I am sure God keeps no one waiting unless He sees that it is good for him to wait.
— C.S. Lewis (via modernhepburn)
(Source: benedmonds)
I am sure God keeps no one waiting unless He sees that it is good for him to wait.
— C.S. Lewis (via modernhepburn)
(Source: benedmonds)
View Larger James Dean signing autographs in Texas. Photo by Richard Miller.
(Source: jamesdeandaily)




A tiger mother lost her cubs from premature labour. Shortly after she became depressed and her health declined, and she was diagnosed with depression. So they wrapped up piglets in tiger cloth, and gave them to the tiger. The tiger now loves these pigs and treats them like her babies.
I will always reblog this. Makes me so happy inside.
i can’t even




Reminders by Austin based artist Erin Hanson.
Too many writers today are afraid to be still.
[…]
I’m not talking about the kind of stillness that involves locking yourself in a room with a laptop, while you wait for the words to come. We writers must learn how to become still in our heads, to achieve the sort of stillness that allows our senses to become heightened. The wonderful nonfiction writer Joyce Dyer refers to this as seeing like an animal.
[…]
We writers must become multitaskers who can be still in our heads while also driving safely to work, while waiting to be called “next” at the D.M.V., while riding the subway or doing the grocery shopping or walking the dogs or cooking supper or mowing our lawns.
[…]
There is no way to learn how to do this except by simply doing it.
— The Art of Being Still – a fine addition to our ongoing archive of insight on writing. (Grain-of-salt alert: Multitasking remains scientifically questionable.)









Monstrous Portraits, entala




Selected work from Marcio Cabral’s amazing Anhumas Abyss cave series.


Awww-rachnids!
Not only is the peacock spider the flashiest dresser in Arthropoda, as well as the best dancer, but its babies look like sloths!
Are you kidding me?
(Images by Jurgen Otto, who has a fantastic collection here)


Pattern
What others do in the summer with sand, Sonja Hinrichsen makes in winter with snow. In the cold season, she goes out into open space and running patterns in the snow.







“At times I come up with ideas beforehand, try to materialize them and it works. At other times, it is an accident and the ideas come afterwards, when the image is already finished and the concept has yet to be understood. It is almost as if I am learning constantly through the process of creation.”
- Grand Central Dilemma
- Fearless Passion
- O Duomo Mio
- The Mind Reader
- Paris, a.k.a. The City of Lights
- Over the Hill
- Oh Sheet!