acinnamon-girl:

catzzimagines:

Update by CVA

Soooo, it seems you can’t have your doughnut [footage] and watch it too 🍩

Aw, that’s too bad but, hey, on the bright side of things at least it was ruled out immediately. 🙂  I sure would like to hear the audio of this though as I’d consider this a munchkin donut hole until we get the main treat. 😉   Poor Nate. 😦

acinnamon-girl:

Last April, I reblogged @everlasting-contrast’s rolling playlist for Dylan with the song Cool Waves by English space rock band Spiritualized. Like I said at the time, I’m not sure (and am even doubtful) that Dyl ever listened to Spiritualized, but there’s something about their mood that sometimes evokes him for me. 

Well, this is one Spiritualized track he may well have heard. In September ’98, Dyl’s faves the Chemical Brothers released Brothers Gonna Work It Out, a compilation album of music by other artists that the two had remixed. The final track on the record is their take on Spiritualized’s I Think I’m in Love. And the epic space vibe of Spiritualized combined with the Chemical Brothers’ big beats is a match made in the halcyons.

The band’s dreamy original song deals more with drug addiction than romantic love, but we’re allowed to create our own meanings for music, as Dylan well knew, and Spiritualized wholeheartedly explored unrequited love on the 1997 album ITIIL appeared on. Listening to this version straight, it’s a psychedelic, spine-tingling sonic journey through what falling in love can feel like; the beauty and the pain. 

By 2002, Brothers Gonna Work It Out had sold 165,000 copies in the US – perhaps Dylan accounts for one of those sales. If he did, I could see this song resonating with him. It has that (’90s era) trippy, hippie vibe he dug, it explores the concept of love, and late into the second minute, the disconsolate ‘and I’ve got nothin’’ echoing over and over against sprawling, kaleidoscopic digital effects has a bittersweetness reminiscent of Dylan’s own writings.

I recommend listening to this one through quality speakers, with the lights dimmed, eyes closed, and the sound turned way up 🙂

Total hippie trippy Dyl vibe going as the song gets going and not too terribly surprising it’s a Chem Bros Crossover. A ‘total match made in the Halycons’ ohh yesss.. 🙂 
 
How serendipitous that I’m low key chilling today and have been scrounging for some new music to play that compliments my new starburst diffuser. Post-holiday Halcyonic bliss. 😉  Thank you @acinnamon-girl

CBS Evening News reports the first look at the Basement Tapes release via the transcripts supplied to Time magazine and the controversy surrounding it.

December 13, 1999

“Harris and Klebold talk a lot about their parents.
They apologized to their parents for the hell they said they’d be putting them through but they said they really had no choice on this matter, it was something they had decided to do and would go ahead and carry it out.“

The Time Magazine article.

everlasting-contrast:

My daylight explorations of Dylan’s home going down the wild, winding, pastoral red rocks flecked Cougar Road.   “Beautiful” by the Smashing Pumpkins perfectly befits the total experience of these breathtaking surroundings which he saw on a daily basis yet was impervious to feel it’s blessings. Still, when you’re there, you cannot help but bask in a kind of presence of Him.  Enjoy 🙂

I also have an dusk version plus some photos of the area.. I’ll post those next up.

Classic reblog in honor of his day. 🙂 

The breadcrumb trail case for bullying is there. It needs to be looked at and acknowledged instead of looked away from as Cullen has dismissively done along with his brainwashing book’s agenda since 2009.  It’s a crime to pretend like it didn’t happen at Columbine and have a hand in affecting these boys and warping them mentally to believe that they needed to fight back by attacking their school and destroying themselves.  Yes, the majority who have been bullied and harassed don’t do the extreme thing they chose to do but that does not negate that they were bullied and chose to externalize their pain and send a message to the world.  People who have been bullied get their message loud and clear.  This is a key thing that society is failing to acknowledge and understand in order to prevent others from wanting to follow in their footsteps.

How Columbine Almost didn’t happen…….

Compliments of Frack and Frack (or shall we say Dumb and Dumber?)

Dylan going to town with his sledge hammer almost whacks and bludgeons a tiny Rebby in one blow. 

*dull, loud thud*

Dylan: “Whoopsy!”   

Rebby: *just keeps on going to town like a maniac*

–dudes watching from the side lines– *OMG !!  laughs*

Breakfast of Champions 2017 with Sue Klebold

Published on Jun 29, 2017 by SJHC Foundation

Sue Klebold talked about her life after Columbine and how it’s led her to become a passionate mental health advocate at this year’s Breakfast of Champions event on April 29, 2017.  The event hosted by St. Joseph’s Health Care Foundation in partnership with the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) Middlesex was attended by more than 1,200 local community leaders and mental health advocates.

More posts here.