A Return to Nagasaki — Ridgeline issue 225https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/225/
I loved learning about Nagasaki. Like many people, I thought the city was destroyed during WWII but in fact not
I loved learning about Nagasaki. Like many people, I thought the city was destroyed during WWII but in fact not
A testimonial for a boring life.
"We spend so much of our lives chasing a version of “enough” that was never ours to begin with. Always trying to catch up. To know more. Do more. Become more.But maybe… the answer was never “more.” Maybe it was less."
"The world rewards loud voices, fast growth, constant novelty. But introverts, we thrive in silence. In the quiet walks. The familiar tea cups. The slow mornings. The repetition that grounds us."
"Maybe the real secret is simply to stay. Stay with your silence. Stay with your quiet hobbies. Stay with your boring, beautiful life.Because sometimes, in choosing to be “left behind,” you finally return to yourself."
"I still don’t get how common the idea is that if you’re not participating in the modern dystopian web, you’re just an outcast, all alone, lost in the woods, not knowing what everyone else is up to. Did you all have lives before all this? Don’t people have family and friends, along with their phone numbers, house addresses, or emails? Why do so many folks feel the need to know what a huge number of strangers are doing, right now, in a completely different part of the world?"
I love this kind of videos, simple ones which shows life in a simple way, full of people and memories to create
Duralex, que de souvenirs de cantines, self, RU, et de repas à la maison
That’s not something I had thought about, but someone recently visited my family to meet again an old friend which was from my family, and a contact page could have been useful in this case.
"This is why I document my life—in photos, in words, in video. Because I don’t know where I came from and I don’t want my kids to wonder the same. I mourn all the lost stories that my grandmother took to her grave, stories that could have helped me understand world history and the human condition through the context of my own family history. " - Jenna Park