Photobucket
❝If your philosophy is not unsettled daily then you are blind to all the universe has to offer.❞ -Neil deGrasse Tyson

(Source: reddit.com)


“Some day you’ll experience tragedy. And yet nothing will change. Time will move forward, space will expand, and the fundamental constants will remain fundamentally constant. The laws of the universe, like a mathematician who takes everything literally, have no sense of propriety or irony. This is the essential joke of reality: It goes on.”

Satuday Morning Breakfast Cereal, September 03, 2011

“Some day you’ll experience tragedy. And yet nothing will change. Time will move forward, space will expand, and the fundamental constants will remain fundamentally constant. The laws of the universe, like a mathematician who takes everything literally, have no sense of propriety or irony. This is the essential joke of reality: It goes on.”

Satuday Morning Breakfast Cereal, September 03, 2011

A brief autobiography by JimKB

A brief autobiography by JimKB

youmightfindyourself:

A six-year-old HIV carrier, has been living alone since his parents died of AIDS. The boy, known as Ah Long, does his own washing, cooking, studying and raises chickens. He lives in his parents’ house at the foothill village of Malu Mountain in Liuzhou in Guangxi Province, China. Ah Long has an 84-year-old grandmother, who visits him quite frequently and cooks for him despite not living with him. A local primary school was forced to turn down his application under pressure from parents of other children.

Due to his complicated family background, the Welfare Department has declined to take care of the boy. He receives 70 yuan of subsistence allowance per month from the local civil bureau. (more details)

And you said your life is fucked because of…what’s that? Some homework? You got dumped by your bitch?

(via petit-four)

❝I know how to do it now. There are nearly thirteen million people in the world. None of those people is an extra. They’re all the leads of their own stories. They have to be given their due.❞ -

Synecdoche, New York

written by Charlie Kaufman

“One death is a tragedy. One million deaths is a statistic.”

-Kevin Federline

What do monkeys have to do with war, oppression, crime, racism and even e-mail spam? You’ll see that all of the random ass-headed cruelty of the world will suddenly make perfect sense once we go Inside the Monkeysphere.

Very great article by David Wong. Now no one can blame me for not caring about someone/something. “Sorry, it’s out of my monkeysphere.”

Dusan Vranic/AP Photo
An Afghan girl who fixes potholes in a road between  Kabul and Bagram and depends on tips from passing motorists, waits for  vehicles in Afghanistan, Tuesday, July 6, 2010. 
:petit-four:cameralens:

Dusan Vranic/AP Photo

An Afghan girl who fixes potholes in a road between Kabul and Bagram and depends on tips from passing motorists, waits for vehicles in Afghanistan, Tuesday, July 6, 2010. 

:petit-four:cameralens:

Objects found at Ground Zero from the National Geographic. I just think this is a beautiful way of representing tragedy.

Objects found at Ground Zero from the National Geographic. I just think this is a beautiful way of representing tragedy.

Ivan

When I was 16, I worked at a law firm downtown as a summer intern. Every day, I’d go get lunch from this row of vendors - either a gyro, a hot dog, a kebab, or a burrito. Each one only took cash, so I got used to carrying around a bunch of cash, and every day, I’d pay for my meal, take all the change I got and anything in my pockets, and give it to a local homeless guy named Ivan. I’d also just say “Hi, Ivan” or “Nice seeing you, man” or something along those lines.

Ivan was a mid-20s black guy who had fought in Iraq, but had some severe PTSD and had run away from whatever family and friends he had and moved a few hundred miles to upstate New York. He was generally nice, but quiet, and obviously in a very bad place in his mind. He had a giant, raggedy beard, clothes that he had obviously just picked off the street, and I can’t remember if I ever saw him in any position other than a mixture of the fetal position and a squat. I gave him change every day that summer, until I had to go back to school.

Now, this story diverges here, and two very important outcomes arise.

First, about two months into this job, I stop by the gyro vendor, order my usual, and chat until he finishes it. I pull out my wallet, only to realize I don’t have any cash. I apologize, and run to the nearest ATM, but for some reason (my bank changed my PIN without informing me) I’m unable to withdraw cash. I come back, looking resigned to not eating lunch, but the gyro guy says “Look, I see what you do for Ivan everyday. Just take it, you deserve it.” I thank him profusely, and walk off, very happy. That’s the first part.

Secondly, I recently went back to town for the summer, and was eating lunch at a diner I always frequented in high school. I was talking to a friend, when I heard a voice behind me say “Excuse me…do you remember me?” I turn to look, and a tall, well-groomed man in business-casual clothes is standing next to my booth. I looked him up and down a few times before it clicked, and I said “Ivan? Really?” He looked at me, eyes shining as it clicked, and as I stood up to shake his hand, he moved and embraced me. I could tell he was on the verge of crying, and all he said was “Thank you.”

Apparently, in the intervening 5 years since I had seen him last, Ivan collected himself enough to get a job as a janitor. This in turn gave him the money to see a therapist, and he worked out many of his mental problems. He began sorting his life out, took advantage of his GI Bill, and worked his way up to a position at a local bank where he actually had people working for him. He told me that he had been at his lowest that summer when I saw him every day, and that he frequently thought of just sitting around and waiting for the end. However, the fact that I paid attention to him reminded him that there was still good in the world, and the money I gave him allowed him to buy at least one meal a day to subsist upon. He told me that were it not for me, he most likely wouldn’t even be close to the position he was in. We talked for half an hour until he had to go back to work, and he once again hugged me before he left.

I sat at that table for another 10 minutes with my friend, unable to speak because the tears leaking out of my eyes clouded my vision and were, unfortunately, soaking my sandwich.

Ivan never knew my name, and still doesn’t. I like to think that he never will, and that he’ll just remember that once upon a time, a young man behaved like a true human being.

(reddit)