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Wish someone a speedy recovery with this adorable wisdom teeth card. This card is made with card stock and measures 5.5" x 4.25". The inside of the card is blank. The picture was drawn by my amazing cousin.

Campus Wisdom Exhibition April 1st -30th, 2014

Public and social practice artist Van C. Tran was spring 2014 Artist-in-Residence at The John Spoor Broome Library at CSU Channel Islands. Throughout the month of April, her site-specific multimedia installation sought out words of wisdom from members of the CI campus community. See Campus Wisdom website. Van C. Tran is a teaching artist based in San Diego, CA. She received an MFA in Art from UC Santa Barbara in 2012. campuswisdom.wordpress.com/csu-channel-islands/

 

This one strikes me as a pretty good poltical philosophy.

Wisdom Tree at the top of Cahuenga Peak, Los Angeles

 

The tree has survived countless fires and wear, standing as the lone tree on its mountain perch. Now, there is a mailbox at the base of the tree for hikers to write personal notes for future travelers.

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Exalt your photography with Golden Ratio Compositions!

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Epic Landscape Photography:

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A Simple Guide to the Principles of Fine Art Nature Photography: Master Composition, Lenses, Camera Settings, Aperture, ISO, ... Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography)

 

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Ralph Waldo Emerson. The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.

 

Lucius Annaeus Seneca: On entering a temple we assume all signs of reverence. How much more reverent then should we be before the heavenly bodies, the stars, the very nature of God!

 

John Muir: All the wild world is beautiful, and it matters but little where we go, to highlands or lowlands, woods or plains, on the sea or land or down among the crystals of waves or high in a balloon in the sky; through all the climates, hot or cold, storms and calms, everywhere and always we are in God's eternal beauty and love. So universally true is this, the spot where we chance to be always seems the best.

Candid of a man strolling on the beach in Torrey Pines, Calif.

 

I was standing there trying to get a shot of the Peregrine Falcons in the cliffs above and to the right. I ended up chatting with the man because he stopped to say hi to me. Regrettably, I forgot to mention that I photographed him only moments earlier. Perhaps I'll run into him again some day. He seemed like a "regular" on this beach stroll.

Seen along a trail in North San Diego County.

 

Photo taken for Our Daily Challenge: Words of Wisdom

 

And Scavenge Challenge #22. Illustrate a favorite quote with a photo.

My Wisdom Teeth, only had 3, one of them split during extraction.

Burlington, VT

When Poseidon and his brothers deposed their father, the sea kingdom fell into his command. At first, the underwater realm was filled with mystery and charm. Poseidon felt at peace under water, but his forever growing loneliness drove him to madness. In his moment of sadness, he looked up into heaven to wonder if Zeus felt his pain. Instead his view was obstructed by a ship, sinking in flames after misfortune. All the gold carried by the ship fell into the sea, and while the sea men could not provide company, Poseidon felt attracted to the treasure. The gold, only swaying in the waves, gave him an idea. He forged with his mighty trident, a sea creature of his own, a secret only known by his loneliness. This gold crab, a symbol of strength and wisdom, became his closest companion. He named him Aurum, after the gold he was created from. Although their deep friendship continued for centuries, Aurum was cast to the deep sea trenches where he could peacefully live out his life away from the prying eyes of diving humans. There he feeds on gold remains from shipwrecks, providing shelter for small creatures that keep him company in the absence of Poseidon.

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Epic Poetry inspires all my photography: geni.us/9K0Ki Epic Poetry for Epic Landscape Photography: Exalt Fine Art Nature Photography with the Poetic Wisdom of John Muir, Emerson, Thoreau, Homer's Iliad, Milton's Paradise Lost & Dante's Inferno Odyssey

 

Epic Art & 45EPIC Gear exalting golden ratio designs for your Hero's Odyssey:

geni.us/9fnvAMw

 

Support epic fine art! 45surf ! Bitcoin: 1FMBZJeeHVMu35uegrYUfEkHfPj5pe9WNz

 

Exalt the goddess archetype in the fine art of photography! My Epic Book: Photographing Women Models!

geni.us/m90Ms

Portrait, Swimsuit, Lingerie, Boudoir, Fine Art, & Fashion Photography Exalting the Venus Goddess Archetype: How to Shoot Epic ... Epic! Beautiful Surf Fine Art Portrait Swimsuit Bikini Models!

 

Follow me my good friends!

