All Posts by ‘Tom's Nature-up-close Photography and Mindfulness Blog

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Beauty and the Beast

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Each one of us, if we are at all honest, is (in many ways) beautiful… and each one of us has elements of bad and ugly habits.

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[This fall foliage is beautiful.  It is an old friend… whom I try to avoid, however.  This is a batch of Poison Ivy.  Sometimes, just being in the woods near it (even though I know what it looks like and avoid it) is enough to give me terrible, endless rashes.  This year, my arthroscopic knee surgery was delayed… due to a case of Poison Ivy rash.  I once received information about how a man encountered a woman carrying a batch of it; she was a teacher… and wanted “pretty leaves” to share with her classroom!]

Beauty and the Beast all wrapped up into one.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Beauty and the Beast all wrapped up into one. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Vast freedom…

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Vast freedom occurs beyond limited narrow-mindedness.

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[This Grasshopper is placidly resting on a flowering Thistle Plant.  Grasshoppers do not generally feed on Thistle Plants, though they may devour the flower sections.]

A beautiful place to be!  Grasshopper on Thistle Plant.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A beautiful place to be! Grasshopper on Thistle Plant. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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There are no separate (isolated) pieces to the universal puzzle… once you see the golden whole.

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There are no separate (isolated) pieces to the universal puzzle… once you see the golden whole.

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[This is a Hover Fly on a wild Sunflower Plant.  This Hover Fly is likely searching for flower nectar (and is distributing pollen as part of a symbiotic relationship).]

Psychologically, the perceiver and the perceived are one.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Psychologically, the perceiver and the perceived are one. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Stairway to Heaven

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My biggest vice (according to my wife) — and the observer is the observed — is that of purchasing too many fossils.  Perhaps, thinking a few words would be sufficient (instead of getting the fossils)… fossils being fixed impressions of the past.  Words – all words – are symbolic representations from the memory bank (i.e., from the stored, dead past).

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[These are Micro-mushrooms growing on a healthy Lichen covered, large Oak Tree.  These diminutive mushrooms are around 2 mm in total length.].

Stairway to Heaven            (lyrics & video by Led Zeppelin):

 
There’s a lady who’s sure all that glitters is gold
And she’s buying a stairway to heaven.
When she gets there she knows, if the stores are all closed
With a word she can get what she came for.
Ooh, ooh, and she’s buying a stairway to heaven.

There’s a sign on the wall but she wants to be sure
‘Cause you know sometimes words have two meanings.
In a tree by the brook, there’s a songbird who sings,
Sometimes all of our thoughts are misgiven.

Ooh, it makes me wonder,
Ooh, it makes me wonder.

There’s a feeling I get when I look to the west,
And my spirit is crying for leaving.
In my thoughts I have seen rings of smoke through the trees,
And the voices of those who stand looking.

Ooh, it makes me wonder,
Ooh, it really makes me wonder.

And it’s whispered that soon, if we all call the tune,
Then the piper will lead us to reason.
And a new day will dawn for those who stand long,
And the forests will echo with laughter.

If there’s a bustle in your hedgerow, don’t be alarmed now,
It’s just a spring clean for the May queen.
Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run
There’s still time to change the road you’re on.
And it makes me wonder.

Your head is humming and it won’t go, in case you don’t know,
The piper’s calling you to join him,
Dear lady, can you hear the wind blow, and did you know
Your stairway lies on the whispering wind?

And as we wind on down the road
Our shadows taller than our soul.
There walks a lady we all know
Who shines white light and wants to show
How everything still turns to gold.
And if you listen very hard
The tune will come to you at last.
When all are one and one is all
To be a rock and not to roll.

And she’s buying a stairway to heaven.

Another Stairway to Heaven.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Another Stairway to Heaven. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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The separation…

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The separation between yourself and your fears is as illusory as the separation between the idea of “me” and the idea of “others.”

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[Who has been eating these beautiful wildflowers?  One need not look very far for the answer!]

At the scene of the crime.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

At the scene of the crime. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-Photo)*** Warm affection…

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Warm affection used for ulterior means is often cold and calculating; beware of false, mechanical reactions, including your own (such as in selfish self-adoration) !

