{Friday, April 25, 2008}





LSD vs Alcohol vs Tree


Original idea: stlive
Modifications: leprosorium.ru

Go See the Whole Panel

Labels:

Posted by Susan at  5:20 PM 0 comments




{Sunday, July 15, 2007}

Mods and Rockers Festival: Skidoo

Writer Paul Krassner shares his recollections about the 1968 acid-comedy film Skidoo directed by Otto Preminger. The movie has its first 35mm screening in Los Angeles in over 25 years on Saturday July 14 at the Mods & Rockers Film Festival in Hollywood.

Timothy Leary had a certain sense of pride about the prominent people he and his associates had introduced to the psychedelic revolution. He once told me the names of some of the folks whose lives had been changed by taking LSD. Among them: director Otto Preminger, actor Cary Grant, conservative think-tanker Herman Kahn, Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson, Time magazine publishers Henry and Clare Booth Luce.

"But," Leary told me, "I consider Otto Preminger one of our failures."

...(Preminger's) Skidoo was pro-acid propaganda thinly disguised as a comedy adventure. However, LSD was not the reason that the FBI was annoyed with the film. Rather, according to Gleason's FBI files, they objected to one scene in the script where a file cabinet is stolen from an FBI building. Gleason was later approved as a special FBI contact in the entertainment business.

One of the characters in Skidoo was a Mafia chieftain named God. Screenwriter Bill Cannon had suggested Groucho Marx for the part. Preminger said it wasn't a good idea, but since they were already shooting, and that particular character was needed on the set in three days, Groucho got the job. During one scene, Preminger was screaming instructions at him.

Groucho yelled back, "Are you drunk?"

When Skidoo was released in 1968, Tim Leary saw it, and he cheerfully admitted, "I was fooled by Otto Preminger. He's much hipper than me."


Krassner's just got tons of good stories, doesn't he?

link


Labels: , , ,

Posted by Susan at  1:39 AM 1 comments




{Tuesday, June 12, 2007}

Bogus Science - The LSD-Chromosome Scare

Fraser Clark reminds us of the 1967 scare that Science Magazine published about LSD causing chromosome damage.

"THE HIDDEN EVILS OF LSD", screamed the Saturday Evening Post, Aug 12, 1967.
"By evening, the charge that LSD could break chromosomes was in all the nation's media." Peter Stafford: ‘Psychedelics Encyclopedia.’

But the entire story was basically a government-funded scam based on the examination of a single patient!

When I had my first child, my Mother was mortified that my previous lsd use (not while pregnant) would produce a deformed baby because of the bogus stories that started in 1967. It didn't.

Somebody wanted a whole generation to be scared straight. It worked about as good as those warnings on a pack of cigarettes do.

link

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  5:38 PM 0 comments




{Thursday, February 15, 2007}

Utopian Bliss Balls is a product exclusively available at Azarius. They are derived from the real Bliss Balls from the sixties, made of psychedelic LSA seeds and bee wax. This modern variety contains Hawaïan baby woodrose (Argyreia nervosa), fo ti tien (Centella asiatica), damiana (Turnera diffusa), ginseng (Panax ginseng) and bee pollen.

Very popular in the sixties among hippies and artists in California. Azarius gives them a brand new look! Made with the traditional ingredients like the Hawaiian baby woodrose seeds and damiana. Gives you an LSD-like trip.

Never heard of them, but it's sure got a great name.

Labels: , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  9:07 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Friday, February 02, 2007}


RADICAL LIVING PAPERS
A history of the free, alternative, counter-culture and underground press, 1965-75

Gavin Brown's enterprise at PASSERBY
February 2 - March 7, 2007

Covering politics, revolutions, evolutions of the planets, freak-outs, love-ins, support of green politics, gay liberation, power to the people, the peace parties, protests, the Panthers, peyote, LSD, pot, fiction, music, poetry, prose, prayers and more. Publications include: Actuel, Avatar, Berkeley Barb, Berkeley Tribe, Black Panther Papers, Digger Papers, Door, East Village Other [EVO], The Fifth Estate, Freep, Grabuge, Hobo-Québec, International Times [it], Los Angeles Free Press, The Oracle, The Organ, Other Scenes, OZ, Rat, The Realist, Re Nudo, Rolling Stone, The Seed, Ann Arbor Sun....more.