Facebook: geni.us/A0Na3

Instagram: geni.us/QD2J

Golden Ratio: geni.us/9EbGK

45SURF: geni.us/Mby4P

Fine Art Ballet: geni.us/C1Adc

 

Some of my epic books, prints, & more!

geni.us/aEG4

 

Exalt your photography with Golden Ratio Compositions!

geni.us/eeA1

Golden Ratio Compositions & Secret Sacred Geometry for Photography, Fine Art, & Landscape Photographers: How to Exalt Art with Leonardo da Vinci's, Michelangelo's!

 

Epic Landscape Photography:

geni.us/TV4oEAz

A Simple Guide to the Principles of Fine Art Nature Photography: Master Composition, Lenses, Camera Settings, Aperture, ISO, ... Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography)

 

All my photography celebrates the physics of light! dx4/dt=ic! Light Time Dimension Theory: The Foundational Physics Unifying Einstein's Relativity and Quantum Mechanics: A Simple, Illustrated Introduction to the Physical: geni.us/Fa1Q

 

Ralph Waldo Emerson. The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.

 

Lucius Annaeus Seneca: On entering a temple we assume all signs of reverence. How much more reverent then should we be before the heavenly bodies, the stars, the very nature of God!

 

John Muir: All the wild world is beautiful, and it matters but little where we go, to highlands or lowlands, woods or plains, on the sea or land or down among the crystals of waves or high in a balloon in the sky; through all the climates, hot or cold, storms and calms, everywhere and always we are in God's eternal beauty and love. So universally true is this, the spot where we chance to be always seems the best.

Hunter Boone '08 & Summer Wisdom '08

 

We met during our freshman year in 2004 in the parking lot of Boone Bagelry. We were each with mutual friends who stopped to talk and introduced us quickly. I still remember what he was wearing during that first meeting. That night we were at the same party coincidentally and ended up becoming part of the same group of friends that year. We were very close friends for 2 years. Technically our first date was a double date to the Broyhill Inn dining room to spend the last of my meal card money, but with two other people we were each dating at the time! We eventually realized that we were more than just best friends and started dating in 2006. In 2009 we were finally moving away from Boone (unfortunately) and he asked me to come out to Macado's for one last night out. After I finished one of my last shifts waiting tables at Casa Rustica, I drove down town to meet him. He was waiting for me outside and walked with me down King Street from my car, stopping in front of Boone Bagelry to cross at the light. He stopped and said "Hey, this is where we first met." I didn't get it and just said "Yeah..." and then he got down on one knee. It turns out he had been pacing up and down King Street all night waiting for me to get off work so he could catch me at the car and steer our walk to Boone Bagelry. He even had all of our friends waiting for us a block up on King Street afterwards!

 

We got married in 2011 in the Solarium in the Plemmons Student Union and had our reception at the Broyhill Inn. Chancellor Peacock was nice enough to let us take a few wedding day pictures at his house, and this one with the Chancellor and our whole wedding party (including 13 ASU alumni!) is one of our favorites. We try to make it back for at least one football game a season and will always be true mountaineers at heart. After all, It's Great To Be A Mountaineer!

 

Campus Wisdom Exhibition April 1st -30th, 2014

Public and social practice artist Van C. Tran was spring 2014 Artist-in-Residence at The John Spoor Broome Library at CSU Channel Islands. Throughout the month of April, her site-specific multimedia installation sought out words of wisdom from members of the CI campus community. See Campus Wisdom website. Van C. Tran is a teaching artist based in San Diego, CA. She received an MFA in Art from UC Santa Barbara in 2012. campuswisdom.wordpress.com/csu-channel-islands/

 

Wisdom Band 13th anniversary concert @ Asian Engine Rebuilders, Inc. October 13, 2013

The Little Hagia Sophia mosque (Turkish: Küçük Ayasofya Camii), formerly the Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus (Ancient Greek: Ἐκκλησία τῶν Ἁγίων Σεργίου καὶ Βάκχου ἐν τοῖς Ὁρμίσδου, romanized: Ekklēsía tôn Hagíōn Sergíou kaì Bákchou en toîs Hormísdou), is a former Greek Orthodox church dedicated to Saints Sergius and Bacchus in Constantinople (modern Istanbul), built between 532 and 536, and converted into a mosque during the Ottoman Empire.

 

This Byzantine building with a central dome plan was erected in the sixth century by Justinian; despite its Turkish name, it likely was not a model for Hagia Sophia ("Holy Wisdom"), with which its construction was contemporary, but it is nonetheless one of the most important early Byzantine buildings in Istanbul. It was recognized at the time by Procopius as an adornment to the entire city, and a modern historian of the East Roman Empire has written that the church "by the originality of its architecture and the sumptuousness of its carved decoration, ranks in Constantinople second only to St Sophia itself".

