Anxiety: *banging pots and pans together* GET UP! HURRY! DO IT! WE’RE IN DANGER! GET IT DONE NOW!
Depression: *lethargic* I hear you. I agree, but… I’m so tired, I wouldn’t even be able run away from danger if danger showed up because I didn’t do the thing that I didn’t do because I have no energy to do it.
Anxiety: *banging pots and pans together* GET UP! HURRY! PEOPLE WILL GET MAD AT US! DO IT NOW!
Depression: I don’t care. Let it happen. We deserve to be punished.
Anxiety: NOOOO! WORST IDEA EVER!inside your head for hours at a time
(via hookah-experience)
Honestly, this is the most helpful thing I’ve ever seen on tumblr.
…well maybe besides the coconut oil uses
I want the zombie. Holy shit
why would anybody wanna drink liquor and tomato juice
(via thefuuuucomics)
For her Tissue Series, artist Lisa Nilsson constructs anatomical cross sections of the human body using rolled pieces of Japanese mulberry paper, a technique known as quilling or paper filigree. Each piece takes several weeks to assemble and begins with an actual photograph of a lateral or mid-sagittal cross section to which she begins pinning small rolls of paper. Depending on its function she rolls the paper on almost anything small and cylindrical including pins, needles, dowels, and drill bits (she even attempted using some of her husband’s 8mm film editing equipment but to no avail). Lastly she even builds the wooden boxes containing the cross-sections by hand. A graduate of RISD, Nilsson now lives and works in Massachusetts and you can learn more about her process in this pair of interviews on All Things Paper and ArtSake.
Be sure to visit Colossal to see more images from this awesome series.
(Source: thisiscolossal.com, via dailystrggls)
Books books books // 08.12.15 // my university library and one of my current reads (leant to me by the lovely @messynotebooks)
Radiology- The study of pretending to see an organ you can’t actually see