Stumbler review: StumbleUpon - alusivas web site...

alusiva joined StumbleUpon on Sep 15, 2005 39 reviews since Oct 1, 2005
icon tagsstumblers alusiva.stumbleupon.com

Thumbs up People who like this stumbler

MandoV
San Pedro
SunMoonStarJewel
California
RedThunderbird
City of Angels
HeartsOnFire
Santa Cruz
auselessstone
Hayward
Vespucci
San Francisco
litvanov
San Francisco
monkeychapps
Phoenix
sports
Arizona
simplyimagineit
Sedona

StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests. Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!

Thumbs up Reviews of this stumbler

hgfernan rated 6 weeks ago
what a beautiful, stylish black cat ! a blog with lots of style, usually with humor too. a pleasure to visit.
squiffy2 rated 2 months ago
alusiva has a wonderfully varied set of pages.
Bullhunters rated 4 months ago
Turle with lots of friends. thanks alusiva
eudora rated 6 months ago
One of the most lovely blogs i ever seen...:)
emjayprice rated 8 months ago
Alusivas has a great blog with wonderful photos and images which are mixed in with eclectic and humorous stumbles which follow the thread of someone taking a spiritual path in life. Thank you for the photo link! I just absolutely adore the sea.
Linnie76 rated 8 months ago
Artifully done! I should try this someday...... Nice stumbles.
lurkerm1e rated 8 months ago
Lovely photos, good stumbles and spot the trul weird banana guard. Visit.
capitolgirl rated 9 months ago
If You Want to Change, Train Your Brain | PickTheBrain [pickthebrain.com] From the page: "To change our habits we first need to stop blaming ourselves and start working on our brain. We can influence the workings of our brain with our will power. Our brain is not hard-wired. Neuro-plasticity is the scientific term for the fact that our brain is constantly adapting and changing and recreating itself. Our determination and intent are forms of neural activity that influence the brain. Our conscious self can impose its will on the brain." Interesting blog, thanks!