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A rafted breakdown. The lava flow skinned over, then broke up into plates that were carried downstream before fetching up here in a jumble -- just like spring breakup on a frozen river.
The morning sun shines on a massive breakup of winter ice on a cold and stormy March morning on the North Shore of Lake Superior near Lutsen, Minnesota.
Dạo này có mấy má ăn không ngồi rồi lăm @@
Ngta up tấm hình nào cũng nhảy vào cm @@ cm j đâu toàn trên trờii dưới đất
Ăn nói cái l qè j đéo co miếng duyên vùng
Chuẩn thì sao mà k chuẩn thì sao ? Có ịnh vào mặt ông cố nội mày làm ỗng lên cơn sãng đức dây nứng lăn đùng ra chết chưa ? Cái đkm đếch cmt thì phắng chứ đừng xoán fl* t =;
The diaries I kept over a period of six years - all 2000 pages, which later became my book BREAKUP:...
The diaries I kept over a period of six years - all 2000 pages, which later became my book BREAKUP: enduring divorce.
The disc they were scanned onto.
What to do with a day and a half near Bergen? Rent a car and drive for the hills. I enjoyed exploring the fjords, charted my path from waterfall to waterfall and looked for small roads that traced along the fjords or through back valleys. Timing was ideal, as the trip fell when the fjords were breaking up and shortly after a recent dusting of snow.
For licensing or usage, please reach out directly.
The Tok River is bulging with early spring meltwater which flows over top of the winter ice, and refreezes; again flows over the top of that ice, and refreezes; building and bulging and completely filling the channel. When it does all go, there will be flooding in several areas, which is completely expected. No one, and no private properties will be threatened, it's just a regular event of spring.
I do love how the ice goes all green and turquoise, because of it's density.
Going out before break-up means dealing with snow and ice. Weather port and tent bases need to be uncovered in order to set them up.
USFWS Yukon Delta NWR
Photo Credit: Casey Setash
Public domain
Abstract Series 138 - Treat Her Right at The Lizard Lounge, Cambridge, MA
Special Guests
Linda S. Viens, Tim Gearan & Jess Tardy
Treat Her Right
Origin: Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Genres: Blues, Low rock
Years active1984-1991, 1995-1998, 2009-10
LabelsRCA Records, Rounder Records
www.myspace.com/treatherrightband
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treat_Her_Right
Members
The late Mark Sandman
Dave Champagne
Jim Fitting
Billy Conway
Billy Beard
Treat Her Right is a blues rock group formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1984. The band originally featured Mark Sandman on guitar, Billy Conway on drums, Dave Champagne on guitar, and Jim Fitting on harmonica. Singing and songwriting duties were shared by all but Conway. Champagne and Fitting reformed the band in 2009 with new members Steve Mayone and Billy Beard.
In addition to being the forerunner to the successful indie rock band Morphine, Treat Her Right is often credited with helping to spawn the punk-blues hybrid (sometimes dubbed cowpunk, among other titles) that achieved prominence in the early 2000s.
History
Career (1984–1998)
The band derived its name from the 1965 international smash hit by Roy Head and the Traits, "Treat Her Right." The group's self-financed and self-titled debut was released on a small Boston record label in 1986, and their first recording attempt was a modest success - Champagne's "I Got a Gun" and Sandman's cover of James Blood Ulmer's "Where Did All the Girls Come From?" received some play on college radio. "I Think She Likes Me" describes Sandman's experience in a Fairplay, Colorado bar where a woman came on to him. The group signed to RCA Records, who reissued the debut in 1988.
Tied to the Tracks was issued in 1989. Sales did not meet RCA's expectations. In the notes for their third record, the group writes, "RCA decided that if our little basement tape could do so well, why not spend fifty times more money and it will be fifty times better! (They think everything works like that.)" Treat Her Right were dropped from their RCA contract.
What's Good for You, their third album, was issued on Rounder Records in 1991. The ragged, live-in-the-studio sound was partly modeled on the model established by Chess Records, which had released many classic blues and early rock and roll records. Shortly after this third release, Treat Her Right disbanded.