GBE@Passerby

Blogged with Flock
(from the inbox via: arthur)



Labels: , , , , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  1:34 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Monday, January 08, 2007}


Uma? No. It certainly looks like Uma Thurman. It's Nena Von Schlebrugge, Uma's mother, as she gets ready to wed Timothy Leary. (She later divorced Leary and married Tibetan scholar, Dr. Robert Thurman.)

Nena was 28 when she met Leary, who was then 45, at his annual Fourth of July party upstate in Millbrook. According to Robert Greenfield (who recently wrote a bio of Leary), she told the mind-altering Harvard professor that she "wanted to go to India to seek ultimate wisdom, not to mention the secret sexual practices of the Orient."

"They took LSD and three days later they decided to get married," recalls Leary's ex-girlfriend Peggy Hitchcock.

Their Millbrook nuptials were a "phantasmagoric, magical mystery tour, the first real big coming-out party for all the A-list, jet-set, high-fashion beautiful people from New York who had recently discovered LSD," writes Greenfield. "Guests lined up to present the newlyweds with hash, grass and psychedelic mushrooms, as well as snuffboxes filled with LSD and cocaine." The wedding cake was crowned with the Hindu deities Shakti and Siva having sex.

You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You
By D A Pennebaker
1964, 12 minutes, Black & White

Watch Video (Quick Time)

Labels: , , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  4:40 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Tuesday, September 26, 2006}

HYPERSPATIAL MAPS

MESCALYSERGIC VISIONS
(Vol. VII, No.1)

"I read that LSD and mescaline could be combined to yield a trip that was longer-lasting and smoother than either alone."


As it turned out, his experiment yielded him a shiny octopus-like creature that was loving and gentle. Makes sense to me now to have the vibrancy of the acid with the loving feelgood of the mescaline, although I never thought to combine the two before.
Floating in the corner of my room was an enormous, shimmering, translucent, opalescent, octopod/jellyfish-like creature from which the tentacles protruded! My initial reaction was one of disbelief, mixed with a substantial degree of fear. However, the thing immediately began to caress me with its tendrils--as if to reassure me, and my apprehension completely melted away. Amazingly, I actually perceived a gentle, soothing pressure against my skin as it caressed me like a child! As it touched me I felt its consciousness partially merge with mine, and I was then flooded with a sense of love unlike I have ever experienced before, or even imagined to be possible.

Thanks to Page 2 in the free issue Entheogen Review. (PDF file)

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  12:35 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Sunday, April 09, 2006}

John Halpern: an informant for the DEA?

-- by Jon Hanna

"I've recently penned the article "Halperngate" for the current issue of The Entheogen Review."

"Since this article deals with a lesser-known snitch, John Halpern, who has also been a psychedelic researcher largely supported by the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, and who still frequents underground events (he will be part of a team at the 2006 BOOM Festival's crisis tent), I feel that it is important for the psychonautical community to have the opportunity to read about Halpern's past choice to repeatedly provide testimony to the DEA related to the arrest and trial of Leonard Pickard and Clyde Apperson, who were ultimately both convicted of LSD manufacture." A PDF of the article is posted at:

www.entheogenreview.com/halperngate.html

"Information about the availability of the hard-copy of this issue of The Entheogen Review will be posted at their main site after 4/12/06; this issue (Vernal Equionox 2006) also contains some reviews of the LSD conference in Basel, the H.R. Giger museum, and a Swiss absinthe bar. As well, there's an ayahuasca article from Peter Gorman, and network feedback notes on the psychoactivity of Pedicularis species, Kaempferia galanga, Atropa belladonna, and DOC. Plus there's an events calendar, my "Sources" column reviewing the latest in psychedelic art, entheobotanical vendors, and book dealers, and a remembrance for Carla Higdon, who passed away earlier this year. See www.entheogenreview.com for more information on the journal."

Interesting.... and probably not the only one in the psychonautical community.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  6:17 PM links to this post




{Sunday, January 08, 2006}

Get BACK On The Bus - Kesey's magic bus is out of the swamp, may get back on the road. Acid test: Restaurateur wants to restore the vehicle once piloted by the LSD-fueled Merry Pranksters in the 1960s. [MORE]


STOP BITCHING, START A REVOLUTIONIt starts right now! We form S.B.S.R. (Stop Bitching Start a Revolution) Circles all over where we come together and start to talk about possibilities. The Circles would be a meeting, a get together, to start an energy going, to start talking to each other about possible solutions to the problems we're facing in our country, in our town, in our world. [MORE]

Blog Nod - to Global Voices Online. The world is talking. Are you listening? An international effort to diversify the conversation taking place online by involving speakers from around the world, and developing tools, institutions and relationships to help make these voices heard. And they may need your help.

