no troubles on the line.

when do you stay?

ask.

a continuous set of self directed rhetorical questions sometimes answered.

we look at beautiful things.

in photographs.

in words.

in pieces.

in others.

in doings.

with others.

with miracle berry the sweetness gets tasted. Hitchcock and environmental and natural resource economics begins. I am a small girl, wishing.

the theatre lifts its curtain.
The Sartorialist

The Sartorialist

Occupy Chicago (by JLaurenAtkins)

Occupy Chicago (by JLaurenAtkins)

bambi (by linus_lohoff)

bambi (by linus_lohoff)

pretty. from The Sartorialist.

pretty. from The Sartorialist.

sitting to you. foolishly and gloriously this: constantly without verbalization, just knowing.
sabino:

[Quoted from Nasa’s flickr] If you have never been north of the Arctic Circle, it is easy to imagine that the “ice cap” at the top of the world is a uniform sheet of white. The reality, particularly during the spring and summer melt, is a mottled landscape of white, teal, slate gray, green, and navy.
The sea ice atop the Arctic Ocean can look more like swiss cheese or a bright coastal wetland. As ice melts, the liquid water collects in depressions on the surface and deepens them, forming melt ponds. These fresh water ponds are separated from the salty sea below and around it, until breaks in the ice merge the two.

sabino:

[Quoted from Nasa’s flickr] If you have never been north of the Arctic Circle, it is easy to imagine that the “ice cap” at the top of the world is a uniform sheet of white. The reality, particularly during the spring and summer melt, is a mottled landscape of white, teal, slate gray, green, and navy.

The sea ice atop the Arctic Ocean can look more like swiss cheese or a bright coastal wetland. As ice melts, the liquid water collects in depressions on the surface and deepens them, forming melt ponds. These fresh water ponds are separated from the salty sea below and around it, until breaks in the ice merge the two.

packing a week of world into boxes and bags.