...I've been realizing that despite my ardent, year-long yearnings to be elsewhere, there isn't a springtime more beautiful than the springtime here in Boulder. It smells just the same as it did with my dorm room windows flug open three years ago. I feel like a just got here.
via Jimmy Himes.
sit. feast on your life.
A celebration of life and the simple pleasures that make it spectacular.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Monday, April 19, 2010
aujourd'hui j'aime...
The French pop band Dionysos. My music has been feeling a bit stale this last week and I was in desperate need of some fresh tunes.
Check out this site as well for some great live concerts at Vega in Copenhagen. "Push the Envelope" by The Asteroids Galaxy Tour is especially sensational.
shades of beige.
via garance doré
and these cocktails, which look divine.
via wide open spaces
Check out this site as well for some great live concerts at Vega in Copenhagen. "Push the Envelope" by The Asteroids Galaxy Tour is especially sensational.
shades of beige.
via garance doré
and these cocktails, which look divine.
via wide open spaces
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
It's a beautiful day in the library...
thanks to happy little distractions such as this.
via alexandre skander.
via alexandre skander.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
aujourd'hui j'aime...
These pretty Parisiennes: one sweet, one sassy. both fabulous.
Springtime in Milan...for obvious reasons.
he cuffed his pants!? je l'aime, je l'aime beaucoup!
via the sartorialist.
These photos of Edie Sedgwick:
Sienna Miller as Edie in "Factory Girl":
Her performance is so spot on...this is one of the best films I've seen in a long time. Guy Pearce is a SPOT ON Andy Warhol. And Hayden Christian is an uncanny Bob Dylan. Though still a horrible actor.
Springtime in Milan...for obvious reasons.
he cuffed his pants!? je l'aime, je l'aime beaucoup!
via the sartorialist.
These photos of Edie Sedgwick:
Sienna Miller as Edie in "Factory Girl":
Her performance is so spot on...this is one of the best films I've seen in a long time. Guy Pearce is a SPOT ON Andy Warhol. And Hayden Christian is an uncanny Bob Dylan. Though still a horrible actor.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
København, jeg skal kommer tilbage til dig
There are days when I wake up and feel my heart tugging in my chest for no apparent reason. Sometimes its an anxious tug, other times its a happy, little heart dance that pulses in the back of my throat and pulls up the corners of my mouth for the rest of the day. Only recently have I started paying attention to these mysterious internal tugs, and only recently have a realized that more often than not, they're punching me in the gut for a reason. Like karma. Or something like it.
I believe that this universe is quite orderly, that there's a pattern to it all, a method to the madness. Its a cirle. Bear with me while a wax poetic, philosophical, or crazy. But there have been so many moments in the last year when I've woken with a feeling that today is an important day. And at some point in my wandering, studying, eating, crying, or laughing, a voice chimes in that says,
"Remember where you were."
And I'll remember where I was on that day, at some point in my past. My life cycles. There seems to be a funny, karmic method to my madness.
On Sunday, I picked up my journal for the first time in 3 months. This is significant because I am a writer, and I usually find myself returning to this book every 3 days. But the last 3 months have been hard on me for reasons that only the the most important people around me understand.
I returned to this book because I am going back to Copenhagen. I received an internship in my city, the city that brought me a sense of peace which I find difficult to explain to people. It was a sense of peace and purpose that I had never really encountered up until that point. I had been chewing on the offer all day long with a familiar little tug in my chest, and it tugged harder and harder as I leafed through the madness I methodically documented in the spring of 2009. The night I sat on a barstool with my silly friend Kristin and tried to make eyes with a man, any man, for two hours before we realized it was "Gay Night." Wipping around street corners in Vesterbro on my little, purple bike while the Danish rain slapped me in the face. Turkish toilets in the basement of a Bulgarian mosque. A bottle of wine in Siena and the kiss that changed the course of an evening.
On February 21, 2010, I lay in bed reading old journals and considering a return voyage. And I came across an entry from February 22, 2009; the day after I met a man. He didn't bring me peace, and the happiness he brought was fleeting. But it was walking with him, talking with him, and riding on the back of his bicycle that made me fall in love with the city of Copenhagen.
And I find it funny that EXACTLY one year after that seemingly random encounter, after an entire year of life, of books, tears, hellos, goodbyes, smiles, french papers, plane rides, family dinners, job interviews, disappointments, and celebrations...
Copenhagen is my reality once again.
I take it as a sign.
But I'm a little superstitious like that.
I believe that this universe is quite orderly, that there's a pattern to it all, a method to the madness. Its a cirle. Bear with me while a wax poetic, philosophical, or crazy. But there have been so many moments in the last year when I've woken with a feeling that today is an important day. And at some point in my wandering, studying, eating, crying, or laughing, a voice chimes in that says,
"Remember where you were."
And I'll remember where I was on that day, at some point in my past. My life cycles. There seems to be a funny, karmic method to my madness.
On Sunday, I picked up my journal for the first time in 3 months. This is significant because I am a writer, and I usually find myself returning to this book every 3 days. But the last 3 months have been hard on me for reasons that only the the most important people around me understand.
I returned to this book because I am going back to Copenhagen. I received an internship in my city, the city that brought me a sense of peace which I find difficult to explain to people. It was a sense of peace and purpose that I had never really encountered up until that point. I had been chewing on the offer all day long with a familiar little tug in my chest, and it tugged harder and harder as I leafed through the madness I methodically documented in the spring of 2009. The night I sat on a barstool with my silly friend Kristin and tried to make eyes with a man, any man, for two hours before we realized it was "Gay Night." Wipping around street corners in Vesterbro on my little, purple bike while the Danish rain slapped me in the face. Turkish toilets in the basement of a Bulgarian mosque. A bottle of wine in Siena and the kiss that changed the course of an evening.
On February 21, 2010, I lay in bed reading old journals and considering a return voyage. And I came across an entry from February 22, 2009; the day after I met a man. He didn't bring me peace, and the happiness he brought was fleeting. But it was walking with him, talking with him, and riding on the back of his bicycle that made me fall in love with the city of Copenhagen.
And I find it funny that EXACTLY one year after that seemingly random encounter, after an entire year of life, of books, tears, hellos, goodbyes, smiles, french papers, plane rides, family dinners, job interviews, disappointments, and celebrations...
Copenhagen is my reality once again.
I take it as a sign.
But I'm a little superstitious like that.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
aujourd'hui j'aime...
Timeless, classic style via the impossible cool.
Jean Seberg
Charlotte Gainsbourg
Grace Kelly
Complimentary café signs:
photo by brian ferry at the blue hour.
This song: "Numbed" by Danish songbird Trolle Siebenhaar.
P.S. Who is the cutest?
Jean Seberg
Charlotte Gainsbourg
Grace Kelly
Complimentary café signs:
photo by brian ferry at the blue hour.
This song: "Numbed" by Danish songbird Trolle Siebenhaar.
P.S. Who is the cutest?
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