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[Some Daddy-Long-Legs – or Harvestmen – eat vegetable matter and mushrooms, but some are carnivorous.  This Havestman  (with dull, dark, leaden eyes) didn’t need to spin a vast, clever web of lies to catch his gullible Fly victim.  Daddy-Long-Legs are harmless to humans, but are bad news for germ-carrying (egotistical) flies.  Havestmen are not true spiders, but they’re close enough for the inclusion of the following poem:

from Mary Howitt (1799-1888):

“Will you step into my parlor?” said the spider to the fly;
“’Tis the prettiest little parlor that ever you did spy.
The way into my parlor is up a winding stair,
And I have many pretty things to show when you are there.”
“O no, no,” said the little fly, “to ask me is in vain,
For who goes up your winding stair can ne’er come down again.”

“I’m sure you must be weary, dear, with soaring up so high;
Will you rest upon my little bed?” said the spider to the fly.
“There are pretty curtains drawn around, the sheets are fine and thin,
And if you like to rest awhile, I’ll snugly tuck you in.”
“O no, no,” said the little fly, “for I’ve often heard it said,
They never, never wake again, who sleep upon your bed.”

Said the cunning spider to the fly, “Dear friend, what shall I do,
To prove the warm affection I’ve always felt for you?
I have within my pantry good store of all that’s nice;
I’m sure you’re very welcome; will you please to take a slice?”
“O no, no,” said the little fly, “kind sir, that cannot be;
I’ve heard what’s in your pantry, and I do not wish to see.”

“Sweet creature!” said the spider, “You’re witty and you’re wise!
How handsome are your gauzy wings, how brilliant are your eyes!
I have a little looking-glass upon my parlor shelf,
If you’ll step in one moment, dear, you shall behold yourself.”
“I thank you, gentle sir,” she said, “for what you’re pleased to say,
And bidding you good-morning now, I’ll call another day.”

The spider turned him round about, and went into his den,
For well he knew the silly fly would soon be back again:
So he wove a subtle web, in a little corner sly,
And set his table ready to dine upon the fly.
Then he came out to his door again, and merrily did sing
“Come hither, hither, pretty fly, with the pearl and silver wing:
Your robes are green and purple; there’s a crest upon your head;
Your eyes are like the diamond bright, but mine are dull as lead.”

Alas, alas! how very soon this silly little fly,
Hearing his wily flattering words, came slowly flitting by.
With buzzing wings she hung aloft, then near and nearer drew
Thinking only of her brilliant eyes, and green and purple hue;
Thinking only of her crested head — poor foolish thing! At last,
Up jumped the cunning spider, and fiercely held her fast.
He dragged her up his winding stair, into his dismal den,
Within his little parlor; but she ne’er came out again!

And now, dear little children, who may this story read,
To idle, silly, flattering words, I pray you ne’er give heed;
Unto an evil counselor close heart, and ear, and eye,
And take a lesson from this tale of the Spider and the Fly.   ]

Gullible Fly! (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Gullible Fly! (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Gullible Fly! (2)  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Gullible Fly! (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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The zebras and the lioness…

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On Twitter, a couple of Twitter friends, Kitusai & Bohdan  — who happen to be excellent, creative musicians, by the way, (and who go by the Twitter icon-image of two Zebras) — suggested to me that it is good to give others a second chance when they do wrong.  However, maybe not always; as I told them:  two zebras who give the lioness a second-chance aren’t zebras for very long!

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[If insects were mammals, this Robber Fly would be the lion of our rural area.  In our area, I will often see a Robber Fly diligently flying from leaf to leaf, looking for prey to attack.  They are very voracious and persistent predators.  They will even attack much larger insects than themselves.  This one has caught a Blue Damselfly.  Blue Damselflies are, themselves, predators of other insects.]

I have nothing against meat eaters! Robber Fly attacking Damselfly.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

I have nothing against meat eaters! Robber Fly attacking Damselfly. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Charlotte’s Web…

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The wall that separates you from all of life’s creatures… is (psychologically) composed of what is projected within (and “as”) you.

