the snow." (C.S. Lewis in Chronicles of Narnia)
(Left to Right) Surprised By Joy, The Four Loves, A Grief Observed, Mere Christianity, and The Great Divorce.
Lewis has had more of an influence on my life and thinking than any other 20th-century writer.
The real-life size of the photo is 2.5" (6.3cm) on a side.
HMM!
HSS 😊😊😍
Being a family means you are a part of something very wonderful. It means you will love and be loved for the rest of your life.
Lisa Weed
The love of family and the admiration of friends are much more important than wealth and privilege.
Charles Kuralt
It is the smile of a child, the love of a mother, the joy of a father, the togetherness of a family.
Menacheim Begin
The homemaker has the ultimate career. All other careers exist for one purpose only — and that is to support the ultimate career.
C.S. Lewis
Everyone needs a house to live in, but a supportive family is what builds a home.
Anthony Liccione
Not forgetting this all important quote:
I believe the world is one big family, and we need to help each other.
Jet Li
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
Being a family means you are a part of something very wonderful. It means you will love and be loved for the rest of your life.
Lisa Weed
The love of family and the admiration of friends are much more important than wealth and privilege.
Charles Kuralt
It is the smile of a child, the love of a mother, the joy of a father, the togetherness of a family.
Menacheim Begin
The homemaker has the ultimate career. All other careers exist for one purpose only — and that is to support the ultimate career.
C.S. Lewis
Everyone needs a house to live in, but a supportive family is what builds a home.
Anthony Liccione
Not forgetting this all important quote:
I believe the world is one big family, and we need to help each other.
Jet Li
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
An enchanment, in the narrowest sense, is a spell cast over something; but more broadly it may be a source of inhabitation.
[fromNarnia and the Fields of Arbol: The Environmental Vision of D.S. Lewis by Dickerson and O'Hara]
Butchart Gardens, Vancouver Island, British Columbia
My textures and photoshop
my testures
a tribute to CS Lewis's Out of This Silent Planet and my favourite people, the Hrossa... a Tributary Garden, shall we say?
digital 2016
My Dear Wormwood,
Be sure that the patient remains completely fixated on politics. Arguments, political gossip, and obsessing on the faults of people they have never met serves as an excellent distraction from advancing in personal virtue, character, and the things the patient can control. Make sure to keep the patient in a constant state of angst, frustration and general disdain towards the rest of the human race in order to avoid any kind of charity or inner peace from further developing. Ensure that the patient continues to believe that the problem is “out there” in the “broken system” rather than recognizing there is a problem with himself.
Keep up the good work,
Uncle Screwtape
"Screwtape Letters" by C.S.Lewis -1942
(In 1942, the author C.S. Lewis wrote a series of purported letters from a senior demon to his nephew, instructing him how to create disharmony in the world.)
(Thank you for your wonderful comments,
awards,invites and faves...
all are very much appreciated....!)
(large is cool)
Looking from Worcestershire Beacon, towards (left to right) Sugarloaf Hill, Table Hill & North Hill on
the range of Malvern Hills that runs along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border, although Worcestershire Beacon itself lies entirely within Worcestershire.
The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and a small area of northern Gloucestershire, dominating the surrounding countryside and the towns and villages of the district of Malvern. The highest summit of the hills affords a panorama of the Severn valley with the hills of Herefordshire and the Welsh mountains, parts of thirteen counties, the Bristol Channel, and the cathedrals of Worcester, Gloucester and Hereford.
The name Malvern is probably derived from the ancient British moel-bryn, meaning "Bare-Hill", the nearest modern equivalent being the Welsh moelfryn (bald hill). It has been known as Malferna (11th century), Malverne (12th century), and Much Malvern (16–17th century). They are known for their spring water – initially made famous by the region's many holy wells, and later through the development of the 19th century spa town of Great Malvern, a process which culminated in the production of the modern bottled Malvern Water.
Flint axes, arrowheads, and flakes found in the area are attributed to early Bronze Age settlers, and the 'Shire Ditch', a late Bronze Age boundary earthwork possibly dating from around 1000 BC, was constructed along part of the crest of the hills near the site of later settlements. The Wyche Cutting, a mountain pass through the hills was in use in prehistoric times as part of the salt route from Droitwich to South Wales. A 19th century discovery of over two hundred metal money bars suggests that the area had been inhabited by the La Tène people around 250 BC. Ancient folklore has it that the British chieftain Caractacus made his last stand against the Romans at the British Camp, a site of extensive Iron Age earthworks on a summit of the Malvern Hills close to where Malvern was to be later established.