The group reformed in 1995 under the direction of Rolling Stones backup guitar player Bob Anderson, but disbanded for the second time in 1998.
Other projects and post-breakup
Fitting later played with The The, The Coots and Session Americana. Champaign remained musically active, playing with groups such as The Jazz Popes. Sandman formed Morphine in 1989, which Conway joined in 1993. Although more blues-based than Morphine, Treat Her Right sowed the seeds of Sandman's later sound with its unusual instrumentation (Sandman's guitar with Treat Her Right was a three string custom model, making it sound more like a bass guitar) and slightly dark focus, most evident on the Sandman-penned songs.
Sandman died of a heart attack while onstage with Morphine in Italy in 1999.
Reformation (2009–present)
The Treat Her Right song "Rhythm & Booze" was featured on The Hangover soundtrack, released in 2009. In the summer of this same year, The Lost Album, a record of unreleased Treat Her Right material, was released by Hi-n-Dry. Shortly thereafter, Treat Her Right reunited to mark the ten-year anniversary of Sandman's death at the Mark Sandman Memorial Concert in September, and the band continued activity thereafter. Champagne and Fitting led the new version of Treat Her Right, joined by Steve Mayone playing low guitar and Billy Beard (previously of the Boston new wave band Face to Face) playing drums.
Discography
Treat Her Right (1986)
Tied to the Tracks (1989)
What's Good for You (1991)
The Anthology 1985-1990 (1998)
The Lost Album (2009)
Well now, it would truly be a sin to visit Germany without exploring at least one decaying building! So a couple of us hopped onto a train from Berlin into the small town of Beelitz in the Brandenburg countryside to find this gigantic hospital complex with an incredible history. Built by architect Heino Schmieden starting in 1898, it was originally a sanatorium for workers from Berlin, but was taken over by the Imperial Army during the first world war, during which time in the winter of 1916 it would be host to one of its most notorious patients - a young Adolf Hitler recovering from a wound sustained during the Battle of the Somme. In 1945 the hospital was captured by the Soviet Army as they marched into what would in 1949 become the Soviet-influenced German Democratic Republic (GDR). As the GDR was absorbed into the Federal Republic of Germany in 1990, the former leader of the GDR - Erich Honecker - would himself stay here for a brief period before fleeing the country to escape responsibility for state abuses committed by his government. The Russians would retain the hospital for several more years, even after the breakup of the Soviet Union, but the hospital would finally become a civilian (and German) institution again in 1995, although due to its poor financial performance most of the buildings would be abandoned in 2000. Behind a patch of peeling wallpaper I found a Russian newspaper from 1990! Some of the site remains in use, but for the most part the buildings are decaying rapidly, attracting no attention other than photographers and graffiti artists.
The idea to tell the story of The Eagles came to Irving Azoff at the time they would have been celebrating their 40th anniversary. Two years later, "History of the Eagles, Part One" is debuting at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, on Jan. 19. And yes, there is a finished "Part Two" as well.
"Part one is from when the band began til its breakup" says Alison Ellwood, director of the high-profile documentary that will eventually be released as a two-disc DVD. "It goes back into the roots of Don (Henley) and Glenn (Frey) and what sparked the desire to become the band. Film two picks up with the solo careers and the band reuniting in 1994. There's quite a bit of Joe (Walsh) in 'Part Two.' It's almost the crux of the film."
"Part 1" premieres at 9:30 p.m. Jan. 19 at the Eccles Theater and then screens in Salt Lake City, Ogden and two other Park City theaters during the week. TheEagles -- Henley, Frey, Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit -- are expected to attend the premiere.
Producer Alex Gibney, who won the documentary feature Oscar for his 2007 film about torture in Afghanistan, "Taxi to the Dark Side," got involved in the project after he saw 16mm footage shot by legendary camera men Haskell Wexler ("No Nukes") and Richard Pearce ("Woodstock") during the 1977 "Hotel California" tour. On top of the seven-camera shoot, the Eagles also recorded in multitrack a concert in Maryland that was to be the centerpiece of the film in the 1970s.
