Hello. I'm Abdul, 23. I'm from Australia. And these are the things I like.
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Hi guys, Still alive, narrowly avoided homelessness and am now working in Dublin so that's sweet, and now I have time to scroll through nonsense again. Because tumblr is terrible and I can't get into the ancient email which I made this blog with, I will probs have to abandon this account soon, and start a new one. It's ahlausahla.tumblr if'n you want to follow it. I'll be refollowing blogs slowly in the meantime. I pretty much have until I get booted off tumblr mobile with this account, which will probably be next time it updates or something. xo
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after finishing the grunt work of my thesis I scraped together some time to do @cy-lindric‘s jedisona/sithsona thing !!! I would totally be a highly eccentric mori-girl hermit aha
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Skellig Islands, Kerry, Ireland by qyu6354
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When I see you walking with her I have to cover my eyes Every time you leave with her Something inside of me dies
Cover My Eyes - La Roux
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i dont mean to alarm you but the gender binary is not real and everything you’ve been taught about what girls and boys are supposed to do/not supposed to do is a huge lie
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Patterns in Nature: Why the Natural World Looks the Way it Does Philip Ball
The curl of a chameleon’s tail, the spiral of a pinecone’s scales and the ripples created by wind moving grains of sand all have the power to catch the eye and intrigue the mind. When Charles Darwin first proposed the theory of evolution by natural selection in 1859, it encouraged science enthusiasts to find reasons for the natural patterns seen in beasts of the land, birds of the air and creatures of the sea. The peacock’s plumage, the spots of a shark must all serve some adaptive purpose, they eagerly surmised.
In Patterns in Nature, Ball brings his own background as a physicist and chemist to bear as well as more than 20 years of experience as an editor for the scientific journal Nature. His first book, published in 1999 (The Self-Made Tapestry), and a trilogy, published in 2009 (Nature’s Patterns: Shapes, Flow, Branches), explore the subject of natural patterns, but neither has visuals as rich as his latest.
Read the full Smithsonian magazine article here.

Images and text via
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Vivianite
Morococala Mine, Santa Fe Mining District, Dalence Province, Oruro Department, Bolivia
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Change your mindset. Educate yourself. Stay positive. Cut shitty people off. Eat healthy. Focus on your goals. Spend some time alone. Read books. Drink more water. Take care of your skin.
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