J.R.R. Tolkien found inspiration in the Malvern landscape which he had viewed from his childhood home in Birmingham and his brother Hilary's home near Evesham. He was introduced to the area by C. S. Lewis, who had brought him here to meet George Sayer, the Head of English at Malvern College. Sayer had been a student of Lewis, and became his biographer, and together with them Tolkien would walk the Malvern Hills. Recordings of Tolkien reading excerpts from The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings were made in Malvern in 1952, at the home of George Sayer. The recordings were later issued on long-playing gramophone records. In the liner notes for J.R.R. Tolkien Reads and Sings his The Hobbit & The Fellowship of the Ring, George Sayer wrote that Tolkien would relive the book as they walked and compared parts of the Malvern Hills to the White Mountains of Gondor.
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I rarely have regrets, but there is also something to say about changing how your story ends… here's to new endings
Theme: Power In Words
Year Fourteen Of My 365 Project
You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream.
C.S. Lewis
On New Year's Eve the whole world celebrates the fact that a date changes. Let us celebrate the dates on which we change the world.
Akilnathan Logeswaran
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
All the things that have ever deeply possessed your soul have been but hints of it – tantalizing glimpses, promises never quite fulfilled, echoes that died away just as they caught your ear. But if it should really become manifest – if there ever came an echo that did not die away but swelled into the sound itself – you would know it. Beyond all possibility of doubt you would say “Here at last is the thing I was made for.” [C S Lewis]
Cannaregio, Venice
textures=mine
"All this is flashy rhetoric about loving you.
I never had a selfless thought since I was born.
I am mercenary and self-seeking through and through:
I want God, you, all friends, merely to serve my turn.
Peace, re-assurance, pleasure, are the goals I seek,
I cannot crawl one inch outside my proper skin:
I talk of love --a scholar's parrot may talk Greek--
But, self-imprisoned, always end where I begin.
Only that now you have taught me (but how late) my lack.
I see the chasm. And everything you are was making
My heart into a bridge by which I might get back
From exile, and grow man. And now the bridge is breaking.
For this I bless you as the ruin falls. The pains
You give me are more precious than all other gains. "
~ CS Lewis
This is a follow on from my SSC shot of the repeating Polar Bears pulling Jadis the White Witch in her chariot . This is one of many characters from The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis .
I could not get the whole scene in one shot as it was far too wide , so this shot completes the scene as found in Garsons Farm Garden Centre !!
“Life's just a merry-go-round. Come on up. You might get a brass ring.” ~ Mae West ~
Well, sometimes they can be a bit rusty! But remember:
“Failures are finger posts on the road to achievement.” ~ C.S. Lewis ~
“I thought I could describe a state; make a map of sorrow. Sorrow, however, turns out to be not a state but a process. It needs not a map but a history, and if I don't stop writing that history at some quite arbitrary point, there's no reason why I should ever stop. There is something new to be chronicled every day. Grief is like a long valley, a winding valley where any bend may reveal a totally new landscape.”
C.S. Lewis, A Grief Observed
"Un jour, tu seras assez grand pour recommencer à lire des contes de fées."
"Tout enfant commence par aimer le temps. En grandissant, on apprend l'art de ne pas l'aimer. Vous l'avez remarqué un jour de neige ? Les adultes font la tête, mais regardez les enfants [...] ? Ils savent à quoi sert la neige."
Cit. C.S. Lewis
♪ ♫ "The Chronicles of Narnia" : youtu.be/5F0pMbA1kkk ♪ ♫
***
"One day, you will be old enough to start reading fairytales again."
"Everyone begins as a child by liking Weather. You learn the art of disliking it as you grow up. Noticed it on a snowy day ? The grown-ups are all going about with long faces, but look at the children […] ? They know what snow’s made for."
Cit. C.S. Lewis
✨❄️✨ ❄️✨ ❄️✨❄️✨ 📚✨❄️✨ ❄️✨ ❄️✨❄️✨
Nikon D5200 + Nikon AF-S DX VR 55-200 f/4-5.6G IF-ED
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→ My other (and new) account : These Authentic Feelings ♥
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The Malvern Hills that runs along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border.
The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and a small area of northern Gloucestershire, dominating the surrounding countryside and the towns and villages of the district of Malvern. The highest summit of the hills affords a panorama of the Severn valley with the hills of Herefordshire and the Welsh mountains, parts of thirteen counties, the Bristol Channel, and the cathedrals of Worcester, Gloucester and Hereford.
The name Malvern is probably derived from the ancient British moel-bryn, meaning "Bare-Hill", the nearest modern equivalent being the Welsh moelfryn (bald hill). It has been known as Malferna (11th century), Malverne (12th century), and Much Malvern (16–17th century). They are known for their spring water – initially made famous by the region's many holy wells, and later through the development of the 19th century spa town of Great Malvern, a process which culminated in the production of the modern bottled Malvern Water.
