In a perfect experience, the clothes you put on each day are the products of relationships. You might know the gentleman who made your coat. Maybe you’ve visited the factory your shoes come from. Or maybe you just had a great day when you purchased the tie you’re throwing around your neck. Relationships and objects become indistinguishable. This is where dressing becomes something of substance.
palavre:

T-shirt

palavre:

T-shirt

I have come gradually to understand that the liberal arts cliché about teaching you how to think is actually shorthand for a much deeper, more serious idea: learning how to think really means learning how to exercise some control over how and what you think. It means being conscious and aware enough to choose what you pay attention to and to choose how you construct meaning from experience.
David Foster Wallace’s legendary This Is Water 2005 commencement address. (via explore-blog)

(Source: , via explore-blog)

(Source: suitupplease, via thatrenegade)

Poverty is not simply having no money — it is isolation, vulnerability, humiliation and mistrust. It is not being able to differentiate between employers and exploiters and abusers. It is contempt for the simplistic illusion of meritocracy — the idea that what we get is what we work for. It is knowing that your mother, with her arthritic joints and her maddening insomnia and her post-traumatic stress disordered heart, goes to work until two in the morning waiting tables for less than minimum wage, or pushes a janitor’s cart and cleans the shit-filled toilets of polished professionals. It is entering a room full of people and seeing not only individual people, but violent systems and stark divisions. It is the violence of untreated mental illness exacerbated by the fact that reality, from some vantage points, really does resemble a psychotic nightmare. It is the violence of abuse and assault which is ignored or minimized by police officers, social services, and courts of law. Poverty is conflict. And for poor kids lucky enough to have the chance to “move up,” it is the conflict between remaining oppressed or collaborating with the oppressor.

Megan Lee  (via shandog)

Yes. Yes fucking yes, everybody read this quote.

(via dailymurf)

(Source: docs.google.com, via flapjackstate)

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