“I had rather munch a crust of brown bread and an onion in a corner, without any more ado or ceremony, than feed upon turkey at another man?s table, where one is fain to sit mincing and chewing his meat an hour together, drink little, be always wiping his fingers and his chops, and never dare to cough nor sneeze, though he has never so much a mind to it, nor do a many things which a body may do freely by one?s self.” MenMindMayLittlesSelfBodyTogetherHoursDrinkTablesFingersDareCornersBreadMeatBrownCeremonyTurkeysAnother ManOnionsChewing Author:Miguel de Cervantes
“One reaches through to the continents and oceans of the imagination, worlds able to sustain anyone who will but play, and then lets the play deepen and deepen until it is a reality that few would even dare to entertain...The human imagination is the holographic organ of the human body, and we don't 'imagine' anything. We simply see things so far away that there is no possibility of validating or invalidating their existence.” WorldHumansPlayBodyRealityAbleImaginationExistenceImaginePossibilityOceanDareOrgansFar AwayContinentsIdealismHuman BodyHuman Imagination Author:Terence McKenna
“There is a time when it is necessary to abandon the used clothes, which already have the shape of our body and to forget our paths, which takes us always to the same places. This is the time to cross the river: and if we don't dare to do it, we will have stayed, forever beneath ourselves” IfsBodyUsedTimeForgetForeverPathShapesClothesRiversCrossesDareAbandon Author:Fernando Pessoa