Unprotecting myself for your pleasure
It’s an echo
Those words
Slowly diminishing down the heart tunnel
Sometimes I forget names and places but
Every feeling remains in tact
What people never understand is that I do understand
All that there is of me
The grotesque grime of this body you choose to oblige
And I’m sorry you feel like you don’t have another choice
Because she still hasn’t chosen you
So here I am
He said
What are you doing
Why weren’t you with me
What are you doing
I said
You needed that
He said
I needed you
painted you a thousand times black
ebb and flow
the way you move
the way you move me
painted you a thousand times black
stiff peaks and flowing trails
curves and lines all undefined
the only thing I know of you is where you are
(Source: three-imaginary-chickens, via s0rdide-sentimental)
(Source: readyisready)
Bertrand Russell (via philosophybits)(via nihilist1901)
I paint my face with fire
this is the way the world works
a noose is your lifeline
every link a kink to keep you alive
classichorrorblog:
The Beyond |1981| Lucio Fulci
(via isaybelow)
customire:
Penderecki and Greenwood
you never spoke a word
your pain was silent
like grass growing overnight
out of wet dirt
wet dirty anecdotes you always had
things that made me laugh to the point that my chest felt a thousand bricks
gasping for air
watching your hands create sonicscapes
you never spoke a word but I hear you now
I hear you now
leadingtone:
Ancient music manuscripts through the ages.
(L): Sumerian inventory tablet from the 26th c. BC including listings of nine types of harp strings and at least twenty-six various instruments; probably the earliest recorded mention of music or musical instruments in human history.
©: The oldest example of musical notation recognized today, this Babylonian tablature (ca. 2000 BC) contains headings for “intonation” as well as “incantation” and is thought to record a song to be sung and played on the four-string lute.
®: Part of a Greek manuscript from Egypt dated ca. 300 AD, this is one of 35 known Greek papyri containing musical notation. It includes music and lyrics. The ability to read this notation was almost certainly limited to a very small number of cooperating individuals.
(B): Ecphonetic notation from Greece ca. 1100 AD. A forerunner to pneumes, this notation was used to indicate proper performance practice for the incantation of religious texts.
(Source: schoyencollection.com)
schwarz-gerat:
Andrea Ehrenreich | From Series “Famous Architects and Polaroid” [Wotruba Church in Vienna].
(via isaybelow)
I must count the things that I do have.
Jean-Paul Sartre, from Nausea (via dieworten)(Source: lifeinpoetry, via dieworten)