Theme
2:31pm May 16, 2013
erickimberlinbowley:

The Loneliest Whale in the World.
In 2004, The New York Times wrote an article about the loneliest whale in the world. Scientists have been tracking her since 1992 and they discovered the problem:
She isn’t like any other baleen whale. Unlike all other whales, she doesn’t have friends. She doesn’t have a family. She doesn’t belong to any tribe, pack or gang. She doesn’t have a lover. She never had one. Her songs come in groups of two to six calls, lasting for five to six seconds each. But her voice is unlike any other baleen whale. It is unique—while the rest of her kind communicate between 12 and 25hz, she sings at 52hz. You see, that’s precisely the problem. No other whales can hear her. Every one of her desperate calls to communicate remains unanswered. Each cry ignored. And, with every lonely song, she becomes sadder and more frustrated, her notes going deeper in despair as the years go by.
Just imagine that massive mammal, floating alone and singing—too big to connect with any of the beings it passes, feeling paradoxically small in the vast stretches of empty, open ocean.

erickimberlinbowley:

The Loneliest Whale in the World.

In 2004, The New York Times wrote an article about the loneliest whale in the world. Scientists have been tracking her since 1992 and they discovered the problem:

She isn’t like any other baleen whale. Unlike all other whales, she doesn’t have friends. She doesn’t have a family. She doesn’t belong to any tribe, pack or gang. She doesn’t have a lover. She never had one. Her songs come in groups of two to six calls, lasting for five to six seconds each. But her voice is unlike any other baleen whale. It is unique—while the rest of her kind communicate between 12 and 25hz, she sings at 52hz. You see, that’s precisely the problem. No other whales can hear her. Every one of her desperate calls to communicate remains unanswered. Each cry ignored. And, with every lonely song, she becomes sadder and more frustrated, her notes going deeper in despair as the years go by.

Just imagine that massive mammal, floating alone and singing—too big to connect with any of the beings it passes, feeling paradoxically small in the vast stretches of empty, open ocean.

Notes:
  1. theamazingmaddix reblogged this from kxpfschuss
  2. leaveyourpride reblogged this from the-great-perhaps
  3. daisyslxl reblogged this from unaparted
  4. beauty-beast00 reblogged this from vanirmagician
  5. oltreilimitinoi reblogged this from nonsonodibuonamore
  6. plan3toi reblogged this from definitive
  7. mxrea reblogged this from date
  8. saranystrom reblogged this from mckaylanonawalker
  9. x1000reasonswhy reblogged this from mord3caii
  10. velorumxsky reblogged this from mord3caii
  11. mord3caii reblogged this from slothpal
  12. sexartcoffee reblogged this from boiwitch
  13. call-me-bones reblogged this from feral-creatures and added:
    Oh god no
  14. ambivalencie reblogged this from definitive
  15. bornforburning1521 reblogged this from ditchdiver
  16. angiecanthink reblogged this from incandescentincubus
  17. nnr1989 reblogged this from plutoh
  18. nate-o-potato-tot reblogged this from preseminal
  19. radical--nonsense reblogged this from stonebc
  20. edsongg reblogged this from preseminal
  21. justanotherentry reblogged this from preseminal
  22. satyrgay reblogged this from plutoh
  23. pvrkvr reblogged this from boysouls