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Rated • 1 review • acting, comedy, pranks, humour, april fools • facebook.com
Last seen: 9 hours ago
Priya is a woman from Even Further Than, Greenland
It is not wisdom if we simply believe what we are told. True wisdom is to directly see and understand for ourselves.
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Rated • 1 review • acting, comedy, pranks, humour, april fools • facebook.com
Rated • 0 reviews • hip hop, video, funny, desi, hindi • youtube.com
Rated • 2 reviews • video, black and white, hindi, 60s, bollywood • youtube.com
beautiful. graceful black and white hindi songs from the 60's.
Rated • 0 reviews • photography, france, photos, landscapes, black and white • southcolors.com
Rated • 0 reviews • photography, france • southcolors.com
Rated • 1 review • photography, france, old world, landscapes • southcolors.com
France is so beautiful.
Rated • 2 reviews • oldies music, music, ballad, video, love • youtube.com
Take me back in time
Maybe i can forget
Turn a different corner
And we never would have met
Would you care?
Rated • 1 review • photography, storms, contemplation • deviantart.com

"I'd like to crawl behind your eyes
and see me the way you do
or climb through your mouth
and sit on every word that comes up through your throat.
Maybe I could be sure then
maybe I could know
as it is - I hide beneath your frowns
or worry when you laugh too loud.
Always sure a storm is rising."
- Rod McKuen
Rated • 1 review • music, video, nostalgia, rock, forgiveness • youtube.com
Forgiveness by Collective Soul
In my silence I would love to forget
But restitution hasn't come quite yet
And with one accord I keep pushing forth
I stretch my heart to heal some more.
It used to be all I want to learn
Was wisdom trust and truth
By now all I really want to learn
Is forgiveness for you.
As my seasons change I've now grown to know
When ones heart creates, ones soul doesn't owe
So I wash away stains of yesterday
Then tempt my heart with loves display.
Rated • 1 review • culture, islam, dolls, women, society • nytimes.com
From the page:
"But toward the end of elementary school, Barbie started to make me feel uneasy. I started to look in the mirror. I began Sharpie-ing the hair on my Barbies black (like mine) and calling them Persian names: Bahareh, Banafsheh, Skippareh. I even attempted to "tan" Peaches "n" Cream Barbie's skin for hours one day, praying for her lotion-slathered skin to turn brown like mine, which it never did. I started to realize the one thing worse than being a foreigner was being a foreigner girl.
Just as Barbie was coming to mean less and less to me, she was coming to mean more and more to the folks back in Iran. In the still shiny and new Islamic Republic, Barbie was spotlighted as a national threat of Jane Fonda magnitude."