Text
i just have this overwhelming feeling of anger sometimes and i can never adequately release it
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dream 11/12/2014
This was a worrisome dream. I was at some event at school. I think it was a concert that had just ended. I was heading out past a stage with a band just playing for the people left over. As i get closer to the gate out, I start to run. Just as I pass some guy, he drops a flyer of some sort and I accidentally step on it. The guy cusses me out as I run past and I apologize, but he keeps cussing. I just keep running but hit an intersection. As I try to cross, a big truck comes by and nearly hits me. I hear some yelling from behind me and discover it's the guy from earlier, still mad at me. He comes up to me, still screaming "really? Why didn't you pick up the wedding flyer? Why did you step on it?" And I apologize again, but he gets more and more threatening and starts to insult me. I get so mad I throw a fake punch to try to scare him. He just keeps going and I get so angry that I strangle him. I started to choke him and as I was about to punch him after he passed out, I woke up, still shaking with anger
0 notes
Photo

Vague out There | Devils Island - (by Viktor Posnov)
16K notes
·
View notes
Photo
kinesin (a motor protein) pulling a some kind of vesicle along some kind of cytoskeletal filament
via John Liebler at Art of the Cell
39K notes
·
View notes
Photo










So… I dediced to make a mini iron throne for my mobile phone. A couple of hours, loooots of swords and hot glue
116K notes
·
View notes
Photo








Light Installations By Bruce Munro
Bruce Munro was born in 1959 and completed a B.A. in Fine Arts at Bristol Polytechnic. Shortly thereafter he moved to Sydney, where he learned about design and lighting, inspired by Australia’s natural light and landscape. Returning to Southwest England in 1992, he settled with his family in the countryside near Bath and set up a studio.
Read More
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
Some old books have hidden messages on the edge of their pages.


This was done through a technique called “fore-edge painting,” which is an illustration that is hidden on the edge of the pages of the book. The technique allegedly dates back to the 1650s.
185K notes
·
View notes