June 3, 2016
pre dwa0042 and 0043Lust is temporary, romance can be nice, but love is the most important thing of all. Because without love, lust and romance will always be short-lived.
Danielle Steel
TWO MUSHROOMS WORKING OUT ASYMMETRIC LOVE
The mushroom on the right has a fully formed, committed, and impassioned love with a perfect heart shape colored brighter red, while the mushroom on the left is not there yet. The shape of the heart is evolving and the darker red puts a little less commitment .. at this time – Tomorrow the situation could be reversed? and this is what they have to work out together.. realising that love is fluid
August 21 2016
100
A successful marriage requires falling in love many times, always with the same person.
TO AND FROM MY LATE PARENTS said the leaves to the trees
In the summer we coveted and covered thee,
mon arbor, mon amour
And now we are gone
And miss you so much in this deathly winter
As we lie and grieve for you in our grave
Now, we can only cover and covet your shadow
To try and renew and relive our love
With a hope to keep our memories warm
Mon mieu, Mon arbor, Mon amour.
January 30 2017
205
The life of the dead is placed in the memory of the living. Marcus Tullius
THE BERNESE AND THE BALD MAN
Love Comfort and Trust when the crowd brings too much noise
252
I love animals and I love working with them because they don’t lie.
The Story of The Orange Packet – a lost soul in fetal position with an orange packet in hand, and nobody to help him out
I took this picture to show to a policeman down the road whom I was hoping would provide some assistance for this poor man. I got a shrug of the shoulders and was told he was just sleeping it off. I wondered to myself if a dog was found in the same situation if it would have been neglected in the same way.
From the Series – “Inhumanity” and “Mexico City”
Nov 25 2018
550
“Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. That is not our business and, in fact, it is nobody’s business. What we are asked to do is to love, and this love itself will render both ourselves and our neighbors worthy.”
Thomas Merton Trappist Monk