"You can see the character of the band, how open they were and more casual, off the cuff," Gibney says, noting that the quality of 1977 footage was a key reason to say yes to the project. "You can see how different they are and how they complement each other."
Gibney, who called in Ellwood, his collaborator on the Ken Kesey film "Magic Trip," to direct and co-edit. The two secured interviews with everyone who has been in the band (founding members Randy Meisner and Bernie Leadon plus guitarist Don Felder), songwriting collaborators J.D. Souther and Jackson Browne, producers Glyn Johns and Bill Szymczyk, and the key figures behind the scenes, manager Azoff and David Geffen, who signed them to his Asylum Records in 1971.
"They were very forthcoming and quite honest about the harder times they had together, but there's another issue because they didn't do much press" in the 1970s," Ellwood says. "It's really a myth that they fought all the time. This amazing footage of them from 1977, at the height of their career, shows they are generally having fun onstage together."
Ellwood, an Eagles fan who bought "Desperado" when it came out, and Gibney say they were familiar with the music but largely unfamiliar with the story of the Eagles when they started. Fascinated with roots that include Bob Seger, Kenny Rogers, the Flying Burrito Brothers and Linda Ronstadt, Gibney notes their goal was to "tell the story inside out," to reveal the artistic side of the band and how they made decisions to lead to classics such as "Take It Easy," "Desperado" and "Hotel California."
"It's a classic rock 'n' roll story," he says, adding, "it's the Beatles story," referring to a band walking away from the stage at the peak of their powers.
"Nobody comes off as a villain," Ellwood notes. "The antagonisms that occurred -- all the members talk about it. It was this thing that imploded on itself.
Part two was initially created as a DVD extras package, with structure to it, Ellwood says, "but they gave such great interviews we created a second film. In some ways it's actually more moving than the first film. The emotional arc is when they grow up. You leave them at the height of their success in meltdown mode (in 'Part One') and in film two they grow and bring themselves back together. It has a nice arc."
Sometimes we wait too long to be surprised by people who, we know, will just disappoint us.
Model: Natalia Gnatyuk Model Mayhem #2675167
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People change and forget to tell each other.
~Lillian Hellman
The breakup only consummates a sep-
aration started long before. Diver-
gence in what "couple" means, now out of step
because the intimate exchanges are
the first of many confidences shared
to go. And something in us knows. It knows
the distancing - those offered daily thoughts, impaired -
has muffled listening... and lets it come...
It lets it come because some better sense
in us has realized what hearts are numb
to: "couple" comes at far too great expense.
When lives are more at peace as loving friends,
it is an act of love when "couple" ends...
Letting go doesn't mean we don't care. Letting go doesn't mean we shut down.
Letting go means we stop trying to force outcomes and make people behave.
It means we give up resistance to the way things are, for the moment.
It means we stop trying to do the impossible - controlling that which we cannot -
and instead, focus on what is possible - which usually means taking care of ourselves.
And we do this in gentleness, kindness, and love, as much as possible.
~Melody Beattie
When people honor each other, there is a trust established that leads to synergy, interdependence, and deep respect. Both parties make decisions and choices
based on what is right, what is best, what is valued most highly.
~Blaine Lee, The Power Principle: Influence with Honor by Blaine Lee
We need, in love, to practice only this: letting each other go.
For holding on comes easily - we do not need to learn it.
~Rainer Maria Rilke
We must be willing to let go of the life we have planned,
so as to accept the life that is waiting for us.
~Joseph Campbell
© Keith Ward 2007
The image is a found photo. The blemishes on the original print were intentionally left just as they were. Take a closer look at the image in the original size view, if you like...
My submission for International Pinhole Day (http://www.pinholeday.org). This was taken with a homemade 9mm pinhole lens mounted on a micro 4/4 digital body.