I wondered why the Frisbee was getting bigger, and then it hit me.

Labels:

Posted by Susan at  4:16 PM 1 comments links to this post




{Monday, January 02, 2006}

Lots of events surrounding the January 13-15, 2006, International Symposium celebrating the 100th Birthday of Albert Hofmann in Switzerland.

Project Eleusis - Release date: January 9th 2006. This Compilation is a Birthday Gift - A Tribute to his Revelations and Inspirations. The music on this CD is created under the influence of... Kykeon - the magical mystical Brew. All tracks are listed with their mp3 links.

Dropout Productions and Gaia Media Stiftung present:
Mystical Experience - Closing Ceremony for the International Symposium. Psychedelic Art and Live Music.

problem child and wonder drug

Labels: , , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  10:43 PM links to this post




{Saturday, December 17, 2005}

URLS GONE WILD
Several mini-posts follow below for those of you reading this through Bloglines, Feedburner, etc.

Zombie Claus was celebrated in Michigan last night. [via]

* My favorite quotes: "...you've never seen the likes of it. A whole bunch of Santa Clauses, drunk as lords, cussing and cursing and scraping, all in broad daylight..." and "...Santas were brawling, swearing & falling about..."

* For Seattle, Denver, Nashville, Detroit, and More

* University Of Michigan newspaper does an online parody of Windows XP. Nicely done.
Link

* Skirt-chasing playboy Daniel Anceneaux spent weeks talking with a sensual woman on the Internet before arranging a romantic rendezvous at a remote beach -- and discovering that his on-line sweetie of six months was his own mother!
Link

* LSD Story Causes Flashbacks

* Reverend Billy exorcised the building, while the security guards looked on, wondering just how much damage control their PR people would have to do if they arrested a preacher and a gospel choir.
Link

* Howard Stern's free speech ride signs off.
Link

* Neil Young to keynote SXSW 2006

* A Celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the publication of Allen Ginsberg's book as well as the American book launch for the 2005 publication of The Baby Beat Generation (The 1970s San Francisco Renaissance)
Link

Why is Christmas just like a day at work? You do all the work and the fat guy with the suit gets all the credit?

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  10:02 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Wednesday, November 16, 2005}

LSD Blotter Art
This post's for the searchers who visit this site looking for posts about LSD Blotter Art. I've featured several sites over the past few years and thought I'd put all the URLS in one place to make it easier to find. Nice artwork and some will run as high as several hundred dollars for print.

Blotter Art is the original and still has the largest selection of blotter art for sale. The All In Your Head and Felix-Yellow pics shown here are some top sellers.

More Blotter Art Sites »
Tripatourium aka Blotter Sheets now.
Blotter Sheets
Blast
Stevee

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  4:03 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Saturday, November 05, 2005}

"Ecstasy: In and About Altered States," Oct. 9, 2005-Feb. 20, 2006, at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA,in Los Angeles. The exhibition includes 30 international artists and their magnificent works.

"Ecstasy" is the closest thing to an LSD flashback that you’re likely to see, a "sensation" in the truest meaning of the term. The strobe lights alone are enough to jump-start long-dormant memories, many of them quite pleasant.

Berlin-based artist Klaus Weber (b. 1967) has installed a cut-glass fountain bubbling with a clear liquid purported to be LSD, formulated in a homeopathic lab. Unsurprisingly, the work is secured behind glass walls and is all but impossible to reach. The implicit tease is whether or not it would be worth it to find out if the liquid is what the artist says it is.

There's also a voyage to the stars exhibit, a floating chamber exhibit, a suspended and architectural matrix of tiny green lights exhibit, giant mushrooms exhibit, an alien abduction exhibit, the cut-glass fountain bubbling with a clear liquid purported to be LSD exhibit and many more.Would love to speak to someone who's been to this exhibit. Gotta be a lot of fun.

Link

Labels:

Posted by Susan at  1:57 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Saturday, October 15, 2005}

The Rare Vinyl Network specializes in 'hard-to-find' vinyl. But I also reading enjoy the back story on the albums about the band members or what was happening at the time it was made.

