May 3, 2012

This is a great song I found today while cramming for my International Relations final. I was listing to a Danish online radio program called Aftenvagten or “The Night Watch” from DR P3. I had just pulled myself out of a panic attack, because I set the bar too high for myself this week. You see, I want to transfer to another university here in the city, and in order to do that, I need 30 credits, I have 15 from last semester, and I want all 15 from this semester to come out great… well let us just say that procrastination has gotten the better of me this week, and I ended up heaps (Aussie shout out) stressed and threw a bag of raw egg noodles at the door… crunchiness has set in on the floor. Anyways, I’m home, ready for bed and I think I did well. That’s all that matters. 

Danni Toma is apparently from Aalborg, DK and I have to say that this is pretty nice study/chillax music!

The title: Det Vil Ikke Altid Være (Sådan Her) means “It won’t always be (like this)” My favorite line is something like “Jeg siger det til migselv når jeg har det svært…” in English: I say this to myself, when I [am going through a hard time, i.e stress, sadness]”

Enjoy, and Good Luck with the rest of the finals y’all!

1:02am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZAdZwvKncP0S
  
Filed under: finals music danish stress 
April 24, 2012

(Source: 082594, via cojokat)

April 22, 2012
maybeimjustawesome:

the-d0wnfall0fusall:

same

Agreed.

ditto

maybeimjustawesome:

the-d0wnfall0fusall:

same

Agreed.

ditto

(Source: virtualgirlfriend)

April 22, 2012
Peut-être, c'est possible
4 weeks ago: single
3 weeks ago: single
2 weeks ago: single
Last week: single
Next week: single
Next month: single
Next year: single
Next decade: single
For the rest of eternity: single
April 22, 2012
This Weekend
me: wow i have so much to do
me: *doesnt do any of it*
April 19, 2012
tyleroakley:





Everyday.

tyleroakley:

Everyday.

(Source: iknewiwasagoner)

April 19, 2012
tyleroakley:

violent-buddhist:

The Quietest Place on Earth Will Drive You Insane Within 45 Minutes
There’s a small room in Minnesota thatblocks out 99% of all external sound. That’s an impressive number! Also impressive: nobody can take more than 45 minutes alone in the room before they go nuts.
The Daily Mail describes Orfield Labs’ anechoic chamber—perfect for making extremely sensitive audio measurements. But also perfect for sending you into a hallucinatory hell so hellacious you’ll need a chair:

‘When it’s quiet, ears will adapt. The quieter the room, the more things you hear. You’ll hear your heart beating, sometimes you can hear your lungs, hear your stomach gurgling loudly. ‘In the anechoic chamber, you become the sound.’ And this is a very disorientating experience. Mr Orfield explained that it’s so disconcerting that sitting down is a must. He said: ‘How you orient yourself is through sounds you hear when you walk. In the anechnoic chamber, you don’t have any cues. You take away the perceptual cues that allow you to balance and manoeuvre. If you’re in there for half an hour, you have to be in a chair.’

That sounds swell. Just the serene quiet of you, your thoughts, and the unceasing pounding of the human heart. Your brain can’t take it, apparently, and begins to fabricate sounds that aren’t really there—completely delusional noises meant to block out the churning of your own horrid biomass.

No thank you.

I’ll give it a shot!

tyleroakley:

violent-buddhist:

The Quietest Place on Earth Will Drive You Insane Within 45 Minutes

There’s a small room in Minnesota thatblocks out 99% of all external sound. That’s an impressive number! Also impressive: nobody can take more than 45 minutes alone in the room before they go nuts.

The Daily Mail describes Orfield Labs’ anechoic chamber—perfect for making extremely sensitive audio measurements. But also perfect for sending you into a hallucinatory hell so hellacious you’ll need a chair:

‘When it’s quiet, ears will adapt. The quieter the room, the more things you hear. You’ll hear your heart beating, sometimes you can hear your lungs, hear your stomach gurgling loudly. ‘In the anechoic chamber, you become the sound.’ And this is a very disorientating experience. Mr Orfield explained that it’s so disconcerting that sitting down is a must. He said: ‘How you orient yourself is through sounds you hear when you walk. In the anechnoic chamber, you don’t have any cues. You take away the perceptual cues that allow you to balance and manoeuvre. If you’re in there for half an hour, you have to be in a chair.’

That sounds swell. Just the serene quiet of you, your thoughts, and the unceasing pounding of the human heart. Your brain can’t take it, apparently, and begins to fabricate sounds that aren’t really there—completely delusional noises meant to block out the churning of your own horrid biomass.

No thank you.

I’ll give it a shot!

April 19, 2012
ilovecharts:

Me and my librarian [ed: the preceding is not a mistake a librarian should be making] colleagues played Humans v. Zombies with the students a few weeks ago at The University of Texas at Tyler. I made this chart to illustrate our team name.
-Tiffany LeMaistre 
I like it, but I have to admit I prefer this.

ilovecharts:

Me and my librarian [ed: the preceding is not a mistake a librarian should be making] colleagues played Humans v. Zombies with the students a few weeks ago at The University of Texas at Tyler. I made this chart to illustrate our team name.

-Tiffany LeMaistre 

I like it, but I have to admit I prefer this.

April 19, 2012
Good movie!

Good movie!

(Source: poetsona, via perksofbeingmadeline)

April 13, 2012
tyleroakley:

Casually chopping onions on the subway.

tyleroakley:

Casually chopping onions on the subway.