Nature

“Nature is not the one-sided affair that we seem to wish it were.  Having attempted to eradicate and control nature, to discount its blessings, we are all the more shocked by its destructive power. For most of us, nature is not the birth of a child, the bounty of food, a gentle summer day, or the extraordinary internal processes that maintain our health and existence—nature is a hurricane, an earthquake, a flood, or an illness.  Traditional peoples living in nature, as part of nature, are naturally attuned to its ways.  They know the lesson of nature is polarity: life/death, day/night, gain/loss—that the way of nature is the way of sacrifice.  Creation is suffering.  The image is there every time you take a meal—some being (plant or animal) has died to give you life.
Traditional peoples love the animal while stalking, killing, and carving it.  We buy our meat prepackaged in cellophane—we don’t want to be reminded of death or sacrifice.  We want good without bad, happiness without suffering, beginnings without endings, life without death.  We try to sugarcoat or avoid the pains of life.  The sick, the old, and the dying are shunned.  They remind us of our own mortality.  Whether we like it or not, nature’s way is our way.  We must come into accord with it, not as an intellectual understanding, but deeply felt in the depths of our being—opening our hearts to the sorrows as well as the joys of life.  Nature’s way is only shocking for someone who lives in an artificial world of his own imagining, where everything is at right angles, and nothing is crooked.
Where we could not eradicate nature, we attempted to control it as if it were a machine—a kind of giant clockwork.  As much as possible, we attempted to make natural functions into soil, mechanical ones.  We start with childbirth, where life is not given by the mother as the embodiment of Mother Nature, but by a socially licensed doctor and his marvelous machines.  We are fed, not mother’s milk, but a product of a mechanized factory.  We try to act as though we are the boss of nature—that through our marvelous science, we can piecemeal manipulate it—without bothering to respect it, much less understand it.  Often our attempts at control only make a bigger mess of things.
Nature is not a dead machine but a living miracle.  Your conscious mind is not required to digest your food or beat your heart.  Nor can it direct the movements of the stars, the orbiting of the planets, the migration of the birds, the sprouting of sees.  If one stops to contemplate this, she recognizes that this great natural intelligence lives within.  Right now you are sitting in the midst of a miracle.  Acknowledge it.  Honor it.  Nature is neither a wild creature to be tamed, nor a machine that can be adroitly controlled by pushing all the right levers.  Nothing you can do from conscious intention can in any way rival the mystery of the life happenings spontaneously within you—right now.” - Laurence G. Boldt

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Why Fight Club Should Replace Detention

Fight club should replace school detention for several reasons:

a.) Students would be conditioned to associate poor conduct and bad grades with physical pain

b.) It would prevent childhood obesity and diabetes as well as develop motor skills in students who will probably end up joining the army or pursuing vocational careers.

c.) It would be much more entertaining for everyone involved.

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They Always Come Back

Back to tumbling.  As with everything, despite the changes, it’s still the same.

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(Source: loveyourchaos)

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i’m starting to find that those who are quickest to judge others are always the least likely to objectively criticize themselves.  go ahead and exist in your fictional universe of half-truths and assumptions.  when you’re ready to leave there will be no fire escape to climb down, and no one waiting to catch you.  when you choose elitism you choose to be lonely at the top.

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There is no excellent beauty, that hath not some strangeness in the proportion.
Francis Bacon, The Essays (via sherry)
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Creation and destruction, love and hate, are not two
instincts which exist independently. They are both
answers to the same need for transcendence, and the
will to destroy must rise when the will to create cannot
be satisfied.
Erich Fromm, The Sane Society
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This is Your Brain on Love

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Dancing Machine

ursofuckinspecial:

dearoldlove:

I believe you can tell so many things from how a person dances. I believe that you are a robot.

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Attention is the holy grail,” Mr. Strayer says. “Everything that you’re conscious of, everything you let in, everything you remember and you forget, depends on it.

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Elpis

Features Of This Song:

house roots

four-on-the-floor beats

beats made for dancing

straight drum beats

altered male vocals

clear pronunciation

a repetitive song structure

a repetitive chorus

buildup/breakdown

the use of chordal patterning

use of tonal harmonies

a tight kick sound

melodic part writing

synth riffs

affected synths

a dry recording studio

radio friendly stylings

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so now not only can we not trust out air,  but we can’t trust our drinking water either.

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