Flint axes, arrowheads, and flakes found in the area are attributed to early Bronze Age settlers, and the 'Shire Ditch', a late Bronze Age boundary earthwork possibly dating from around 1000 BC, was constructed along part of the crest of the hills near the site of later settlements. The Wyche Cutting, a mountain pass through the hills was in use in prehistoric times as part of the salt route from Droitwich to South Wales. A 19th century discovery of over two hundred metal money bars suggests that the area had been inhabited by the La Tène people around 250 BC. Ancient folklore has it that the British chieftain Caractacus made his last stand against the Romans at the British Camp, a site of extensive Iron Age earthworks on a summit of the Malvern Hills close to where Malvern was to be later established.
J.R.R. Tolkien found inspiration in the Malvern landscape which he had viewed from his childhood home in Birmingham and his brother Hilary's home near Evesham. He was introduced to the area by C. S. Lewis, who had brought him here to meet George Sayer, the Head of English at Malvern College. Sayer had been a student of Lewis, and became his biographer, and together with them Tolkien would walk the Malvern Hills.
Recordings of Tolkien reading excerpts from The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings were made in Malvern in 1952, at the home of George Sayer. The recordings were later issued on long-playing gramophone records. In the liner notes for J.R.R. Tolkien Reads and Sings his The Hobbit & The Fellowship of the Ring, George Sayer wrote that Tolkien would relive the book as they walked and compared parts of the Malvern Hills to the White Mountains of Gondor.
Information Source:
Top half of the lamppost said to have inspired C.S. Lewis to feature it in his Chronicles of Narnia.
I'd love to see it covered in snow and lit up one winter's night.
Slieve Bearnagh (739m), the Mourne Mountains, Co. Down, Northern Ireland.
Panorama taken from the summit of the Slieve Bearnagh (foreground) in the Mourne Mountains looking over the Slieve Binnian & the Ben Crom Reservoir (on the left) and Slieve Meelberg (on the right).
*** the Narnia connection ***
CS Lewis was inspired by the surrounding of the Mournes to create the world of Narnia from his book The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe.
“I have seen landscapes (in the Mourne Mountains) which, under a particular light, made me feel that at any moment a giant might raise his head over the next ridge,” wrote Lewis.
Hope you enjoy it. If you like it, please comment and add it to favourites.
The Malvern Hills that runs along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border.
The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and a small area of northern Gloucestershire, dominating the surrounding countryside and the towns and villages of the district of Malvern. The highest summit of the hills affords a panorama of the Severn valley with the hills of Herefordshire and the Welsh mountains, parts of thirteen counties, the Bristol Channel, and the cathedrals of Worcester, Gloucester and Hereford.
The name Malvern is probably derived from the ancient British moel-bryn, meaning "Bare-Hill", the nearest modern equivalent being the Welsh moelfryn (bald hill). It has been known as Malferna (11th century), Malverne (12th century), and Much Malvern (16–17th century). They are known for their spring water – initially made famous by the region's many holy wells, and later through the development of the 19th century spa town of Great Malvern, a process which culminated in the production of the modern bottled Malvern Water.
Flint axes, arrowheads, and flakes found in the area are attributed to early Bronze Age settlers, and the 'Shire Ditch', a late Bronze Age boundary earthwork possibly dating from around 1000 BC, was constructed along part of the crest of the hills near the site of later settlements. The Wyche Cutting, a mountain pass through the hills was in use in prehistoric times as part of the salt route from Droitwich to South Wales. A 19th century discovery of over two hundred metal money bars suggests that the area had been inhabited by the La Tène people around 250 BC. Ancient folklore has it that the British chieftain Caractacus made his last stand against the Romans at the British Camp, a site of extensive Iron Age earthworks on a summit of the Malvern Hills close to where Malvern was to be later established.
J.R.R. Tolkien found inspiration in the Malvern landscape which he had viewed from his childhood home in Birmingham and his brother Hilary's home near Evesham. He was introduced to the area by C. S. Lewis, who had brought him here to meet George Sayer, the Head of English at Malvern College. Sayer had been a student of Lewis, and became his biographer, and together with them Tolkien would walk the Malvern Hills.
Recordings of Tolkien reading excerpts from The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings were made in Malvern in 1952, at the home of George Sayer. The recordings were later issued on long-playing gramophone records. In the liner notes for J.R.R. Tolkien Reads and Sings his The Hobbit & The Fellowship of the Ring, George Sayer wrote that Tolkien would relive the book as they walked and compared parts of the Malvern Hills to the White Mountains of Gondor.
