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The End?

Hi all, 

Just wanted to say that I’m likely leaving tumblr behind. I’ve developed an army of social media accounts as I’ve spent years working at the computer. I think… it would be better for me to slowly close them down.

For now, I think this tumblr is on hiatus. After all, it devolved from inspiration to reblogging pictures of animals…

Anyway, this isn’t a definite closure. But expect that I will be on here less, at least for awhile. I’m currently moving house (and not taking any days off from my full-time job where I’m currently in the middle of preparation for a major grant proposal), so it’s busy to say the least.

All the best!

madfuture:

Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.
 Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.
 Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.
 Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

Fascinating if more than a little disturbing…

madfuture:

Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)
To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.

 
Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.

 
Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.

 
Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.
Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.
The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

Fascinating if more than a little disturbing…

(via treyfla)

theloudestvoice:

Buster Keaton, Steamboat Bill, Jr., 1928

Because he’s awesome.

(Source: bustrkeatn)

theanimalblog:

Where’s a Good Place to see a Moose? (por NaturalLight)

I just think this is a beautiful image—composition, color, clear lines…

theanimalblog:

Where’s a Good Place to see a Moose? (por NaturalLight)

I just think this is a beautiful image—composition, color, clear lines…

theanimalblog:

Shelter Puppies by Michael Kloth

All of these puppies were successfully adopted.

So, this is England from the anime Hetalia (country stereotypes/relationships as people). He’s drunk, and he says, “Am I Catholic or Protestant? God, I don’t know.”
Made me laugh more than any television moment that I can think of off the top of my head. History jokes. Good times.

So, this is England from the anime Hetalia (country stereotypes/relationships as people). He’s drunk, and he says, “Am I Catholic or Protestant? God, I don’t know.”

Made me laugh more than any television moment that I can think of off the top of my head. History jokes. Good times.

headlikeanorange:

Siberian salamanders have compounds in their blood that enable them to survive temperatures of -45°C(-49F). They can stay frozen solid for years before thawing and reviving as good as new. (Wild Russia - NDR)

Salamanders, an early and lasting love.

headlikeanorange:

Siberian salamanders have compounds in their blood that enable them to survive temperatures of -45°C(-49F). They can stay frozen solid for years before thawing and reviving as good as new. (Wild Russia - NDR)

Salamanders, an early and lasting love.

(via theanimalblog)

Have an Eastern glass lizard. They are pretty nifty legless lizards. (Not snakes. They are not snakes.)
So yesterday I was feeling great about things. Planning to move to a state that has tiny bats and (not tiny) elephant seals, ate delicious food, checked out the beautiful beams and woodwork in an 1800s smokehouse. Who doesn’t feel like they’re on cloud nine in any old visible-structure wooden building? …Probably most people, but I like them. I just really love old buildings. I also found a room with a mural restoration, so chemicals and scaffolding and hardhats, and it all felt very homelike. And earlier in the week there was a “Florida style” rain/deluge. Which just feels super cozy. Unless you’re in the car. Then it feels like you’re going to die. But I was in the apartment.
Then I woke up today. Massive stress headache, and I feel like I want to jump off a bridge. Why?
In good news though: I visited the grad studio this past week, and there was no part of me that was sorry I wasn’t deciding where to put walls in clinics. None. All I could think was that I was ridiculously glad I wasn’t doing it, so leaving was completely and totally right. Except they have a laser cutter now. I’ve never used a laser cutter, so I’m pretty jealous of that.

Have an Eastern glass lizard. They are pretty nifty legless lizards. (Not snakes. They are not snakes.)

So yesterday I was feeling great about things. Planning to move to a state that has tiny bats and (not tiny) elephant seals, ate delicious food, checked out the beautiful beams and woodwork in an 1800s smokehouse. Who doesn’t feel like they’re on cloud nine in any old visible-structure wooden building? …Probably most people, but I like them. I just really love old buildings. I also found a room with a mural restoration, so chemicals and scaffolding and hardhats, and it all felt very homelike. And earlier in the week there was a “Florida style” rain/deluge. Which just feels super cozy. Unless you’re in the car. Then it feels like you’re going to die. But I was in the apartment.

Then I woke up today. Massive stress headache, and I feel like I want to jump off a bridge. Why?

In good news though: I visited the grad studio this past week, and there was no part of me that was sorry I wasn’t deciding where to put walls in clinics. None. All I could think was that I was ridiculously glad I wasn’t doing it, so leaving was completely and totally right. Except they have a laser cutter now. I’ve never used a laser cutter, so I’m pretty jealous of that.

The End?

Hi all, 

Just wanted to say that I’m likely leaving tumblr behind. I’ve developed an army of social media accounts as I’ve spent years working at the computer. I think… it would be better for me to slowly close them down.

