Chiara Salvesi
Bio
Stories (5/0)
Lana Del Rey: a great American poet
The corner parcel of 100 E Ocean Boulevard isn't mythic. It's a little fix of scrubland, rubble and grass, graffitied wall boards, two or three vertebral palms. Round the back, a parking area, black-top blanched and wiped out under the Los Angeles sun, and a steel wall, effectively versatile. It wasn't similar to this all of the time. Worked in 1919, the Jergins Trust Building used to remain on the site, its square-jawed congruity tempered by the cut support points that used to enhance the highest point of its ten stories, straight-upheld against the blue sky. The workplace block was crushed in 1988, notwithstanding the humble endeavors of government authorities to save it - the proprietors guaranteed an inn would be based on the grounds and impeded all endeavors to add it to the legacy register. The Jergins Trust Building exists now just in several filed paper reports, a nearby history blog and the recollections of some more seasoned LA occupants. What's more, that is all there is to it: a blip, an intriguing tale, a piece of mostly secret neighborhood history.
By Chiara Salvesi12 months ago in Poets
Push through the pain!
You will cry. There's some stuff that will occur in your life that will make you cry, it's OK. It's a piece of the arrangement. In the event that you can't deal with torment, you don't need achievement. You have to take a gander at life, when life wrecks you and say, this all you got? Is this it?
By Chiara Salvesi12 months ago in Motivation
Got $2500? You can have a private helicopter fly you to Taylor Swift's concert
Swifties expecting to get the Periods Visit show on time can sanction their own confidential helicopter to sidestep a large part of the traffic in all likelihood going with perhaps of the most expected show somewhat recently.
By Chiara Salvesi12 months ago in Interview
What makes a poem… a poem?
Muhammad Ali went through years preparing to turn into the best fighter the world had at any point seen, yet just minutes to make the briefest sonnet. Ali enthralled Harvard's graduating class in 1975 with his message of solidarity and companionship. At the point when he got done, the crowd needed more. They needed a sonnet. Ali conveyed what is viewed as the briefest sonnet of all time.
By Chiara Salvesi12 months ago in Poets
The love hormone: What happens when you fall in love?
Love is frequently portrayed as inspiring, awful, and, surprisingly, tragic. All in all, what does the mind have to do with it? Everything! The excursion from the first flash to the last tear is directed by an orchestra of neurochemicals and mental frameworks.
By Chiara Salvesi12 months ago in Psyche