In 1967 the Beatles were in Abbey Road Studios putting the finishing touches on their album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. At one point Paul McCartney wandered down the corridor and heard what was then a new young band called Pink Floyd working on their hypnotic debut, The Piper at the Gates of Dawn. He listened for a moment, then came rushing back. "Hey guys" he reputedly said, "There's a new band in there and they're gonna steal our thunder". With their mix of blues, music hall influences, Lewis Carroll references, and dissonant experimentation, Pink Floyd was one of the key bands of the 1960s psychedelic revolution, a pop culture movement that emerged with American and British rock, before sweeping through film, literature, and the visual arts. The music was largely inspired by hallucinogens, or so-called 'mind-expanding' drugs such as marijuana and LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), and attempted to recreate drug-induced states through the use of overdriven guitar, amplified feedback, and droning guitar motifs influenced by Eastern music.

This psychedelic consciousness was seeded, in the United States, by countercultural gurus such as Timothy Leary, a Harvard University professor who began researching LSD as a tool of self-discovery from 1960, and writer Ken Kesey who with his Merry Pranksters staged Acid Tests - multimedia 'happenings' set to the music of the Warlocks (later the Grateful Dead) and documented by novelist Tom Wolfe in the literary classic The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968) - and traversed the country during the mid-1960s on a kaleidoscope-colored school bus. Suzy Hopkins, formerly *Suzy Creamcheese, a dancer and inspirational figure on the underground scene in Los Angeles and London, remembers the visceral way psychedelic culture affected the senses. 'There's a difference between a drug and a psychedelic. Drugs make you drugged and psychedelics enhance your ability to see the truth or reality' she says. For her, LSD and music created a kind of alchemy. Many psychedelic bands explored this sense of abandonment in their music, moving away from standard rock rhythms and instrumentation.

* She's ONE of the Suzy Creamcheesees.

MORE

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  8:24 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Wednesday, June 29, 2005}

The day Chet Helms died was the day they brought old San Francisco down.

Several years ago somebody wrote the SF Chronicle saying Chet Helms had died. So Chet decided to have a wake and a resurrection. He hired a hearse and a coffin and invited 200 people. He was driven up to the Gold Coast Restaurant in the hearse and the pall bearers were Terance Hallinan, Richard Hongisto and Wavy Gravy. The Coffin rolled into the restaurant and was opened. Chet lay there with flowers and a cellular phone on his chest. The phone rang and he rose to answer it and walked thru the toasting crowd and camera people.

The day Chet Helms died, goes the old eulogy, Owsley returned and gave out real LSD and everyone remembered their last ecstatic romance at the Avalon and began to dance that perfect trance dance that merged them with the divine.

But this past weekend, Chet Helms really did pass away. He died from complications of a stroke in San Francisco surrounded by family and friends; he was 62.

[Extensive info and obituary @ sfbg]

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  1:17 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, March 17, 2005}

LSD Tit Print '01 - Annie Sprinkle


An organization that supports psychedelic drug research is hosting an eBay auction featuring ecstasy icon Alexander Shulgin's lab glassware, LSD blotter paper art and a week of "tanning, dancing and trancing" on Ibiza, among other mind-bending items. This blotter print and others for sale until March 21 on eBay. (kulcha brought to you via: wired and annie)

Labels: , ,

Posted by Susan at  10:06 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, February 24, 2005}

Psychedelic medicine: Mind bending, health giving
JOHN HALPERN clearly remembers what made him change his mind about psychedelic drugs. It was the early 1990s and the young medical student at a hospital in Brooklyn, New York, was getting frustrated that he could not do more to help the alcoholics and addicts in his care. He sounded off to an older psychiatrist, who mentioned that LSD and related drugs had once been considered promising treatments for addiction. "I was so fascinated that I did all this research," Halpern recalls. "I was reading all these papers from the 60s and going, whoa, wait a minute! How come nobody's talking about this?"

More than a decade later, Halpern is now an associate director of substance abuse research at Harvard University's McLean Hospital and is at the forefront of a revival of research into psychedelic medicine. He recently received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to give late-stage cancer patients the psychedelic drug MDMA, also known as ecstasy. He is also laying the groundwork for testing LSD as a treatment for dreaded super-migraines known as cluster headaches.

Say, I wonder if my doc would be open to some psychedelic therapy? My own personal psychedelic therapy doesn't seem to help my cluster (fucking) headaches one damn bit.