For now, I think this tumblr is on hiatus. After all, it devolved from inspiration to reblogging pictures of animals…

Anyway, this isn’t a definite closure. But expect that I will be on here less, at least for awhile. I’m currently moving house (and not taking any days off from my full-time job where I’m currently in the middle of preparation for a major grant proposal), so it’s busy to say the least.

All the best!

madfuture:

Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.
 Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.
 Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.
 Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

Fascinating if more than a little disturbing…

madfuture:

Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)
To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.

 
Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.

 
Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.

 
Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.
Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.
The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

Fascinating if more than a little disturbing…

(via treyfla)

theloudestvoice:

Buster Keaton, Steamboat Bill, Jr., 1928

Because he’s awesome.

(Source: bustrkeatn)

theanimalblog:

Where’s a Good Place to see a Moose? (por NaturalLight)

I just think this is a beautiful image—composition, color, clear lines…

theanimalblog:

Where’s a Good Place to see a Moose? (por NaturalLight)

I just think this is a beautiful image—composition, color, clear lines…

theanimalblog:

Shelter Puppies by Michael Kloth

All of these puppies were successfully adopted.

So, this is England from the anime Hetalia (country stereotypes/relationships as people). He’s drunk, and he says, “Am I Catholic or Protestant? God, I don’t know.”
Made me laugh more than any television moment that I can think of off the top of my head. History jokes. Good times.

So, this is England from the anime Hetalia (country stereotypes/relationships as people). He’s drunk, and he says, “Am I Catholic or Protestant? God, I don’t know.”

Made me laugh more than any television moment that I can think of off the top of my head. History jokes. Good times.

kari-shma:

Endangered Egyptian Tortoises

Cutest thing ever? Maybe? Maybe?

(via theanimalblog)

headlikeanorange:

Siberian salamanders have compounds in their blood that enable them to survive temperatures of -45°C(-49F). They can stay frozen solid for years before thawing and reviving as good as new. (Wild Russia - NDR)

Salamanders, an early and lasting love.

headlikeanorange:

Siberian salamanders have compounds in their blood that enable them to survive temperatures of -45°C(-49F). They can stay frozen solid for years before thawing and reviving as good as new. (Wild Russia - NDR)

Salamanders, an early and lasting love.

(via theanimalblog)

Have an Eastern glass lizard. They are pretty nifty legless lizards. (Not snakes. They are not snakes.)
So yesterday I was feeling great about things. Planning to move to a state that has tiny bats and (not tiny) elephant seals, ate delicious food, checked out the beautiful beams and woodwork in an 1800s smokehouse. Who doesn’t feel like they’re on cloud nine in any old visible-structure wooden building? …Probably most people, but I like them. I just really love old buildings. I also found a room with a mural restoration, so chemicals and scaffolding and hardhats, and it all felt very homelike. And earlier in the week there was a “Florida style” rain/deluge. Which just feels super cozy. Unless you’re in the car. Then it feels like you’re going to die. But I was in the apartment.
Then I woke up today. Massive stress headache, and I feel like I want to jump off a bridge. Why?
In good news though: I visited the grad studio this past week, and there was no part of me that was sorry I wasn’t deciding where to put walls in clinics. None. All I could think was that I was ridiculously glad I wasn’t doing it, so leaving was completely and totally right. Except they have a laser cutter now. I’ve never used a laser cutter, so I’m pretty jealous of that.

Have an Eastern glass lizard. They are pretty nifty legless lizards. (Not snakes. They are not snakes.)

So yesterday I was feeling great about things. Planning to move to a state that has tiny bats and (not tiny) elephant seals, ate delicious food, checked out the beautiful beams and woodwork in an 1800s smokehouse. Who doesn’t feel like they’re on cloud nine in any old visible-structure wooden building? …Probably most people, but I like them. I just really love old buildings. I also found a room with a mural restoration, so chemicals and scaffolding and hardhats, and it all felt very homelike. And earlier in the week there was a “Florida style” rain/deluge. Which just feels super cozy. Unless you’re in the car. Then it feels like you’re going to die. But I was in the apartment.

Then I woke up today. Massive stress headache, and I feel like I want to jump off a bridge. Why?

In good news though: I visited the grad studio this past week, and there was no part of me that was sorry I wasn’t deciding where to put walls in clinics. None. All I could think was that I was ridiculously glad I wasn’t doing it, so leaving was completely and totally right. Except they have a laser cutter now. I’ve never used a laser cutter, so I’m pretty jealous of that.

The End?

About:

This is mainly just an inspiration collection. I am a human being. Fancy that. My interests include Holland, China, CCP politics, whaling history, animation, architecture, art, fashion, lighting, costumes, set design, environment as alternative medicine, zoology, some Eastern philosophy, and neurobiology.

Following: