Yorick...bae
post as much as possible while the women are offline so they can have something to read for breakfast when they are awake.
Why is this me?
tweed jackets, corduroy pants, brown trousers, oxford shoes, white button ups, brown leather, heavy sweaters, coffee rings, ripped out pages, thick belts, wire rimmed glasses, dusty books, quiet spaces, low lighting, dark wood, the picture of dorian gray, thick paper, expensive pens, figering brushing while reaching for the same book, long eye contact, small classes, close relationships with teachers, being an enigma, disappearing without explanation, wilting flowers, long coats, thrist for knowledge, thick volumes of ancient words, reading poetry aloud, old watches, golden jewelry, classical music, red wine, black coffee, music played on the piano, close knit groups of friends, a morbid longing for the picturesque at all costs.
Decisions decisions...
Snape?
I believe that this is the essence of academia. This is just so beautifully written. My heart fluttered as I read through the page.
Thrifting because why not?
Day in the life of a Natural Science academic.
-I am absolutely in love with Santiago Ramon y Cajal and Camillo Golgi. I found it quite fascinating learning about their lives and the influence both had on Modern Neuroscience.
Santiago kind of has my heart because he is everything but the stereotypical idea of a scientist. He actually wanted to become an artist but that went against his father’s wishes and Santiago became quite…the rebel in school. But with time, he was intrigued by histology and proceeded to conducting a lot of research, one of them being neurons and Golgi’s Black Reaction. Santiago was able to illustrate neurons as shown in one of the pictures above. And he improved Golgi’s reaction that was a staining method using (silver nitrate and potassium chromate).
This is the epitome of academia and it’s beautiful in my eyes.
“Writers aren’t exactly people...they are a bunch of people trying to be one person” -F. Scott Fitzgerald
...I am writers. Thank you Scott, for giving an explanation for my dilemma.
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