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Taken at St. Mark's Square, Venice

Love is union with somebody, or something, outside oneself, under the condition of retaining the separateness and integrity of one's own self.

-- Erich Fromm

 

A space between the mother and child is used by the child to work out its independent self and by the mother to enable the child‟s separation from her. Their interdependence on each other is embodied in this psychic space between them.

 

(Re-edit 01/07, thanks Noel Upfield for the explanation)

 

Life is really nicely done on earth. You can see there the unique and symbiotic relationship between ants and aphids on a gooseberry: ants protect aphids from predators, and aphids produce/secrete drops of honeydew that feeds the ants (they’re addicted to).

 

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(Réédité le 01/07, merci Noel Upfield pour l’explication)

 

La vie est vraiment bien faite sur Terre. Ici, vous pouvez voir la relation unique et symbiotique qu’ont les fourmis et les pucerons, sur une groseille à maquereau: les fourmis protègent les pucerons des prédateurs, et les pucerons produisent/sécrètent des gouttes de miellat qui nourrissent les fourmis (elles en raffolent).

Photoshop collage; FX Photo Studio Pro, CS5.5

Part 2 of a study on color relationships.

 

Model: Rhea Ansell

Make Up: Jordyn Ferris

Photo Assistant: Raquel Nese

For FGR (Help me plan my next vacation)

 

This is a page out of my scrapbook from the summer i studied in Florence. I fully believe everyone should have an extended stay abroad once in their lives.* I've been lucky to have two :) (Ok, the first was a mini-extended stay. 2 weeks at age 16. but it counts.)

 

*why i'm now in a love/hate relationship with becca.

 

I've been meaning to go back and edit some of my old europe shots to post. maybe this will motivate me?

 

a closer look

The polar bear most of the time couches lazily on the land and catches rays of the sun. It seems nothing can bother him and distract from his relaxing pastime. Аt feeding time the bear changes from a still creature into a strong and ferocious predator. Lots of people always come to look at the process of feeding. A small girl was looking excitedly at what was going on behind the glass, standing in front of it as if enchanted.

Зоопарк Сингапура-2016.

Полярный медведь чаще всего лениво лежит на суше и греется на солнышке. И казалось бы, что ничего не может помешать этому. Но во время кормления, этот белый, пушистый коврик, превращается в активного хищника, злого и беспощадного. Посмотреть на это зрелище, всегда собирается много людей. Девочка была так увлечена происходящим за стеклом, что стояла как заваражённая.

iPod touch's camera / brushes+scratchcam fx+deco sketch+decim8+filterstorm+vsco+enlight+pictureshow+phototoaster

I experienced Canyon de Chelly from both its rim and its bottom lands. The experience was truly awesome.

 

The canyon was inhabited by pueblo-dwelling peoples hundreds of years ago and it still a summer home to many Dineh (Navajo) families today. The canyon is located in the Navajo Reservation in Chinle, Arizona. I spent three nights in Chinle.

 

The bottom of the canyon is illed with loose sand and in the dry season a jeep ride through it is like an ocean ride in choppy water in h high-speed motor boat. What an experience! With the help of our local guides we learned about the historic and present relationship between the canyon and the Dineh.

 

While I was able to take photos of the abandoned pueblos and petroglyphs, I'm focusing upon the land in this trio. I was not able to take phots of modern Dineh dwellings, land, or people because doing so went against their customs.

 

Note: I am posting the shot with the vehicles driving in front of the jeep I was in to give a sense of proportion

 

If you are interested in learning more about the canyon, you might visit this website:

www.nps.gov/cach/index.htm

 

Gauntlet Birds of Prey Eagle and Vulture Park

anna and tyler (in their essence)

This lovely image of three Yellow-billed Oxpeckers perching on a Cape Buffalo was taken by Nelis Wolmarans on a recent South African tour. Ticks and other insects feasting on the host animal are removed by oxpeckers (a symbiotic relationship), although the overall merits of the oxpeckers behaviour is speculative as wounds on the animal are often kept open by the oxpeckers as they have a weak spot for blood (and in this instance only the oxpecker benefits!).

 

For more information you are welcome to visit www.oryxwildlifesafaris.com/ or email us at info@oryxwildlifesafaris.com

 

#wildlifephototgraphy#travelphototgraphy#endlesssafari#bestnatureshot#natureaddict#safariadventure#pictureoftheday

impressions @ Kokerei HANSA, Dortmund (GER)

/ Koraku, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo // リレーションシップ -2 / 文京区後楽

Canadians (and likely other winter residents as well) have a love hate relationship with the snow plow. It's great to have clear streets after a heavy snowfall but on the other hand, it's probably fair to say that everyone thinks the plow operator has a mean streak and takes particular delight with filling in the end of your driveway to make it impassible - especially when you've just cleared it all out.