 

The building stands in Istanbul, in the district of Fatih and in the neighbourhood of Kumkapı, at a short distance from the Marmara Sea, near the ruins of the Great Palace and to the south of the Hippodrome. It is now separated from the sea by the Sirkeci-Halkalı suburban railway line and the coastal road, Kennedy Avenue.

 

According to later legend, during the reign of Justin I, his nephew Justinian had been accused of plotting against the throne. He was sentenced to death, avoided after Saints Sergius and Bacchus appeared before Justin and vouched for Justinian's innocence. He was freed and restored to his title of Caesar, and in gratitude, he vowed to dedicate a church to the saints once he became emperor. The construction of this Church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus, between 527 and 536 AD, was one of the first acts of the reign of Justinian I.

 

The new church lay at the border between the First and Third Regio of the City, in an irregular area between the Palace of Hormisdas (the house of Justinian before he acceded to the throne) and the Church of the Saints Peter and Paul. Back then, the two churches shared the same narthex, atrium and propylaea. The new church became the centre of the complex, and part still survives today, towards the south of the northern wall of one of the two other edifices. The church was one of the most important religious structures in Constantinople. Shortly after the church's building a monastery bearing the same name was built near the edifice.

 

Construction of the new church began either shortly before or during that of Hagia Sophia, built from 532 to 537. It was believed that the building had been designed by the same architects, Isidorus of Miletus and Anthemius of Tralles, as a kind of "dress rehearsal" for that of the largest church of the Byzantine Empire. However, the building is quite different in architectural detail from the Hagia Sophia and the notion that it was but a small-scale version has largely been discredited. Instead, the church built by Anicia Juliana around a decade before SS. Sergius & Bacchus's construction, the Sasanian-influenced Church of St Polyeuctus - the largest church in Constantinople until Hagia Sophia's construction - was likely the most direct influence. Even so, because Anicia Juliana's St Polyeuctus, built 519–522, was not domed with brick but instead covered three opposing pairs of exhedrae with a wooden roof typical of a basilica, the immediate architectural precedent of both SS. Sergius & Bacchus and Hagia Sophia must be found in pendentive domes elsewhere, such as in the so-called Mausoleum of Galla Placidia in Ravenna and the several earlier Byzantine domes rotundas and polygons whose foundations survive.

 

During the years 536 and 537, the Palace of Hormisdas became a Monophysite monastery, where followers of that sect, coming from the eastern regions of the Empire and escaping the persecutions against them, found protection by Empress Theodora.

 

In year 551 Pope Vigilius, who some years before had been summoned to Constantinople by Justinian, found refuge in the church from the soldiers of the Emperor who wanted to capture him, and this attempt caused riots. During the Iconoclastic period the monastery became one of the centres of this movement in the City.

 

After the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453, the church remained untouched until the reign of Bayezid II. Then (between 1506 and 1513) it was transformed into a mosque by Hüseyin Ağa, the Chief Black Eunuch, custodian of the Bab-ı-Saadet (literally The Gate of Felicity in Ottoman Turkish) in the Sultan's residence, the Topkapı Palace. At that time the portico and madrasah were added to the church.

 

In 1740 the Grand Vizier Hacı Ahmet Paşa restored the mosque and built the Şadırvan (fountain). Damage caused by the earthquakes of 1648 and 1763 was repaired in 1831 under the reign of Sultan Mahmud II. In 1762 the minaret was first built. It was demolished in 1940 and built again in 1956.

 

The pace of decay of the building, which already suffered because of humidity and earthquakes through the centuries, accelerated after the construction of the railway. Parts of SS. Peter and Paul to the south of the building were demolished to accommodate the rail line. Other damage was caused by the building's use as housing for the refugees during the Balkan Wars.

 

Due to the increasing threats to the building's static integrity, it was added some years ago to the UNESCO watch list of endangered monuments. The World Monuments Fund added it to its Watch List of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in 2002, 2004, and 2006. After an extensive restoration which lasted several years and ended in September 2006, it has been opened again to the public and for worship.

So here it is, the Wisdom Path. I'd walked all the way to see this, but I did not go onto the trail itself due to the up incline. The totem poles seen here each bear an inscription with teachings from the Buddha, hence the name Wisdom Path. Hong Kong, Jan/ Feb. 2012.

Wisdom and Knowledge Shall Be The Stability Of Thy Times.

 

GE Building, 30 Rock, NYC.

