Yūgen

youmightfindyourself:

mostexerent:

Yūgen is a Japanese word pertaining to a profound awareness of the universe which evokes feelings that are inexplicably deep and too mysterious for words. The word itself is like an extension of awareness, the aesthetic perception which allows us to conceive of the vastness of the universe- but carries it beyond into an inconceivably mysterious realm. The feeling of Awareness is induced by confrontation to the brevity of life, and yugen is initiated from the awareness that even ‘aware’ itself is an ephemeral thing. Zeami Motokiyo’s description portrays a medium through which one may experience the unspeakably deep, stirring, feeling of yugen; “To watch the sun sink behind a flower clad hill. To wander on in a huge forest without thought of return. To stand upon the shore and gaze after a boat that disappears behind distant islands. To contemplate the flight of wild geese seen and lost among the clouds.”

(via youmightfindyourself)

hungryhijabii:

Nobody tells you how much mental illness fucks with your perception of time. How you can’t place memories right. How you can’t distinguish if something happened a month ago or a year ago. How you lose entire chunks. Weeks, months of memories just get brushed away somewhere. What you do remember just ebbs and flows together. You’re never really in the moment so you can’t ever really hang onto it.

(via ignoranthands)

pikeys:

The Maybe (Subject: Tilda Swinton), 1995 by Cornelia Parker

(via ignoranthands)

“expect sadness
like
you expect rain.
both,
cleanse you.”
— Nayyirah Waheed (via boyoatmeal)

(via langleav)

reblog if u a little problematic

camwhoreconfessional:

thecsph:

chescaleigh:

The 10 Phrases I’ve Stopped Saying And The People Who Appreciate Me For It (via Upworthy)

It’s pretty common for people to use disability metaphors like “That guy is crazy!” or “This weather is so bipolar” without giving it a second thought. It’s important to realize how these words and metaphors can affect people with disabilities and perpetuate stigmas surrounding mental health. If you’ve never thought about the impact these words can have, you’re in luck because this chart provides some common disability metaphors and easy alternatives!

ps. Special thanks to m-arkiplier for inspiring me to create this graphic! (and for his permission to use his post) For more info on why it’s important to be conscious of the metaphors we use, check out this HuffPost article ”10 Reasons to Give Up Ableist Language.”


Remove casual ableism in your everyday lexicon!

My own addition ‘anal retentive’ instead of “OCD”

(via ryotouslye-deactivated20160911)

“Depression in summer is weird. It’s not dark and brooding, for me - it’s white and hazy and confusing. You feel very absent from everyone and everything. And all the light seems a little too bright for your tired eyes.”
— broken thoughts (via soofyahn)

(via nerdyn0va)

ashesinyourhair:

darkbookworm13:

owlmylove:

if you were praised for being smart as a child and now feel crippling sensations of inadequacy when you don’t instantly know how to do something perfectly clap your hands

*clap clap*

*hesitates to clap because I might fuck it up*

Honestly though, if you want to get Freudian up in here, this likely contributes a lot to how I’m fucked up now.

(via cupcakemichi)

“How scary it is to be ready to die at such a young age.”