Saguran / Brown Frond carpets $30 a piece
DUNGAREES / Jesns
A shot in the dark.....
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Pu'uhonua National Park ~ Reconstructed Hale o Kea…
Lock
Fall morning
Living dangerously
Rainy day
There was an old door....
Flowers ... they don't move
Into the sunset
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Lazise
When in Paris....
Memorabilia
White on white
Tickell's Blue Flycatcher
Mocking bird
Soliloquy of a Stone
Kona Shores evening
Ordovician Fossil Algae
Watching the boat....
Sacred feet
ThermoFisher SCIENTIFIC
Keeping a low profile
All the crooked fences ....
Dodge & Fargo
Tropical dusk
^^
No 'U' turn
A perfect day....
Reconstructed Hale o Keawe ~ Pu'uhonua National…
South Point, Hawaii
Foyar
Down to earth
Worship on the beach
Immensity and insignificant / Immensité et insign…
Personal belongings
Board walk
Sitting on the Fence
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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- Photo replaced on 02 Sep 2019
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100 visits
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emil_Cioran
But we don’t just need to view life in general this way, we need to view our own life this way. The paths to literal and symbolic immortality laid out by our worldviews require us to feel that we are all valuable members of our cultures. Hence, the second vital resource for managing terror is a feeling of personal significance, commonly known as self-esteem. Just as cultural worldviews vary, so do the ways we attain and maintain self-esteem. For the Dinka of Sudan, the man who owns a larger herd of long-horned cattle is the most highly regarded. In the Trobriand islands, a man’s worth is measured by the size of the pyramid of yams he builds in front of his sister’s house and leaves to rot. For many Canadians, the man who best uses his stick to slap rubber pucks into nets guarded by masked opponents is considered a national hero. Page 9 (Excerpt: “The Worm at The Core” ~ Authors: Sheldom Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski
But we don’t just need to view life in general this way, we need to view our own life this way. The paths to literal and symbolic immortality laid out by our worldviews require us to feel that we are all valuable members of our cultures. Hence, the second vital resource for managing terror is a feeling of personal significance, commonly known as self-esteem. Just as cultural worldviews vary, so do the ways we attain and maintain self-esteem. For the Dinka of Sudan, the man who owns a larger herd of long-horned cattle is the most highly regarded. In the Trobriand islands, a man’s worth is measured by the size of the pyramid of yams he builds in front of his sister’s house and leaves to rot. For many Canadians, the man who best uses his stick to slap rubber pucks into nets guarded by masked opponents is considered a national hero. Page 9 (Excerpt: “The Worm at The Core” ~ Authors: Sheldom Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski
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