A fleeting glimpse of a snow-covered summit breaking through the heavy clouds. The veil of mist creates a sense of mystery and grandeur, as if the mountain itself is revealing only a secret part of its beauty for a moment.
After a hurtfull breakup with Eidar Timulus, top model Kandy Kotton did what every girl would do : a new haircut and a new hair color.
"I needed some change" she told Elle Pullip magazine, on which cover she will appear in January. "My new head is my way of saying that I'm ready for that and, maybe, for a new man!"
The strings we create ourselves are built from all kinds of materials;
emotion, lust, endorphins, loneliness, coincidence.
All of these strings can tatter and break.
Though the red sting tangles in your negligence, it never frays.
About the series:
There's a story in Asian folklore that a red string ties together two people who are destined to be together. This string can stretch and become tangled, but can never be severed.
These are scenes I took inspired by this story.
To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover
that the prisoner was you.
-- Lewis B. Smedes.
Anger makes you smaller, while forgiveness
forces you to grow beyond what you were.
-- Cherie Carter-Scott.
SHOWN IN:
*Art show for Speak 4 Silent Voices (6.4.11)
Spring in Alaska is known as "breakup," because that's a pretty accurate description of what happens. One day there's lots of snow on the ground -- gray because it's been there so long -- and it's bitterly cold. The next day, there's still lots of snow but it's melting fast and there are puddles everywhere.
so this is my favorite movie of all time (except for mean girls 1 and 2 <3)
so i had to make a poster to it!
next is mean girls one!
Wonderful collection of Image quote from around the world.
You can download for free these quotes about funny breakup quotes .
Below are some unique quote you can read :
Explore Dark Angel’s board “funny breakup quotes” on Pinterest, a visual bookmarking tool that helps you...
So unimaginative today. And I just looked at my 365 set and this one is so much like several others. I just didn't have it in me today. It was either this or nothing. And while I really don't feel that this is going to be something I can look back on for some time, I really don't want to quit now. I want to see it through to Day 365. It's been a bit over three weeks since we broke up and it still hurts like hell. Actually, the smiling hasn't been working too well at keeping the tears at bay. I haven't heard a word from him to explain or apologize. I don't know why I thought I would, though. I mean, someone who had been lying to me and cheating, and then denying when he was caught, surely lacks the integrity. Bad day all around. Work really sucks, too.
Sorry to be such a downer. I just didn't have the energy to fake it today.
If you are still looking at my stream, I'm wondering how you rationalized it all to yourself? How did you think it was okay to lie to me? To lead a double life? To continue sleeping with me and acting like you were committed to our relationship? You accused me of having trust issues and of unfairly scrutinizing you. As it turned out, I was justified in questioning you, wasn't I? You like to think of yourself as a gentleman because you open doors and pull out chairs. Well, a gentleman also has integrity and that is something you certainly lack. You can't have integrity in part of your life and not in other parts. It's all or nothing. I stood beside you while you went through your cancer treatments. Through the ups and downs of it, as much as someone can be there for someone else going through it. I can look through my 365 and remember when it was a weekend you felt good or bad, when you received bad news, when you received good news. I could have left you when you told me about it, but I chose to stay with you and see it through with you. Apparently that didn't matter to you, it didn't count for anything. Now that I know of your more recent lies, there are so many things I now question over the course of our whole relationship. Even though I am still in pain now, I know I will heal and I know that I am ultimately better off without you.
The diaries I kept over a period of six years - all 2000 pages, which later became my book BREAKUP:...
"Is this the end of the moment?
Or just a beautiful unfolding
Of a love that can never be.
You and me."
I made this today after i was feeling all upset about them. I decided to make a collage about all the times theyve spent together as a couple. its not the best in the world but hey i tried. im starting to see the light in all this thanks to my amazing friends Jessica, Marian, Joie and everyone else over at the Jemi thread on the Jbros board. i love you guys and i love joe and demi too.
Lyrics: Anywhere But Here-Safety Suit