(Source: beachriot)
(Source: sjhastings)
PREACH.
(Source: forever-irreplaceable9)
(Source: colouredpaper)
Buddha | Brambila Salon | 2011
Sometimes you climb out of bed in the morning and you think, “I’m not going to make it,” but you laugh inside — remembering all the times you’ve felt that way.
Charles Bukowski
every fucking morning i feel like pulling the covers over my head!!
(Source: adri-elle)
(Source: quotelibrary.info)
Charles Bukowski - Cause and Effect
For my friend
Before World War II, the swastika was a sign of strength, luck, and other decidedly un-Nazi-like good vibes. Unfortunately, it only takes one angry little man with a Chaplin mustache to ruin a perfectly nice symbol (and mustache, for that matter) for the whole world. Here we are, almost seven decades after the guy’s death, and the swastika is still one of the most recognizable and viscerally despised emblems around.
ManWoman, a Canadian artist and poet, has been trying to reclaim the swastika from cue ball-headed bigots since the 1960s, when he was tasked with the mission via a series of powerful dreams. As he describes it, he fell into a trance and his soul “soared up into the Womb of the Sacred,” where an old guy in white robes showed him the symbol and told him to redeem it. Two hundred swastika tattoos, a couple of near-beatdowns, and one failed marriage later, ManWoman’s mission is finally starting to pay off. He has written a book, Gentle Swastika, Reclaiming the Innocence, was featured prominently in the 2010 film, My Swastika, and is now the unofficial grandfather of the Reclaim the Swastika movement.
And in case you were wondering, ManWoman is not transgender. The name was given to him by the same “dream people” who gave him his quest. It has been his legal name since 1971, but for some reason Zuck still kicked him off Facebook. You can call him “Manny” for short.
(Source: hiflight)