 

It's nonsense, of course, but I'll bet it crossed your mind more then once when you're the one standing in the driveway and watching it happen.

 

Think positive! Think photo ops!

In 994, Count Palatine Aribo I of the Aribonen noble family donated a monastery in “Sewa”. Due to the very good relationship between the Count Palatine and the Bishop of Regensburg, Wolfgang von Regensburg, monks from the St. Emmeram Monastery in Regensburg move into the new foundation. The monastery receives relics of St. Lambert of Maastricht.

The monastery is in full bloom financially and economically. The monastery has a very good reputation for the production of magnificent manuscripts and books. This economic success is also reflected in the construction of a new, essentially Romanesque church, consecrated in 1200. In 1201, King Philip gave the Bishop of Salzburg the former imperial abbey together with Frauenchiemsee.

At the end of the 14th and beginning of the 15th century the church was rebuilt in the Gothic style.

But in the 16th century, many monks followed the teachings of Martin Luther and left the monastery.

Duke Albrecht V reformed the Seeon monastery with the help of the Benedictines from Tegernsee. It experiences a new beginning. In 1579, during the Renaissance, the interior of the church was decorated with magnificent frescoes.

Under Abbot Honorad Kolb, however, the monastery experienced an upswing in the middle of the Thirty Years' War. This can be seen in the numerous new buildings that the abbot has built. The interior of the church was also lined with baroque stucco under his leadership. Debt weighs heavily on the monastery's shoulders. The abbot is deposed. However, the monastery was soon debt-free again and was one of the richest monasteries in old Bavaria.

Like all monasteries, Seeon falls victim to secularisation. The monastery church becomes a parish church, and the convent buildings change hands several times.

In the 19th century, the church interior was redesigned in a neo-Gothic style, and the baroque stucco was removed.

Today there is a cultural and educational center in the monastery buildings.

The Seeoner Madonna is famous, a figure of the Master of Seeon (name unknown). A copy of the figure is in the high altar created in 1947, the original is on display in the Bavarian National Museum. The crucifixion group created around 1390 hangs under the triumphal arch. There it was placed in its original place in 2002 after it had been removed during the baroque period, and in 1982 it went to the Diocesan Museum in Freising.

5/5 Columbine is a common name for the genus Aquilegia both in English and French (spelled colombine), so I thought I'd find out why. Apparently, the flower of the columbine, specifically the top, has been interpreted as a group of birds (often doves) sitting, facing each other. In fact other common names, for example in a number of German language dialects, also refer to that image. Correspondingly, the name Columbine is thought to come from the Latin word 'columbīna' signifying a relationship with a pigeon or dove (Latin columba), or more specifically of the same colour as a dove.

Fittingly in scientific classification, there is an order of doves and pigeons (Columbiformes) which contains a Family (Columbidae) and Subfamily (Columbinae), which in turn contain the genus (Columbina). Columbina is a genus of nice species of small doves that can be found from the Southern United States through Central and most of Southern America.

Like the other pictures in this little series (see here flic.kr/s/aHBqjBskvZ), I took this one in a friend's garden. For information on the common columbine, see flic.kr/p/2pS4jd2 and flic.kr/p/2pSsA6x

 

Shoji screen at a Japanese restaurant... display at the Pacific Design Center... a garage door... a bathroom window?

 

Take a guess. What do you think?

30-07-2015

TOPIC : I HOPE MY PHOTO IT HAS A STORY

Relationship

Camera : Sony A7s

Lens : Carl Zeiss sonnar F135mm F2.8

Si te gustan las curiosidades y quieres saber más, sobre la relación que tiene el símbolo de la psicología, la ciencia del conocimiento, con la salud mental…sigue leyendo…

palabrasquemuestranelcamino.wordpress.com/2025/01/09/psique/

www.grada.es/psique/blogueros/amparo-garcia/

 

If you like curiosities and want to know more about the relationship between the symbol of psychology, the science of knowledge, and mental health…keep reading…

palabrasquemuestranelcamino.wordpress.com/2025/01/09/psique/

www.grada.es/psique/blogueros/amparo-garcia/

Our relationships with our siblings are the longest we have in life. Probably, not by coincidence, the story of Cain and Abel is at the beginning of the book of Genesis, showing us the complex, not to say, dangerous aspects of these relationships (when the parent prefers one child over the other).

