Vodka/Wingtips/Vintage Ads.

Young professional nestling into a new city and starting a new career in Advertising.

Musings/Fashion/Music/Pretty Pictures

This is what I look like
This is my girlfriend and partner in crime.
November 9th
9:29 PM
Via
Lol.. What?!What does an OM Symbol have to do with the below phrase? Nothing really. I don’t get the relation.
If anything, the OM symbol teaches us that you can’t choose what stays and what fades away—because nothing fades away. Everything stays.Everything is here, and it will always be here.Everything that was still is and everything that is not..still is, it just hasn’t yet come to be.
Everything may fade away to our ears, eyes and sense..but if you listen closely—it doesn’t fade, just turns into the dancing, vibration of OM.

Lol.. What?!

What does an OM Symbol have to do with the below phrase? Nothing really. I don’t get the relation.


If anything, the OM symbol teaches us that you can’t choose what stays and what fades away—because nothing fades away. Everything stays.

Everything is here, and it will always be here.
Everything that was still is and everything that is not..still is, it just hasn’t yet come to be.


Everything may fade away to our ears, eyes and sense..but if you listen closely—it doesn’t fade, just turns into the dancing, vibration of OM.



August 22nd
10:26 PM
Ceremonial Dress of Nootka Tribe

Ceremonial Dress of Nootka Tribe

July 22nd
12:21 AM
I will perfect Indian food—soon!

I will perfect Indian food—soon!

July 16th
4:53 PM
“A komusō (虚無僧) was a Japanese monk during the Edo period. Komusō were characterised by the straw basket (tengai) worn on the head, manifesting the absence of specific ego. They are also known for playing solo pieces on the shakuhachi flute. The Japanese government introduced reforms after the Edo period, abolishing the sect. Komusō means ”priest of nothingness” or “monk of emptiness””

“A komusō (虚無僧) was a Japanese monk during the Edo period. Komusō were characterised by the straw basket (tengai) worn on the head, manifesting the absence of specific ego. They are also known for playing solo pieces on the shakuhachi flute. The Japanese government introduced reforms after the Edo period, abolishing the sect. Komusō means ”priest of nothingness” or “monk of emptiness””

May 30th
7:58 PM

Louisiana Well-Represented at Hangout Fest (...Or, how I became a Louisianan in Gulf Shores, Ala.)

Article I wrote chronicling Hangout Fest, Randy Newman, Sunburns, Frenchmen, and Geographic identity crises. 

August 13th
6:10 PM
Via