Post Reality Yogyakarta

iwantjellybean:

:’) :”)

(Source: thepearlofaegean)

(Source: jessgough, via travelthirst)

relucent:

empire state building (by Ralph Hockens)

relucent:

empire state building (by Ralph Hockens)

(via travelthirst)

allcreatures:

Picture: Ann & Steve Toon/Solent News & Photo Agency

allcreatures:

Picture: Ann & Steve Toon/Solent News & Photo Agency

ileftmyheartinistanbul:

Ordinary day on a not so ordinary street (via Jagatai)

ileftmyheartinistanbul:

Ordinary day on a not so ordinary street (via Jagatai)

allcreatures:

Koalas under threat in Australia - in pictures

The Australian government has listed the koala as a threatened species in parts of the country for the first time. It says the species faces numerous threats including climate change, disease and habitat loss.

Everyone has that person that they go back to. Each time, they swear it’s different, and they’re done for good. But they aren’t. They wish they were, but the things is, they can’t be. Because that person they keep going back to, they can’t be completely happy without them.
ustacatali:

untitled on Flickr.
Via Flickr: Pamukkale 2011

ustacatali:

untitled on Flickr.

Via Flickr:
Pamukkale 2011

(via fuckyeahmiddleeast)

(Source: s-onora, via simplynorule)

Time is strange. A moment can be as short as a breath, or as long as eternity.
Cornell Woolrich via (via sunnythunderstorms)

(Source: petitpoulailler, via insidemyuniverse)

life:

On this day in 1948 Gandhi was assassinated in New Delhi by a Hindu fanatic. 
In a career spanning more than two decades, photographer Margaret Bourke-White fearlessly documented many facets of the human experience. Her astonishing portfolio ranged from trailblazing assignments in the Soviet Union in the late 1920s, to capturing the horrors of the Buchenwald concentration camp upon its liberation in 1945. And Bourke-White’s focus on humanitarian issues — showcased in these stunning images of Mohandas Gandhi in India — was equally renowned. 
 Pictured here in 1946, the leader sits next to a spinning wheel, a device used to make yarn or thread; the image came to symbolize Indian self sufficiency — and thus independence from British rule.
(see more — Gandhi: Glimpses of a Legend)

life:

On this day in 1948 Gandhi was assassinated in New Delhi by a Hindu fanatic. 

In a career spanning more than two decades, photographer Margaret Bourke-White fearlessly documented many facets of the human experience. Her astonishing portfolio ranged from trailblazing assignments in the Soviet Union in the late 1920s, to capturing the horrors of the Buchenwald concentration camp upon its liberation in 1945. And Bourke-White’s focus on humanitarian issues — showcased in these stunning images of Mohandas Gandhi in India — was equally renowned. 

Pictured here in 1946, the leader sits next to a spinning wheel, a device used to make yarn or thread; the image came to symbolize Indian self sufficiency — and thus independence from British rule.

(see more Gandhi: Glimpses of a Legend)

mykindafairytalee:

Ninja: Eat, Sleep, Assassinate. (by Leesamaree)

mykindafairytalee:

Ninja: Eat, Sleep, Assassinate. (by Leesamaree)

(via theanimalblog)

Walk beside me, we will live the dreams together