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[This Wolf Spider (Lycosas gulosa) is clinging to the side of a rock wall.  It is tending some lines for potential prey.  This particular species of Wolf Spider lives in both the United States and Canada.]

Pink Floyd... The Wall. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Pink Floyd… The Wall. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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To be sane in an insane world isn’t easy.

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To be sane in an insane world isn’t easy.  

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[This small Ant may be biting the leaf to extract juices. Below the Ant is a small, bite-sized hole.]

Walking on a vertical leaf isn't easy. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Walking on a vertical leaf isn’t easy. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Too much blind affection…

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Too much blind affection can strangulate the object of such so-called affection.

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Intense Passion!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Intense Passion! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

 

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Compassion is that alive awareness that…

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Compassion is that alive awareness that cares beyond the cadaverous uncaring.

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[This is a small Leafhopper on a cluster of colorful, wild Pigweed seeds.  The Leafhoppers in Illinois are all relatively small.  Leafhoppers have piercing-sucking mouth parts, which enables them to feed on plant sap.  Pigweed is considered a weed and is a nuisance to farmers… but it is edible for humans and is full of nutritious vitamins.]

Down the Up-staircase. (Leafhopper on Pigweed) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Down the Up-staircase. (Leafhopper on Pigweed) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Untethered freedom is not…

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Untethered freedom is not mesmerized by authority’s lopsided systems and structures…  additionally, it is full of deep order, intelligence, and integrity.  

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[This is a web-free Crab Spider in Phlox Flowers.  Most Crab Spiders do not form webs.  Crab Spiders, as we have shown, often change in chameleon-like fashion to suit their needs.  They are usually found in flowers, even garden flowers.

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Crabby and waiting! Crab Spider in Phlox Flowers. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Crabby and waiting! Crab Spider in Phlox Flowers. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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A small ego and a Big Heart is better than a Big Ego and a small heart.

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A small ego and a Big Heart is better than a Big Ego and a small heart.

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[A yellow Katydid.  This is a small katydid with a really Large Antenna.]

A Katydid with what may be a large Broadband Antenna.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A Katydid with what may be a large Broadband Antenna. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Blindly and eagerly leading people…

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Blindly and eagerly leading people into a false path brings more than one into the ditch.

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[These are leaves of a Sassafras Tree.  Root Beer gets its name from the oil extracted from the root of the Sassafras Tree.  Sassafras Tree parts were known primarily as medicinal herbs by the American Indians and, later, to the Europeans, who shipped great quantities to shops in England and on the Continent. The leaves could be made into teas and poultices, while the root bark was either chipped or crushed and then steeped in boiling water—one ounce of bark to one pint of water—and taken in small proportions as often as needed to reduce fevers; soothe chronic rheumatism, gout, and dropsy; relieve eye inflammation; ease menstrual and parturition pain; help cure scurvy and various skin conditions; and act as a disinfectant in dental surgery.]

Holy Sassafras Leaves!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Holy Sassafras Leaves! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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You can’t think outside the box. Thinking is the box!

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You can’t think outside the box.  Thinking is the box!

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[This very unique and unusual wild plant is the Seed Box Plant (Ludwigia alternifolia).  The square, box-like seed-pods of the Seed Box Plant are – indeed – different than most!]

Little, wrapped presents. (Seed Box Plant) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Little, wrapped presents. (Seed Box Plant) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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A small ego and a Big Heart is better than a Big Ego and a small heart.

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A small ego and a Big Heart is better than a Big Ego and a small heart.

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[This diminutive Milkweed Bug Nymph just finished shedding its (outer) exoskeleton.  The Milkweed Bug Nymph is around 3 mm long.  It seems to be proudly overlooking its great accomplishment!  Some insects devour their exoskeletons after shedding them; but this little vegetarian likely will not.]

Dumping your skeleton!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Dumping your skeleton! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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The little contains the large. The large contains the little.

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The little contains the large.  The large contains the little.

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[Scarlet-and-green Leafhoppers are active from spring through fall in open habitats with plenty of herbaceous, lush foliage.  Scarlet-and-green Leafhoppers feed on the sap of vines and shrubs.  They are relatively small… often considerably less than 1/4th of an inch long.]

