“the siren song” by nina maclaughlin
“out there: on not finishing” by devin kelly
“illuminating kirinyaga: meaing and knowing in mount kenya’s forests” by tristan mcconnell
“on the igbo art of storytelling” by ikechukwu ogbu
“poetry fills tehran streets as iranians adapt nowruz rituals to corona restrictions” by alex shams
“writing emails to my late father” by krista stevens
“panic is worse than pain: how fiction failed me after trauma” by jenn ashworth
inscription that i am obsessed with
“I want you to do this with me for one month. One month. Write 10 observations a week and by the end of four weeks, you will have an answer. Because when someone writes about the rustic gutter and the water pouring through it onto the muddy grass, the real pours into the room. And it’s thrilling. We’re all enlivened by it. We don’t have to find more than the rustic gutter and the muddy grass and the pouring cold water.”
— Marie Howe, Boston University’s 2016 Theopoetics Conference (via mothersofmyheart)
Supernatural / Dean & Cas // Love Of The Wolf by Hélène Cixous
Happy birthday @deansmithfag!
Joanna Klink, from Raptus
some of my favorite tiny love stories
If you persevere, in time you will have an entirely different problem – not that life is meaningless, but rather that life has almost too much meaning. As the scales fall from your eyes the world rushes into focus, presenting itself with a kind of vibrational eloquence that can, at first, be almost overwhelming. Everything shimmers, everything clarifies, everything wrestles for your attention. Trees feel super-real, their roots plunged into the earth, their branches stretching to the sky, birds are flesh and blood souls, fragile with life, the sky unfolds and rolls, the ocean crashes, people fascinate, books are beautiful, children are whirling dynamos of chaos, dogs bark and cats meow, flowers shout, your neighbour glows, and God runs like a helix through all things. The world awaits you, humming with meaning. You are alive with potential. You are not dead.
— Nick Cave on getting clean, Red Hand Files #258
Jenny Holzer, Truisms, offset poster, 1978, 17 x 22 in.
Every lover’s got a little dagger in their hands…Communications and Media Scholar📚
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