Information Source:
To all good dentists, I know that your work is important and you save so many with problems and I want to thank you all. Never the less, I am terrified of going to the dentist and so this work describes those feelings.
“Feelings, and feelings, and feelings.
Let me try thinking instead.” -
C.S. Lewis, A Grief Observed
“It doesn't really matter whether you grip the arms of the dentist's chair or let your hands lie in your lap. The drill drills on.”
C.S. Lewis, A Grief Observed
Dentists
Making the world a better place,
One smile at a time. - anon
Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! xo❤️
"You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream." - C.S. Lewis
Taken in VanDusen Botanic Garden, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Looking towards Worcestershire Beacon, the highest point of the range of Malvern Hills that runs along the Herefordshire-Worcestershire border, although Worcestershire Beacon itself lies entirely within Worcestershire.
The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English counties of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and a small area of northern Gloucestershire, dominating the surrounding countryside and the towns and villages of the district of Malvern. The highest summit of the hills affords a panorama of the Severn valley with the hills of Herefordshire and the Welsh mountains, parts of thirteen counties, the Bristol Channel, and the cathedrals of Worcester, Gloucester and Hereford.
The name Malvern is probably derived from the ancient British moel-bryn, meaning "Bare-Hill", the nearest modern equivalent being the Welsh moelfryn (bald hill). It has been known as Malferna (11th century), Malverne (12th century), and Much Malvern (16–17th century). They are known for their spring water – initially made famous by the region's many holy wells, and later through the development of the 19th century spa town of Great Malvern, a process which culminated in the production of the modern bottled Malvern Water.
Flint axes, arrowheads, and flakes found in the area are attributed to early Bronze Age settlers, and the 'Shire Ditch', a late Bronze Age boundary earthwork possibly dating from around 1000 BC, was constructed along part of the crest of the hills near the site of later settlements. The Wyche Cutting, a mountain pass through the hills was in use in prehistoric times as part of the salt route from Droitwich to South Wales. A 19th century discovery of over two hundred metal money bars suggests that the area had been inhabited by the La Tène people around 250 BC. Ancient folklore has it that the British chieftain Caractacus made his last stand against the Romans at the British Camp, a site of extensive Iron Age earthworks on a summit of the Malvern Hills close to where Malvern was to be later established.
J.R.R. Tolkien found inspiration in the Malvern landscape which he had viewed from his childhood home in Birmingham and his brother Hilary's home near Evesham. He was introduced to the area by C. S. Lewis, who had brought him here to meet George Sayer, the Head of English at Malvern College. Sayer had been a student of Lewis, and became his biographer, and together with them Tolkien would walk the Malvern Hills. Recordings of Tolkien reading excerpts from The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings were made in Malvern in 1952, at the home of George Sayer. The recordings were later issued on long-playing gramophone records. In the liner notes for J.R.R. Tolkien Reads and Sings his The Hobbit & The Fellowship of the Ring, George Sayer wrote that Tolkien would relive the book as they walked and compared parts of the Malvern Hills to the White Mountains of Gondor.
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/LAST%20ISLAND/70/170/1949
Welcome to Tranquilla - Poesy Wildes. Thank you for viewing these visions.
Link to the Tranquilla album:
www.flickr.com/photos/sadiezeephotos/albums/7217772032341...
~C.S Lewis
Date: Jan 25th 2013 | #20
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A new month means I am heading back into the magical land of Narnia for the second book in the series. I really enjoyed the first book!
Theme: I'd Rather Be Reading
Year Fifteen Of My 365 Project
"You can’t go back and change the beginning, but you can start where you are and change the ending." ~C.S. Lewis
No one knows the future that, like this photo is always a bit 'out of focus'. But we do know the present and can start shaping the future by the decisions made today.
"For I know the plans I have for you", declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." ~Jeremiah 29:11
Technical Information (or Nerdy Stuff):
Camera - Nikon D5000 (tripod mounted)
Lens – Nikkor 18-300mm Zoom
ISO – 100
Aperture – f/32
Exposure – 1/5 second
Focal Length – 300mm
The original RAW file was processed with Adobe Camera Raw and final adjustments were made with Photoshop CS6.
Or, walking a mile in someone else's shoes. The problem of truly understanding somebody else has been discussed in extenso. Going through the motions oneself makes one feel the pain.
“The lion the witch and the wardrobe” by CS Lewis. It’s not image that I’m that happy with, but it’s the best effort that I could come up with for the theme. The lion’s tail is a toy and rather than choose a dark wardrobe ( as I think of it in the novel) I chose one with a mirrored front to at least try to be a little inventive. The shoe on the right is the closest I could think of for the witch.
The novel is one that I have read in both Welsh and English and of course have watched the film several times.
HMM thanks for stopping