Tristin Crawford
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In Love and War
The river ran backwards on the day the Queen vanished. The meander tiara had been thought about as the countesses united before the queen was moved. While the Crown of Strathmore Rose Tiara had been coronated and moved to a different palace also. “The true dexterity is not just in books. Although books have kept ancient secrets alive.”- (Princess Diana) They addressed the recent ordeal by a lawyer letter to the responding member of the family from Parliament’s heir. The French revolutionary war comes to mind and the reign of Queen Elizabeth I still giving way to modern day. The orientation for the future endeavors began with the Americas state Kentucky. The Federal Forest Service had career orientation and how to approach an investigation from the underworld. The ordeal was not over at the arrest of the “accessories”. Upon the return the mountain range was ringing and a personnel approached the home. The first time I had ever been asked of for Princess treatment. Where has this decade gone since and what frosted courtships unveiled intimate details of ties to the family as I quartered their homes. They asked of an intimate person to the family to be lead on a further investigation. It wasn’t just that this since estranged respondence was being separated from the family again. The history of Princess Holly as a countesses is overwhelming in the essences of time and being saved evasively. The appeal has not been denied for a year since. The harkened feeling yet another account of war. Our earlier years of fury became about intimacy and betrayal. The intimate encounters and the evasive demeanors gave heir to new instincts. Who writes of the sequel to Of Love and War in the Art of War and the truths of the betrayals and manipulations.
By Tristin CrawfordExclusive • 11 months ago
Apothecary for the Plants
The first dark apothecary for the plants was a run in with a night dwelling flower. A tea from a blue pigmented butterfly tea. My mourning was dark and dismal. The innervating sun light was not enough to keep this flower awake. Etheral and eternal darkness for its rapid growth and one day it will bloom once the sun innervates its lush greenary with a dream. The earthy smell elates it essence in the greenhouse. The essence is grounding with geosmin thriving to enrich the soil. Mist in the air lay on the mineral esscent. Petrichor gathers my senses from the ethenol used on the potion vial for the extraction of the pigmented butterfly tea.
By Tristin Crawford11 months ago in Earth
Folklore
Written in the stars is a constellation called the pentagram of Venus and the beehive. It was a June summer night. The month of the pearl. The market had palms in the garden centers. The book of superstitions briefly mentions mermaids. How have they discovered the evolution of the mermaid? The folklore that summer made me realize there is some truth to uncover with some of these superstitions. Here is what I have discovered from nutrition to religion and environmental information.
By Tristin Crawford2 years ago in History
Biochemical
Our environment has a self-sustaining ecosystem, generating bacterias as nutrients for cellular functions. Most notable being nitrogen in the soil. This nutrient is either used or short-lived. As nitrogen escapes the soil. When used for plant growth it is a vital role in cellular function responsible for making its own food. This innervates the function of a pigmented cell known as chlorophyll. Absorbing light as energy to convert to sugar and starch. You might even find a plant when it silicates. Plants acquire carbon dioxide from its environment in combination with hydrogen from water, using light as energy to convert that to sugar. Another trace element in plants is miniscule amounts of metals. The probability that this metal nutrient, copper and iron, has bonded to a nitrogen molecule. Water being the main transport for nutrients through the vascular system. Given the pH conditions are adequate for this to inhibit nutrient absorption. As a plant metabolizes it also gives off by product most commonly known as oxygen. As potassium helps draw in water for the stomata to swell, open and release. A plant’s metabolism is said to help it adapt to abiotic and biotic factors in the environment. Some plants are able to produce defense mechanisms such as toxins and thorns to ensure full development of the plant. Some resulting in food production for seasonal consumption by others in the kingdom. Magnesium is essential for many biochemical functions in the plant. Without it the soil pH falls to an acidic state. The cystolith is what innervates the biochemical bonds of the gains and losses in hydrogen and carbon chains, producing different combinations of hydrogens and carbons. This is a repeated chemical response in plants during the growing season until dormancy at deciduous parts of the earth. The plant no longer uses chloroplast to synthesize proteins. There are twenty two common essential amino acids that are present in all that is living.
By Tristin Crawford2 years ago in Psyche
Eye Anatomy
Several thinker’s of the theory of light accommodate from excerpts of books and cache data. [‘The Sage Age’ pg 159] talks of two, particularly Newton. Theorize concept of light receptors in the eye. Huygens has two theories of wavelengths and particles of matter having velocity. Theorizing that light has mass and travels so far varied with color of light. The theory of speed of light came into play when Einstein’s imagery, a well known mathematician, developed formulas and equations for scientific fact. Wrote on blackboards. This was placed with a demonstration of refraction. Broken light, broken image, traveled at a slower rate as ripples of a disturbed puddle. Maxwell used the natural rainbow as part of his example of explanation. Our eyes see the world in color because of a macula.
By Tristin Crawford2 years ago in Humans
Somewhere in the Forest
"Somewhere in the forest." A glimpse of grey and dismal. Biotic fruiting bodies and biome seeping in the rain fall. It has been misty all day. Latency of the fall foliage has become compost and has no vibrancy by now. Its a bug's life not the pixie's. Perhaps this trade is latent by magic. Pixie, dusty from spores using the mushroom as an umbrella, brushes off. Bringing new life forth from the biotic fruit. It is that time of year again.
By Tristin Crawford3 years ago in Earth
Thee Eye
This is an introduction to become familiar with the anatomy of the eye. I intend to break the information into a forum. To become comfortable with using these terms as descriptive words to better fortify myself an explanation. This is a premeditation for the study of optometry. With information from [teachmeanatomy.info][Stephanie Britton; Anatomy Teacher][‘The Sage Age’ pg 159]. The plan is to keep journaling on the subject matter to innovatively construct my mind to adopt this topic as nature. I will be using previous journal entries and finesse of a vitae. I predict that later entries will have revisions. This will contain writing only, no images.
By Tristin Crawford3 years ago in Humans