Little insect; large beauty! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Little insect; large beauty! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Genuine heartfelt passion for life naturally helps others.

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Genuine heartfelt passion for life naturally helps others.

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[Carpenter Bees, such as this one, love nectar and pollen, such as this Pink Cone-flower provides.   Females of Carpenter Bees establish nests in broken or burned ends of hollow or pity stems and twigs.  They can extract up to a foot of pith from the interior of a stem, but (nevertheless) are not considered pests.  With Carpenter Bees, there is somewhat of a division of labor… similar to what honeybees expertly do, but at a far more simple level.]

Small but efficient! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Small but efficient! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-photo)*** The fears and hopes that exist in one…

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The fears and hopes that exist in one… may not at all be separate from what one is.

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[Marbled Orb Weaver Spiders make spiraling orb webs built on low trees, shrubs, or grasses.  Marbled Orb Weaver Spiders make a retreat in curled leaves or, if the web is on a tree, under bark.  This one was in our yard near the river bank and was tough to photograph from its top side (i.e., dorsal side); its eyes are pretty good a seeing approaching visitors and it would quickly retreat into a curled leaf!  However, I was better able to approach it in the evening!  Notice how it is simultaneously spinning web and tightening web with separate legs! (I usually can’t do two things at once!)

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Different and colorful! Marbled Orb Weaver Spider. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Different and colorful! Marbled Orb Weaver Spider. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Interesting marbled design! Marbled Orb Weaver Spider.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Interesting marbled design! Marbled Orb Weaver Spider. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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True and authentic, wise behavior is never the result of a blueprint or mere book of rules.

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True and authentic, wise behavior is never the result of a blueprint or mere book of rules.

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[A spotted Cucumber Beetle walks across a wild Sunflower flower.  An adult Cucumber Beetle may feed on many different types of plants, including cucumbers.]

A Cucumberless Cucumber Beetle.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A Cucumberless Cucumber Beetle. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Ponder beyond the ordinary. Go deep beyond the superficial.

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Ponder beyond the ordinary.  Go deep beyond the superficial.

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[This is a Crab Spider in an Viola Flower.  Crab Spiders act like chameleons and usually change to be the color of the particular flower that they are in… as they wait for winged prey to capture.  This one should have made itself more yellow, but… considering the sprig hanging by this flower, this spider didn’t do too bad; I almost didn’t see it!

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Almost missed. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Almost missed. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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The real treasure to find is…

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The real treasure to find is within you yourself; you don’t have to travel or search anywhere (out there) to find it.

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[This is a fluffy, seeding Thistle Plant full of Thistle Plant down.  Some insects will nest in a Thistle Plant’s down to keep comfortable.  Goldfinches (i.e. little, yellow, wild birds) use the Thistle Plant down for the main material for nest construction; they, additionally, relish Thistle seed.]

A lot of useful fluff!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A lot of useful fluff! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

 

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Ebola and other forms of spreading disorder…

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Hate is like a disease; it can spread in ways that are not of intense order.

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[The following statements – which I have written in the following, final paragraph – pertain to the following five sentences (occurring here at the beginning within bold quote marks) which are excerpts from a recent news article, about Ebola, written by David Willman:  “Public health officials have voiced similar assurances, saying Ebola is spread only through physical contact with a symptomatic individual or their bodily fluids. “Ebola is not transmitted by the air. It is not an airborne infection,” said Dr. Edward Goodman of Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, where the Liberian patient remains in critical condition.  Yet some scientists who have long studied Ebola say such assurances are premature — and they are concerned about what is not known about the strain now on the loose. It is an Ebola outbreak like none seen before, jumping from the bush to urban areas, giving the virus more opportunities to evolve as it passes through multiple human hosts.

