bebemoon:

“Small delights – a clear winter sunset through the natural iron grillwork of black trees, a street lamp shining through ice-encased branches, blue sky glittering, and sun on ice-crusted snow. Loveliness, loveliness.”

Sylvia Plath, from a journal entry featured in “The Unabridged Journals,”
(via violentwavesofemotion)

henryclervals:

“When I was 21 I read “Anna Karenina.” I thought Anna and Vronsky were soul mates. They were deeply in love and therefore had to be together. I found Karenin cruel and oppressive for keeping his wife from her destiny. Levin and Kitty and the peasants bored me. I read those parts quickly. Last year I turned 49, and I read the book again. This time, I loved Levin and Kitty. I loved the fact that after she declined his proposal he waited for a long time to mend his hurt feelings and then asked her again. I loved that she had grown up in the interim and now felt grateful for a second chance. Anna and Vronsky bored me. I thought Anna was selfish and shrill. My heart went out to poor Karenin, who tried to be decent. What has literature taught me about love? Literature (along with experience) has taught me that love means different things at different points in our lives, and that often as we get older we gravitate toward the quieter, kinder plotlines, and find them to be richer than we had originally understood them to be.”

— Ann Patchett, “A Sentimental Education - Writers on Love” (via zenshipper)

20aliens:
“IRELAND. County Kerry. 1986
Martin Parr
”

20aliens:

IRELAND. County Kerry. 1986
Martin Parr

20aliens:

IRELAND. County Kerry. 1986
Martin Parr

northmagneticpole:
“ Photographs of Morehouse’s Comet, September 1, 1908
”

northmagneticpole:

Photographs of Morehouse’s Comet, September 1, 1908

northmagneticpole:

Photographs of Morehouse’s Comet, September 1, 1908

The capacity to be alone is the capacity to love. It may look paradoxical to you, but it is not. It is an existential truth: only those people who are capable of being alone are capable of love, of sharing, of going into the deepest core of the other person—without possessing the other, without becoming dependent on the other, without reducing the other to a thing, and without becoming addicted to the other.
Osho (via quotemadness)
yua:
“https://www.instagram.com/p/BpzuhHTgxva/
”
gnossienne:
““Virginia Woolf, Night and Day (1919) ” ”

gnossienne:

Virginia Woolf, Night and Day (1919)

gnossienne:

Virginia Woolf, Night and Day (1919)
@ RAW Paste Data