Photo 22 May 
sa uulitin.. :D

sa uulitin.. :D

Photo 22 May 18,740 notes

(Source: philbohol)

Video 15 May 2,086 notes

arpeggia:

alecshao:

Simon Husslein - Nest One, 2007 

Branches intertwined with electronic equipment and placed in dying trees throughout Burgundy, France. 

Artist’s statement: 

“A woven sphere glowing at sunset…symbolizing new life placed into a dying tree.”

This is lovely.

via arpeggia.
Photo 15 May 1,562 notes arpeggia:

it’s raining books!
Foire aux livres, Romainmôtier. Second-hand book fair. Archway between abbey courtyard and main street. Photo by overthemoon

Sana ganyan sa bahay namin.. ♥books

arpeggia:

it’s raining books!

Foire aux livres, Romainmôtier. Second-hand book fair. Archway between abbey courtyard and main street. Photo by overthemoon

Sana ganyan sa bahay namin.. ♥books

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Photo 14 May 1,573 notes hazor:

But if you’d just spend time with me,
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Quote 9 May 1,496 notes
Someday you’ll find the right person, and you’ll learn to have a lot more confidence in yourself. That’s what i think. So don’t settle for anything less. In this world, there are things you can only do alone, and things you can only do with somebody else. It’s important to combine the two in just the right amount.
— Haruki Murakami (via skeletales)

(Source: rochelledelaroche)

Text 6 May “If the only place where I could see you was in my dreams, I’d sleep forever”

Photo 5 May 9,083 notes aylsiomailovetoyou:

contentment is next to happiness. :)

aylsiomailovetoyou:

contentment is next to happiness. :)

(Source: aplaceforart)

Video 13 Apr 1,671 notes

black-tangled-heart:

L’air frissonne des choses qui s’enfuient

by Emmanuelle Brisson

(Source: arpeggia)

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Video 25 Mar 132 notes

black-tangled-heart:

This is Your Brain in Love: Scenes from the Stanford Love Competition

Can one person experience love more deeply than another? That’s what The Stanford Center for Cognitive and Neurobiological Imaging and filmmaker Brent Hoff set out to understand when they hosted the 1st Annual Love Competition. Seven contestants, ranging from 10 to 75 years of age, took part. And they each spent five minutes in an fMRI machine, thinking deeply about love and allowing the imaging technology to measure activity in their dopamine, serotonin and ocytocin/vasopressin pathways. If you think this sounds unromantic, you’ll want to reserve judgment. Though science may be the explicit focus here, the film has a touching human dimension to it. (via openculture.com)

(Source: arpeggia)

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