Hazal Tuncer

I'm Hazal, 25 years old Web Designer from Turkey. I like art, museums, exhibitions, coffee, beige, mugs, curly hair, my dog "Pebbles", Josh Keyes, books, robots, power napping, buying stuff that i will never use, adam apples, colorful clothes and music. I hate getting up early, cars, desserts, dark, nescafe, coiffeur, spoiled ego. I like mails and I don't expect sanity from internet.
A story can always end happily by stopping at a cheerful moment.
— Lanark — Alasdair Gray (via nruth)
Television is the way it is simply because people tend to be extremely similar in their vulgar and prurient and dumb interests and wildly different in their refined and aesthetic and noble interests.

David Foster Wallace, “E Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction.”

(via booksinthekitchen)

Writers are entitled to their political opinions, and there are good political novels out there, but the language of fiction is not the language of daily politics. Identity politics divides us. Fiction connects. One is interested in sweeping generalizations. The other, in nuances. One draws boundaries. The other recognizes no frontiers. Identity politics is made of solid bricks. Fiction is flowing water.
— Elif Şafak
From my grandmother, I learned, amongst many other things, one very precious lesson. If you want to destroy something in this life, beat an acne, a blemish or the human soul, all you need to do is to surround it with thick walls. It will dry up inside. We all live in some kind of social and cultural circle. We’re born into a certain family, nation, class. But if we have no connection whatsoever with the worlds beyond the one we take for granted then we too run the risk of drying up inside. Our imagination might shrink, our hearts might dwindle and our humanness might wither. If we stay for too long inside our cultural cocoons, our friends, neighbors, colleagues, family - if all the people in our inner circle resemble us, it means we are surrounded with our mirror image.

One other thing women like my grandma do in Turkey is to cover mirrors with velvet or to hang them on the walls with their backs facing out. It’s an old Eastern tradition based on the knowledge that it’s not healthy for a human being to spend too much time staring at his own reflection.
— Elif Şafak
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feeling good // nina simone

(via coffeenotes)

(via coffeenotes)

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glycerine // bush

Seen doctor this morning. Turns out I’m allergic to grains. And by grains, I mean a lot of things.