sir loughlin

A Brief Letter of Awareness regarding Obama

theyareasweare:

For those who believe Barack Obama as part of the deceptive governmental strategy, it’s a hack. I’ve watched the Obama Deception three times and I concluded that it’s all a huge hack to disway all you people to thinking he’s a bad guy. Obama’s policies and mindset are geared more toward humane and…

jtotheizzoe:

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2011 goes to Israeli Dan Shechtman for his discovery of quasicrystals, which are trying so hard to be crystals but just can’t quite make it.
Actually, quasicrystals are a form of crystal structure that is ordered but not repeating (as opposed to, say, table salt, which has a very ordered and repeating crystal structure).
Above is a picture of a silver/aluminum quasicrystal (via Wikimedia)

jtotheizzoe:

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2011 goes to Israeli Dan Shechtman for his discovery of quasicrystals, which are trying so hard to be crystals but just can’t quite make it.

Actually, quasicrystals are a form of crystal structure that is ordered but not repeating (as opposed to, say, table salt, which has a very ordered and repeating crystal structure).

Above is a picture of a silver/aluminum quasicrystal (via Wikimedia)

(via jtotheizzoe)

For the first time in my life, I have never felt so alone. Yet these tears redeem my heart so gently that I am eternally grateful for what I have and seek no longer for what I do not. theyareasweare.com | Meditation (via theyareasweare)

Love can be mistaken for obsession. Obsession is not love because it is giving your all to anyone but yourself. The idea of giving your all to someone roots from feelings of security and safety, but that is ironic because it is YOURSELF telling you it needs something YOU do not have - that is, security in yourself. All the while, you are reaching towards someone else to attain it. Truly, in the end, all you have is yourself - no one can heal you more than you can heal yourself. theyareasweare.com | Meditation (via theyareasweare)

The popular image of the “Jesus Christ” figure is, incongruously, usually portrayed as a nice, blonde-haired, blue-eyed white man, perhaps more likely to hail from Kansas than the Middle East. So that the “true believers” can feel more comfortable – and be sure to recognize their savior when he shows up – they are told that he’ll look and dress just like the imaginary religious figure from long ago. Of course being a savior, he’ll save them from whatever it is the religions have convinced them is wrong with them. And, as a bonus, he’ll “wash away their sins”, meaning that they don’t have to worry about the negative consequences of any of their actions. So, in defiance of the laws of cause and effect, they’ll get a free pass because they’ll be “forgiven” just because they…believe. Michael Horn (via theyareasweare)