(link via mousemusings via New Scientist)

Labels: , , , ,

Posted by Susan at  11:46 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, January 13, 2005}

Acid Test
I can't tell by looking at the rat that it's on LSD. The rat doesn't seem too fazed. It looks kind of placid, unlike the fanged beasts that haunt Manhattan apartments. I start to wonder what a rat version of Dark Side of the Moon would sound like.

A scientist whisks me to the next room, which houses a maze. It looks like a giant plastic octopus lined with red lights, and it's for rats on various substances to wander through for more tests. The greenish glow of computer screens fills the next room, where a team of researchers is inputting data they hope will support new theories on how LSD, the common name for d-lysergic acid diethylamide, produces its profound effects on the human brain.

I'm out in bucolic West Lafayette, Indiana, about an hour's drive from Indianapolis. Cornfields are everywhere. The vast spaces not taken up by Purdue University or the highway are dotted with sports bars and houses. I've traveled all the way out here because this is one of the only labs in America doing pioneering LSD research. I'm searching for clues to a mystery: How, in terms of brain chemistry, does the fabled "acid trip" initially produce an overpowering swirl of visual effects, only to "come down" into something that's nonvisual, heavily introspective, and—in some cases—downright creepy? More...
David Nichols & Indiana lab doing research on LSD in Village Voice

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  7:27 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, April 15, 2004}

Romantic and Voluptuous, By Mark Miller
"Romantic, sensitive, sincere, caring, honest, affectionate 25-year-old non-smoking male, a Kevin Costner lookalike, with great sense of humor, Ph.D. in Business, runs own advertising agency, enjoys sports, nature, movies, theater, restaurants, dancing--seeks sincere woman for friendship and good conversation."

Dear Romantic: I nearly fainted when I read your personals ad, because it pretty much described my ideal man. So even though I'm sure you'll be overwhelmed with responses, here's mine: I'm a bright, honest, loving, considerate, vivacious, outgoing 23-year-old, blonde, voluptuous, non-smoking female, often described as a Darryl Hannah lookalike. I am independently wealthy, and love exotic travel, gourmet cooking, and passionate embraces in front of a roaring fire. I am yearning for your reply.

Dear Voluptuous: Thank you for your wonderful letter in response to my ad. Coincidentally, you described my ideal woman. Unfortunately, I wasn't exactly 100% honest about myself in my ad. But your letter touched me to such a degree that I've decided to stop deluding myself and others. So even though it may cost me the loss of meeting you, here's the truth: I'm a 46-year-old Abe Vigoda lookalike, who smokes like a chimney, dropped out of high school to steal cars, still lives with my parents, and haven't the slightest idea how to function in a social situation.

Dear Romantic: I can't tell you how relieved I was to receive your refreshingly honest letter. I, too, have had it with all the artifice, the game-playing, the misrepresentation. So please allow me to revise my initial ad, as well: I'm a 52-year-old, enormously overweight woman, interested solely in my next meal. I suffer from indescribable body odor, but it doesn't bother me too much, as I spend most of my days dealing with the voices that I hear, commanding me to do the bidding of Emperor Borgar, ruler of my home planet. I am currently working, gutting fish, at Harvey's Carp-O-Rama, but it's the evening shift, so I have my days free to tend to my open sores and seventeen cats. I also like looking in people's windows while drooling. [more »]

TV Turnoff 2004 - April 19-25
What happens during a seven-day experiment in life without TV? A whole new space to think emerges. You find yourself passing time in ways you never expected. And you start to wonder: when I reach for the remote, who is really in control? View posters from previous years here. Adbusters link via ollapodrida



{Fast Links}
:: Be Here Now by Paul Krassner [link]
:: Realist
:: Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Chabon sizes up a new medium for his superhero, the Escapist. [link]

{this day in history}
April 14, 1966 -- Swiss pharmaceutical firm Sandoz discontinues production of LSD. Owsley smiles. via daily bleed

{bullshit cliché of the week} - "war footing"

I feel a sin coming on.


Labels: , ,

Posted by Susan at  6:56 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Wednesday, January 07, 2004}

Have you ever drawn on acid? Or see an artists' rendering while on acid? You can see the effects of a controlled experiment with someone drawing after being adminstered LSD-25 from the beginning to the end of his trip. #5 and #6 look much too familiar to me. [link: j-walk]

Maggie has a post on RU-21. The anti-hangover pill that came from Russia and now in the US and Canada. It's kind to your liver, so I like that aspect of it.

Happy 60th birthday, Jimmy Page. Everybody's getting old.

