
(via nickdrake)
“I SING the Body electric;
The armies of those I love engirth me, and I engirth them;
They will not let me off till I go with them, respond to them,
And discorrupt them, and charge them full with the charge of the Soul.
Was it doubted that those who corrupt their own bodies conceal themselves;
And if those who defile the living are as bad as they who defile the dead?
And if the body does not do as much as the Soul?
And if the body were not the Soul, what is the Soul?”
I Sing the Body Electric (Walt Whitman, 1900)
(via shoelust)
(via stolze)
I <3 Sabine Schoenberger
Plays: 2
Fun Loving Criminals - I’m not in love
I like to see you, but then again
That doesn’t mean you mean that much to me
So if I call you, don’t make a fuss
Don’t tell your friends about the two of us
I’m not in love, no-no
It’s just because…
(via)
You’re as beautiful as you think you are.
still about house: “not everyone understands house music: it’s a spiritual thing, a body thing, a soul thing… A SOUL THING!” (tks, Renato!)
But having all the earmarks of anxiety in the brain does not always translate into a subjective experience of anxiety. “The brain state does not make it a disorder,” Kagan told me. “The brain state exists, and the statement ‘I’m anxious,’ exists, and the correlation is imperfect.” Two people can experience the same level of anxiety, he said, but one who has interesting work to distract her from the jittery feelings might do fine, while another who has just lost his job spends all day at home fretting and might be quicker to reach a point where the thrum becomes overwhelming. It’s all in the context, the interpretation, the ability to divert your attention from the knot in your gut.
—
Magazine Preview - Understanding the Anxious Mind - NYT
(via sherry)