Welkie parkin tha bus again....shocking
cute, cuddly and cold...and no baby we cant get one
Gawd damn it r u kidding, eyeballs for sale in the supermarket meat section.. whats next? canned cheeseburgers
Yeah....what choo lookin at dipshit
London Bridge is falling down
And for dinner we're having....
Da...DA...Mother Russia
Things are getting hairy down Bondi
Go team Go
watchout now.....
Monday, April 20, 2009
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Such a sad but inspiring story
The girl in the picture is Katie Kirkpatrick, she is 21 . Next to her, her fiancé, Nick, 23.
The picture was taken shortly before their wedding ceremony, held on January 11, 2005 in the US .
Katie has terminal cancer and spend hours a day receiving medication.
In the picture, Nick is waiting for her on one of the many sessions of khemotherapy to end.
In spite of all the pain, organ failures, and morphine shots, Katie is going along with her wedding and took care
of every detail. The dress had to be adjusted a few times due to her constant weight loss.
An unusual accessory at the party was the oxygen tube katie had to use throughout the ceremony and reception.
The other couple in the picture are Nick's parents. Excited to see their son marrying his high school sweetheart
Katie, in her wheelchair with the oxygen tube , enjoying a song from her husband and friends.
At the reception, katie takes a rest. The pain from her cancer would stop her from standing for long periods.
Katie died five days after her wedding day. Watching a women so ill, and so weak still getting married with a smile on her face It makes me think..... Happiness is relative, no matter what we do we should enjoy life. R.I.P Katie
Life is short,
Break the rules,
Forgive quickly,
Hustle hard,
Love true,
Enjoy every minute,
And never stop smiling
no matter how shitty things may seem,
Life is not always the party we expect it to be
but as long as we are here, we are blessed.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Shini chi Maruyama was born in 1968 in Nagano, Japan. He hurls black India ink into water (or visa versa) and photographs the millisecond that these two liquids collide. Capable of capturing this phenomenon at a 7,500th of a second, Maruyama takes full advantage of a recent advancement in strobe light technology which can record physical events faster than the naked eye can perceive them. In the series Kusho, which means “writing in the sky,” Maruyama’s goal is to arrest in space and time the sublime intersection of two different media before they merge into one. In some respects, the project resembles a scientific experiment, but in Maruyama’s artistic hands, the total action becomes a form of Shodo (Japanese calligraphy) performance–with the gesture executed in the air rather than on the flat surface of the paper.
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