The attached photograph is of a female Common Whitetail Dragonfly resting with a Green Bottle Fly.  The Dragonfly could easily eat and devour the Fly (which they do in nature often).  Being familiar with insects, because of my intense interest in animals and close-up photography, I realize certain aspects of what they are capable of.  One of my concerns is that, in the countries currently facing epidemics due to the Ebola virus, there are ways that non-airborne diseases can be transmitted easily through the air… and that is through the mechanism by which common flies (such as houseflies) eat and travel.  Such flies do not eat their food whole; they regurgitate digestive juices onto food to dissolve it and then slurp the contents up.  Flies use their proboscis and labellum (sponge-pad-like-mouth-parts) to repetitively sample and slop juicy substances around.  Common flies tend to (and this happens dozens of times a minute) repetitively sample and re-sample things, liquefying them, spitting them back out, and spreading them.  Needless to say, they fly from person to person (even from face to face) carrying germs and liquid debris on their mouth parts and feet-pads, and victims of Ebola tend to vomit a lot and have a lot of diarrhea.  Enough said!  Just as fleas had a big part in the Bubonic plague, flies may, I strongly suspect, significantly contribute to the spreading of the Ebola virus.  (I diligently sent an email to the White House regarding this.  I have not yet – to no shock to me – received a response.)  In countries where housing and hospital spaces are minimal, placing Ebola victims in areas where flies have direct access to them (without making attempts to eradicate the flies) may be a very precarious situation indeed.  Spraying with pesticides is needed in areas with Ebola… and such pesticides should be dispersed in large quantities.  Anyway, I’m all for having more dragonflies and less flies!]

Face to face... Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Face to face… Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Painted turtles really haven’t been painted…

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Painted turtles really haven’t been painted; enlightened human beings don’t glow in the dark.

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[Basking occurs when Painted Turtles leave the water to soak up sunlight.  This allows their bodies to warm, since Painted Turtles – like all turtles – are cold-blooded, and helps eliminate parasites, such as leeches, which do not like dryness nor sunlight.  Basking is also essential in the synthesis of vitamin D3.]

Soaking up some rays.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Soaking up some rays. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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(Multi-photo)*** True love goes beyond the affinity due to attractiveness. Love the less beautiful (that are also truly beautiful).

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True love goes beyond the affinity due to attractiveness.  Love the less beautiful (that are also truly beautiful).

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[This is a Phidippus Jumping Spider.  It’s difficult to sneak up on a Jumping Spider; their multiple eyes easily detect others in their environment. They are harmless to human beings.  I have some Jumping Spiders in 50 million year old amber which I will post at a later time.

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Tightrope climber! (Jumping Spider) (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Tightrope climber! (Jumping Spider) (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Tightrope climber! (Jumping Spider) (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Tightrope climber! (Jumping Spider) (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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The lucidity of insight shatters through the shady recesses of the stale known.

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The lucidity of insight shatters through the shady recesses of the stale known.

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[Golden Mayflies do not feed.  With Golden Mayflies, the young naiad nymphs eat diatoms and other algae from the bottom mud and submerged vegetation of lakes, rivers, and ponds.]

Resting Golden Mayfly. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Resting Golden Mayfly. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Real beauty is…

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Real beauty is much deeper than what you can see!

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[Many Wolf Spiders hunt during the day.  Wolf Spiders have excellent vision and a highly developed sense of touch.  Male Wolf Spiders wave  and motion with their large, often hairy pedipalps in a rhythmic pattern as they approach suitable female mates.

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

 

The better to see you with, my dear!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

The better to see you with, my dear! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Poise includes…

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Poise includes intelligence, compassion, awareness, humor, and balance.

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[This lone Hover Fly is feeding on a wildflower of Woodland Lettuce (Lactuca floridana).  It appears as if the Hover Fly has been feeding on his favorite type of plant for some time; he seems to be taking on the colors of the flower! (I’ve got to stop eating broccoli almost every day!)]

Hover in the blue.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Hover in the blue. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-Photo)*** Many are caught in the limitation and web of mundane time; very few, unfortunately, go…

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Many are caught in the limitation and web of mundane time; very few, unfortunately, go beyond that barrier. 

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[This spider, in our backyard (down by the river bank), won the lottery!  This spider is an Orb-weaver that is likely a Barn Spider (due, partly, to the whitish hairs on its legs).  Orb-weaver spider webs are dismantled (consumed) by the spider at the end of each night, and are rebuilt early the next evening; but this spider had too much to consume!  She hit the jackpot!  Count them all!

