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QuoteoftheDay ‘Once your heart is purified and cleansed, God himself will settle in.’ - HH @Younus_AlGohar
An old fishing boat left unused poses as a really good location for photographs.
Taken in Muscat, Oman
QuoteoftheDay ‘Once your heart is purified and cleansed, God himself will settle in.’ - HH @Younus_AlGohar
This is what Mr. Pink looked like when I gave him the "Daddy is going to be gone all next week" talk. He wasn't very happy. I'll have to buy him some cat treats in San Francisco.
Because of the lack of living space, we tend to discard a lot of things which are no longer useful, and make room for new stuff. By getting rid of old stuff which once lived in our memories, are we getting rid of our memories too? Once they are lost, they are lost forever and ever. From time to time when familiar memories come through our minds, would you feel that it hurts because certain things didn't stay and you are the one who let it go? Maybe not until when we have shattered glass stuck on our foot will we realise the insignificant pain from this.
"Appreciating the Trees." The University of Alabama in Huntsville. 19 Sep 2008.
Before this semester I never really noticed these trees on the Library Quad. But now that I have my camera, and the green of the leaves and the blue of the sky have been so beautiful, I am coming to appreciate them.
"Tension, like polluted air and water, is everywhere, and it affects everyone. It's part of this generation's bag. But there's no reason why you can't create your own carefree time zone....Laying brick has the uncanny capability of transporting the subconscious mind back into the distant past....It can even help you write your own prescription for peace of mind."
Step aside, Timothy Leary.
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From a series of circa-1960s D.I.Y. books called "Easi-Bild" that were published by a fellow named Donald Brann. In the beginning of each one, he wrote a little homily that tried to link up his own Confucius-like wisdom with whatever Easy Bild project was at hand.
So there would be a couple of paragraphs where he waxed poetic about some general concept essential to the good life, and then there would be a paragraph where he'd try to make you think you'd never done better by yourself than you did the moment you decided, say, to purchase the Easy Bild book on building a plywood bar in your basement.
A tragically overlooked 20th-century Thoreau was Mr. Brann.