February 2012
Feb 22nd
4,747 notes
Feb 22nd
5,538 notes
Feb 22nd
2,263 notes
Feb 22nd
21 notes
Feb 21st
39 notes
3 tags
Feb 21st
150 notes
Feb 21st
5,662 notes
1 tag
Feb 21st
978 notes
Feb 21st
1,346 notes
Feb 21st
3,258 notes
Feb 21st
921 notes
4 tags
Feb 20th
3,587 notes
Feb 20th
39,794 notes
Feb 20th
924 notes
Feb 20th
28,420 notes
Feb 20th
2,791 notes
4 tags
Feb 20th
50 notes
Feb 20th
7 notes
Feb 20th
74,685 notes
Feb 19th
477 notes
Feb 19th
4,866 notes
Feb 19th
890 notes
Feb 19th
5,561 notes
Feb 18th
133 notes
1 tag
Listennow-this-is-living: All These Things That I’ve...
Feb 18th
81 notes
Feb 18th
104 notes
Feb 18th
216 notes
Feb 18th
423 notes
Feb 18th
842 notes
What is "Namaste"?
Loosely translated, “namaste” means “the spirit in me recognizes spirit in you.” It is, beyond its use as a greeting, an acknowledgement of oneness. It says, “I see you for all you are beneath the flesh, and I welcome your presence.” It isn’t necessary to start greeting all of our peers with “namaste,” but maybe we could all use a little more of this attitude in our lives.
Feb 18th
2,048 notes
2 tags
Feb 18th
26 notes
Feb 18th
105 notes
Feb 18th
2,615 notes
Feb 18th
7,485 notes
Feb 18th
221 notes
Feb 18th
6,773 notes
Feb 18th
194 notes
“I like art, and by art I mean music, poetry, sex, paintings, the human body,...”
– Hunter Reveur
Feb 18th
9,385 notes
Feb 17th
3,605 notes
Feb 17th
14,606 notes
Feb 17th
20 notes
Feb 17th
160 notes
Feb 17th
16,671 notes
Feb 17th
8,235 notes
Feb 17th
9,186 notes
Feb 17th
6,097 notes
Feb 17th
666 notes
Feb 17th
472 notes
Feb 17th
433 notes
Feb 17th
3,249 notes