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Orb Weaver Spider's Bonanza Catch (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Orb Weaver Spider’s Bonanza Catch (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Orb Weaver Spider's Bonanza Catch (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Orb Weaver Spider’s Bonanza Catch (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Concentration on a fixed (limited) point is…

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Concentration on a fixed (limited) point is hypnosis or egotism, not meditation; meditation is not being fixated by the limited technique (or blueprint) of others, but is a free, passionate awareness of the whole of everything beyond exclusion.

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[This aperture in the tree could be a scope for a gun barrel or a focal mechanism for shooting a camera; or it could be a place where lichens no longer exist (unless they’re on the far tree in the background).  We will have more photos of interesting lichens in the future.  (We will be visiting the tree in the background and some of the other trees in the area.)]

Tree Scope.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Tree Scope. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-photo)*** Roots to Branches…

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Let the lowly roots reach out through the water (and the boat) and flower into something truly lofty and sublime beyond all the endless mediocrity.

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[Watch the following YouTube music-video also.

Roots To Branches    (Lyrics by Jethro Tull):

Words get written.  Words get twisted.
Old meanings move in the drift of time.
Lift the flickering torches.  See gentle shadows change
the features of the faces cut in unmoving stone.
Bad mouth on a prayer day, hope no one’s listening.
Roots down in the wet clay, branches glistening.

True disciples carrying that message
to color just a little with their personal touch.
Home-spun fancy weavers and naked half-believers
Crusades and creeds descend like fiery flakes of snow.
Bad mouth on a prayer day, hope no one’s listening.
Roots down in the wet clay, branches glistening.

In wet and windy priest-holes.  Grand in vast cathedrals.
High on lofty minarets or in the temples of doom.
I hope the old man’s got his face on.
He’d better be some quick change artist.
Suffer little children to make their minds up soon.
Bad mouth on a prayer day, hope no one’s listening.
Roots down in the wet clay, branches glistening. ]

 

Roots to Branches (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Roots to Branches (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Roots to Branches (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Roots to Branches (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

 

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Don’t just pick flowers or buy cut flowers… enjoy wildflowers or grow flowers!

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Don’t just pick flowers or buy cut flowers… enjoy wildflowers or grow flowers!

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[These are wildflowers.  The white wildflowers are Robin’s Plantain.  The purplish wildflowers are American Vetch. The American Vetch is less common than the Robin’s Plantain. (There is an insect in this photograph.)]

American Vetch & Robin's Plantain. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

American Vetch & Robin’s Plantain. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Thoughts are the conditioned, residual remnants of experience; deep insight and “being” go far beyond mere experience.

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Thoughts are the conditioned, residual remnants of experience; deep insight and “being” go far beyond mere experience.

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[This insect is known as the Bee Assassin.  These predatory insects are usually found on the leaves and stems of plants (as was this photographed specimen).  Leaves and stems are not areas where honeybees usually tend to visit.  Bee Assassin insects, in reality, mostly eat other types of insects, such as flies, beetles, caterpillars, and mosquitoes.  Their front legs have a “stickiness” which enables them to easily catch insects. Bee Assassin insects, though they may look rather intimidating, are largely beneficial, as they help to eradicate many harmful garden pests.]

If you're another bug, watch out for this one! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

If you’re another bug, watch out for this one! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Fear…

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Fear — unless there is an immediate physical danger in the environment — is often based on patterns and images in (and “as”) time that are projected as “what might be.”

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[Nursery Web Spiders may sit quietly for hours, legs spread out on vegetation, a large rock, or on a boat dock… or they may actively hunt in vegetation.  Nursery Web Spiders have excellent vision.

Additional Note:  I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Rock-a-bye Baby.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Rock-a-bye Baby. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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(Multi-Photo)*** There is no “we” and “them.” There is no “us” and “they.”

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There is no “we” and “them.”  There is no “us” and “they.”  