 

A shot of my "Skinny Grandmother". My "Fat Grandmother" passed away a little over a year ago. Back in Laos my grandfather married both my Skinny and Fat grandma because my Skinny Grandma (who he married first) could not have kids. So, in the old fashion way of life, the he was allowed to marry someone who could have kids (my Fat Grandma, also my mom's mother).

Getting them removed on the 20th.

Abstract painting of the sun.

Hagia Sophia (from the Greek: Ἁγία Σοφία, "Holy Wisdom"; Latin: Sancta Sophia or Sancta Sapientia; Turkish: Aya Sofya) is a former Orthodox patriarchal basilica, later a mosque, and now a museum in Istanbul, Turkey. From the date of its dedication in 360 until 1453, it served as the cathedral of Constantinople, except between 1204 and 1261, when it was converted to a Roman Catholic cathedral under the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople of the Western Crusader established Latin Empire. The building was a mosque from 29 May 1453 until 1934, when it was secularized. It was opened as a museum on 1 February 1935.[1]

The Church was dedicated to the Logos, the second person of the Holy Trinity,[2] its dedication feast taking place on December 25, the anniversary of the incarnation of the Logos in Christ.[2] Although it is sometimes referred to as Sancta Sophia (as though it were named after Saint Sophia), sophia is the phonetic spelling in Latin of the Greek word for wisdom - the full name in Greek being Ναός τῆς Ἁγίας τοῦ Θεοῦ Σοφίας, "Church of the Holy Wisdom of God".[3][4]

Famous in particular for its massive dome, it is considered the epitome of Byzantine architecture and is said to have "changed the history of architecture."[5] It was the largest cathedral in the world for nearly a thousand years, until Seville Cathedral was completed in 1520. The current building was originally constructed as a church between 532 and 537 on the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian and was the third Church of the Holy Wisdom to occupy the site, the previous two having both been destroyed by rioters. It was designed by Isidore of Miletus, a physicist, and Anthemius of Tralles, a mathematician.[6]

The church contained a large collection of holy relics and featured, among other things, a 49 foot (15 m) silver iconostasis. It was the seat of the Patriarch of Constantinople and the religious focal point of the Eastern Orthodox Church for nearly one thousand years. It is the church in which Cardinal Humbert in 1054 excommunicated Michael I Cerularius - which is commonly considered the start of the Great Schism.

In 1453, Constantinople was conquered by the Ottoman Turks under Sultan Mehmed II, who subsequently ordered the building converted into a mosque.[7] The bells, altar, iconostasis, and sacrificial vessels were removed and many of the mosaics were plastered over. Islamic features — such as the mihrab, minbar, and four minarets — were added while in the possession of the Ottomans. It remained a mosque until 1935, when it was converted into a museum by the Republic of Turkey.

For almost 500 years the principal mosque of Istanbul, Hagia Sophia served as a model for many other Ottoman mosques, such as the Sultan Ahmed Mosque (Blue Mosque of Istanbul), the Şehzade Mosque, the Süleymaniye Mosque, the Rüstem Pasha Mosque and the Kılıç Ali Paşa Mosque.

...herself by way of gray hair in my little sister's head.

Waorani wisdom:

 

“During our youth, we Waorani women went for walks with our parents and grandparents in order to share in their activities and access to all the secrets of the forest. With our Pikenanis (grandmothers and grandfathers) we also learnt to tell the different seasons in synchrony with changes in the forest; to locate game animals, collect plants with nutritious properties; know the territory to move as we desire, and have the courage to defend nature with spiritual strength because she (nature) is a mother and an inspiring guide".

 

"The commander of the spaceship sees all this and more."

 

There is much appeal to positions of leadership, but with great power comes great responsibility. Ignorance is bliss and knowledge can be a burden. Being omniscient in a world of poverty, despair, and corruption can seriously depress a person. There's only so much truth eyes can healthily proccess. Maybe we would all be better off if we just covered them.

Wisdom teeth present potential problems when they are misaligned - they can position themselves horizontally, be angled toward or away from the second molars or be angled inward or outward. Poor alignment of wisdom teeth can crowd or damage adjacent teeth, the jawbone, or nerves. Wisdom teeth that lean toward the second molars make those teeth more vulnerable to decay by entrapping plaque and debris. In addition, wisdom teeth can be entrapped completely within the soft tissue and/or the jawbone or only partially break through or erupt through the gum.

 

Here is Brian Dental Care!

Dr. Kim will help correct wisdom teeth issues.

 

Please visit our web at www.BrianDentalCare.com for more info!

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