My rules. Hanging on my desk over my typewriter.

My rules. Hanging on my desk over my typewriter.


Test Date: Aug 25, 2011 4:20:07 am Connection Type: Lte Server: New York, NY Download: 29.28 Mbps Upload: 5.97 Mbps Ping: 94 ms

External IP: 166.248.0.91 Internal IP: 10.169.222.207 Latitude: 40.79090 Longitude: -73.96000

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Mourn youth.


De la Vega, 5th avenue

De la Vega, 5th avenue


De la vega, 5th avenue

De la vega, 5th avenue


De la vega, 5th avenue, part 2

De la vega, 5th avenue, part 2


De la vega, 5th avenue part 1

De la vega, 5th avenue part 1


She drives a stick car.
Blonde girl at Four-Faced Liar

theatlantic:

Antarctica, 1961: A Soviet Surgeon Has To Remove His Own Appendix 

If you think House and the guy who James Franco played in 127 Hours are tough, you haven’t heard of Leonid Rogozov.
In 1961, Rogozov was stationed at a newly constructed Russian base in Antarctica. The 12 men inside were cut off from the outside world by the polar winter by March of that year. In April, the 27-year-old Rogozov began to feel ill, very ill. His symptoms were classic: he had acute appendicitis. “He knew that if he was to survive he had to undergo an operation,” the British Medical Journal recounted. “But he was in the frontier conditions of a newly founded Antarctic colony on the brink of the polar night. Transportation was impossible. Flying was out of the question, because of the snowstorms. And there was one further problem: he was the only physician on the base.”

Read the rest at The Atlantic

theatlantic:

Antarctica, 1961: A Soviet Surgeon Has To Remove His Own Appendix 

If you think House and the guy who James Franco played in 127 Hours are tough, you haven’t heard of Leonid Rogozov.

In 1961, Rogozov was stationed at a newly constructed Russian base in Antarctica. The 12 men inside were cut off from the outside world by the polar winter by March of that year. In April, the 27-year-old Rogozov began to feel ill, very ill. His symptoms were classic: he had acute appendicitis. “He knew that if he was to survive he had to undergo an operation,” the British Medical Journal recounted. “But he was in the frontier conditions of a newly founded Antarctic colony on the brink of the polar night. Transportation was impossible. Flying was out of the question, because of the snowstorms. And there was one further problem: he was the only physician on the base.”

Read the rest at The Atlantic

(via henryzhang)


Peaceful spring

transitory

the future

does not seem

so 

bad