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[This is a unique form of Parasol Mushroom that seems to be almost glass-like with barely any top section; even from the top it looks like gills!  The bottom photo is actually a shot of the top of this mushroom!  These mushrooms grow at night and are gone by daylight. They are rather small sized mushrooms.]

Glass-like and diminutive. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Glass-like and diminutive. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Glass-like and diminutive. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Glass-like and diminutive. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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If we shipped all of the foolish people to the moon…

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If we shipped all of the foolish people to the moon… none of us would be left on earth!

😉

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[This is a Katydid, whipping its antenna like a fishing fly-rod.  A female Katydid has a long sword-like ovipositor.  The sword-like ovipositor is used for depositing eggs deep in soil or rotten wood.]

A Katydid whipping her fishing fly-rod.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A Katydid whipping her fishing fly-rod. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Societies and authorities weave an intricate, complex web. Unwind into what is simple, pure, and unadulterated!

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Societies and authorities weave an intricate, complex web.  Unwind into what is simple, pure, and unadulterated!

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[This is a reddish Harvestman.  Notice the shadow of the Havestman upon the leaf.  Harvestmen are arachnids, but they are not spiders and do not make webs to catch insects.  Harvestmen are also called Daddy-long-legs.  There are 200 species of Harvestmen in North America… 4,500 to 5,000 worldwide.  They are harmless to human beings (and eat many pests, such as flies).

Additional note:   I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Long Legs 4 sure!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Long Legs 4 sure! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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It is extremely easy to “fit in” to what others of authority maintain is normal and acceptable. Don’t be their shadow.

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It is extremely easy to “fit in” to what others of authority maintain is normal and acceptable.  Don’t be their shadow.

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[Spider Silhouette.

I will be posting more spiders (and similar creatures) in the Halloween month of October.  It is neat that they are part of an old Halloween tradition (that is fun for kids).  However, it is unfortunate that many children grow up associating spiders with “being frightened” and as “terrible creatures to be horrified of.”  As the late, superb naturalist, Steve Irwin often propounded, spiders and snakes can indeed be seen to be majestic, marvelous animals, truly beautiful in their own ways.  Perhaps what’s truly horrifying is human beings who do not care enough (and who do not do enough) about the environment.  We must, as Steve Irwin so graciously suggested before his untimely passing, be far better caretakers of Mother Earth.]

Spider Silhouette.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Spider Silhouette. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Life does not always give you exactly what you ask of it. Life is not a gumball machine, hungry for quarters.

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Life does not always give you exactly what you ask of it.  Life is not a gumball machine, hungry for quarters.

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[Mydas Flies are large, heavy-bodied wasp mimics.  They are a velvety black, with the 2nd abdominal segment being a bright orange-yellow, orange, or reddish orange.  Blackish wings have a bluish or purplish sheen.  Mydas Flies are frequently seen on flowers and they presumably feed on nectar (they were once thought to feed on other insects).]

Wasp-like but harmless! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Wasp-like but harmless! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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(Multi-photo)*** Don’t function like a cold, callous machine; operate with a warm, living heart.

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Don’t function like a cold, callous machine; operate with a warm, living heart.

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[These are ants collecting pollen on wild Queen Ann’s Lace flowers.  Pollen is great protein for some species of ants.]

Ant on Queen Ann's Lace (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Ant on Queen Ann’s Lace (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Ant on Queen Ann's Lace (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Ant on Queen Ann’s Lace (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Constant desire is the crutch of…

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Constant desire is the crutch of a very broken and injured mind.

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[Buffalo Treehoppers are aptly named for their hornlike projections, which suggest a buffalo’s horns. Female Buffalo Treehoppers make crescent-shaped slits in young plant stems to lay their eggs.  The larvae are a pale green and are covered with short spines.]

Buffalo Treehopper photo, from successful buffalo hunting!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Buffalo Treehopper photo, from successful buffalo hunting! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Watch it… sometimes your hobby becomes so intense that it begins to pursue you!

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Watch it… sometimes your hobby becomes so intense that it begins to pursue you!