Don't Happy. Be Worried.

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  11:38 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, December 18, 2003}

Keith Richards is 60 years old today. That Richards has reached 60 at all is a source of some amazement. For a long time in the 1970s when he was "a human chemical laboratory" - his own description - you couldn't have got decent odds on him making 40. He lived on a diet of heroin, cocaine, amphetamines, barbiturates, LSD and heaven knows what else, washed down with industrial quantities of Jack Daniels. Many of his drug buddies, including Gram Parsons and John Belushi, failed to make it.

{timewaster of the day} Visit Tongsville - Take a Flash-based trip through town with the innovative Brits who created classic videos for Beck, Supergrass, Badly Drawn Boy, REM and Fatboy Slim. Make sure to click away on every building and store you pass by... lots of fun and surprises await!

Is President Bush gay? It's all so damn fabulous. Betty Bowers' satire site poses the question.

Get a George In The Box toy for only $29.95. [via: coolios]

Got ready to go to the LOTR premiere showing last night, and decided to call first to check on ticket availability. "4 tickets left", they said. First come, first served. So I missed out on last night. Did anyone get to see it? I think Alexandra did.

{blog site of the day} Eurotrash

Is it time for your medication or mine?

Labels: , ,

Posted by Susan at  8:42 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Sunday, November 02, 2003}

What Bush Won't Say and Blotter Acid Art. Both guaranteed to blow your mind.

If I Were Bush's Speechwriter
By CBS News Correspondent Andy Rooney
[click for video]

"... I probably shouldn't have said Iraq had nuclear weapons. Our guys and the U.N. have looked under every bed in Iraq and can't find one."

"In one speech, I told you Saddam Hussein tried to buy the makings of nuclear bombs from Africa. That was a mistake and I wish I hadn't said that. I get bad information sometimes just like you do..."

"On May 1, I declared major combat was over and gave you the impression the war was over. I shouldn't have declared that. Since then, 215 American soldiers have been killed in Iraq. As the person who sent them there, how terrible do you think that makes me feel?"

"...When I landed on the deck of the carrier, I wish they hadn't put up the sign saying MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. It isn't accomplished. Maybe it should have been MISSION IMPOSSIBLE."


:: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::


Blotter (LSD)Art




Lycaeum link seen on Ollapodrida.

Due to recent cutbacks and until further notice, the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off.

Labels: , , ,

Posted by Susan at  11:58 PM 0 comments links to this post




{Thursday, October 09, 2003}

Good Morning to you. Today's outlook: Gloomy, cloudy, and dreary. My outlook: Sunny as hell, baby.

Wanna see some spider webs woven by spiders on LSD? Mescaline? Hash, or caffeine? Or the web created by the straight spider?

Nobel Peace Prize to be announced Friday, Oct 10 @ 10am; don't know what time zone this is, but with Jimmy Carter the recipient last year, I'm curious to see who is chosen this year.

This is fascinating to watch. Bio-Motion Walker.

Substantial penalty for early withdrawal.

Labels: ,

Posted by Susan at  10:05 AM 0 comments links to this post




{Saturday, July 12, 2003}

Good Saturday morning....

Here is a larger pic {720x720} of the one featured at the top of the site today. It's by Trevor Brown and is called 'little small dots'. Caution: contains mature and controversial graphics; some are humorous. Some pics are disgusting, some are not. All are well executed. [via coudal]

Blogging Around
Skippy celebrated his one year blogiversary this week. His site is one of the fastest growing blogs I've ever seen in blogatopia--y!hctp!.

Lorraine was talking about people who nibble in the produce aisle of the super market. Is that ok to do?

Alex is so over wool clothes in dept stores in the dead heat of summer. What's the rush, people?

Kim, from Thymewise, talks about purchasing a hairagami for your hair.

Johnny Depp was once again on tv last night--David Letterman. Can you get enough of him?

Quote For Today
Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive. ~Anäis Nin

saturday morning me//
hazelnut coffee/oatmeal cookie/
marlboro ultra lights for the perpetual smoker/
listening: go to sleep-radiohead/
jeans shorts/lt blue dylan tee/old birks/
how about you?/

I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Labels: , , ,

Posted by Susan at  7:25 AM 0 comments links to this post

live from Asheville, NC

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz

 Subscribe in a reader

AIM
XML
Profile

My Last-FM
100 Things
Website Name
My StumbleUpon



{Most Recently Viewed}














Look here to read previous days posts


Participating