The girl here is tweaking her brother's cheek 'from the depth of her heart', and as you can guess he was offended, hurt, and started crying as loud as he could.

p.s.

Above them, it is written in Hebrew: (I am a good person) "Defamation, is not talking to me"…

 

The photo was taken a day before the Jewish 'Day of Atonement' (YOM KIPPUR) in which people are supposed to ask forgiveness from other people they might offend…

"Girl, our time has come to a sunset."

"What"

"Yeah"

Enjoying it alone great. Sharing the moment is bliss.

 

Japan, Gifu Prefecture, Takayama-city Autumn

日本、岐阜県、高山市 秋

Two traditional Korean instruments

Tarpon Springs is a city in Pinellas County, Florida, United States. The population was 23,484 at the 2010 census. Tarpon Springs has the highest percentage of Greek Americans of any city in the US. Downtown Tarpon Springs has long been a focal point and is currently undergoing beautification.

 

The region, with a series of bayous feeding into the Gulf of Mexico, was first settled by white and black farmers and fishermen around 1876. Some of the newly arrived visitors spotted tarpon jumping out of the waters and so named the location Tarpon Springs. The name is said to have originated with a remark of Mrs. Ormond Boyer, an early settler from South Carolina, and who, while standing on the shore of the Bayou and seeing fish leaping exclaimed, "See the tarpon spring!' However, for the most part, the fish seen splashing here were mullets rather than tarpon. In 1882, Hamilton Disston, who in the previous year had purchased the land where the city of Tarpon Springs now stands, ordered the creation of a town plan for the future city.

 

On February 12, 1887, Tarpon Springs became the first incorporated city in what is now Pinellas County. Less than a year later on January 13, 1888, the Orange Belt Railway, the first railroad line to be built in what is now Pinellas County, arrived in the city. During this time the area was developed as a wintering spot for wealthy northerners.

 

In the 1880s, John K. Cheyney founded the first local sponge business. The industry continued to grow in the 1890s. Many people from Key West and the Bahamas settled in Tarpon Springs to hook sponges and then process them. A few Greek immigrants also arrived in this city during the 1890s to work in the sponge industry.

 

In 1905, John Cocoris introduced the technique of sponge diving to Tarpon Springs by recruiting divers and crew members from Greece. The first divers came from the Saronic Gulf islands of Aegina and Hydra, but they were soon outnumbered by those from the Dodecanese islands of Kalymnos, Symi, and Halki. The sponge industry soon became one of the leading maritime industries in Florida and the most important business in Tarpon Springs, generating millions of dollars a year. The 1953 film Beneath the 12-Mile Reef, depicting the sponge industry, takes place and was filmed in Tarpon Springs.

 

In 1947, red tide algae bloom wiped out the sponge fields in the Gulf of Mexico, causing many of the sponge boats and divers to switch to shrimping for their livelihood, while others left the business. Eventually, the sponges recovered, allowing for a smaller but consistent sponge industry today. In the 1980s, the sponge business experienced a boom due to a sponge disease that killed the Mediterranean sponges. Today there is still a small active sponge industry. Visitors can often view sponge fishermen working at the Sponge Docks on Dodecanese Boulevard. In addition, visitors can enjoy shops, restaurants, and museum exhibits that detail Tarpon Springs' Greek heritage.

 

In 2007 and 2008, the City of Tarpon Springs established Sister City relationships with Kalymnos, Halki, Symi, and Larnaca, Cyprus, honoring the close historical link with these Greek-speaking islands.

 

There are several districts or properties in Tarpon Springs that have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places:

 

Tarpon Springs Greektown Historic District

Tarpon Springs Historic District

Arcade Hotel

Old Tarpon Springs City Hall

Old Tarpon Springs High School

Safford House

Rose Hill Cemetery

Tarpon Springs Depot

 

Many sites related to the sponge industry within the Greektown District also have been recognized. They include but are not limited to two sponge packing houses:

 

E.R. Meres Sponge Packing House

N.G. Arfaras Sponge Packing House

And several boats:

 

N.K. Symi (Sponge Diving Boat)

St. Nicholas III (Sponge Diving Boat)

St. Nicholas VI (Sponge Diving Boat)

 

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarpon_Springs,_Florida

www.pcpao.org/?pg=https://www.pcpao.org/general.php?strap...

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

  

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