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[I went out to the backyard (to the bird-feeder) to get a few photos of birds, for a change of pace from all of those insects that I am perpetually pursuing.  The following is what came to the bird-feeder.  Sorry about that!  I’ve been chasing insects for so long, I think they may be following me home!  It’s, by the way, a Painted Lady butterfly.  Painted Lady butterflies do not eat bird seed… but they do like to be the center of attention!  😉  ]

Just another egotist! (Painted Lady butterfly) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Just another egotist! (Painted Lady butterfly) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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Inner and integral happiness does not cost a dime!

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Inner and integral happiness does not cost a dime!

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[This is a Black Swallowtail Butterfly resting on a Thistle Flower.  Black Swallowtail Butterfly eggs are yellowish and ovoid shaped, and are laid on wild and cultivated plants of the carrot family, such as parsley, parsnips, celery, and carrots. There are two broods of Black Swallowtails annually in the North, and at least three in the South.]

Black is beautiful!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Black is beautiful! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-photo)*** Nature has priceless and very precious gifts.

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Nature has priceless and very precious gifts.

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[A small Praying Mantis on a Red Lily.  This Praying Mantis was around an inch and a half long.  It is, I think, a male Carolina Praying Mantis.  The Carolina Praying Mantis is not seen very often in our rural Illinois area.  It was very aware of my presence and didn’t stick around long.]

Small and different. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Small and different. (1) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Small and different. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Small and different. (2) Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

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Most people, unfortunately, are content to remain in the limited…

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Most people, unfortunately, are content to remain in the limited… which is like staying in an enclosed, cold room.

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[This is a Painted Lady Butterfly, a Bee Assassin, a Green Tree Cricket, a Hover Fly, some Ants, and a Soldier Beetle on a Goldenrod Plant. The more the merrier!]

A big weekend party!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

A big weekend party! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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(Multi-photo)*** The implicate, illimitable order…

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The implicate, illimitable order always exists beyond limited, crass confinement.

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[This is a Red-eyed Planthopper, Acanalonia conica.  The Planthopper hops with gigantic leaps to get away from danger.  This rapid form of transportation is only used when it needs to make a quick getaway, though. Usually, Planthoppers move very slowly so as not to attract any unwanted attention from birds or other predators. I noticed this one temporarily resting on our cement porch; then I quickly ran in the house to grab my camera!]

Planthopper. Enlightenment personified (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Planthopper. Enlightenment personified (1). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Planthopper. Enlightenment personified (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Planthopper. Enlightenment personified (2). Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

 

 

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An unfocused (distorted) mind looking at a well-focused photograph is…

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An unfocused (distorted) mind looking at a well-focused photograph is — interestingly enough — simultaneously focused and unfocused.

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[Differential Grasshoppers have relatively large bodies; the females are larger than the males.  Differential Grasshoppers inhabit grasslands, rural meadows, and weedy areas and are most abundant in the central states. The one in the photograph is a male.  Male Differentail Grasshoppers have bootlike appendages on the abdomen tip.]

Male Differential Grasshopper.  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Male Differential Grasshopper. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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A simple, mindful smile to a person — though seemingly nothing much — may…

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A simple, mindful smile to a person — though seemingly nothing much — may help someone in immense and profound ways!

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[These are either cute Shih Tzu puppies or fuzzy Caterpillars.  They are the last two remaining from the litter, and have had all of their shots.  $300 each.  Take your pick.]

Fuzzy Caterpillars or Shih Tzu Pups?! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Fuzzy Caterpillars or Shih Tzu Pups?! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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If one sneers at another, one may be smothering one’s own intelligence and goodness.

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If one sneers at another, one may be smothering one’s own intelligence and goodness.

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[Mating Virginia Tiger Moths. Virginia Tiger Moth caterpillars are very fuzzy and are often yellow, or red, or even black colored.]

Together as one!  Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

Together as one! Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

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The epiphany of profound insight may occur when…

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The epiphany of profound insight may occur when the mind is naturally quiet without effort.

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[A Bronze Copper Butterfly.  Bronze Copper Butterflies like to frequent wet meadows.  They hibernate in the egg stage.]

The Dalmatian of butterflies. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014

The Dalmatian of butterflies. Photo by Thomas Peace 2014