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atypicaljulia

Hello. Welcome, stranger tellurian. This is where I post all the stuff I find around the web that somehow manage to tickle my fancy. Enjoy.

Love Poem, John Frederick Nims

psychotherapy:

My clumsiest dear, whose hands shipwreck vases,
At whose quick touch all glasses chip and ring,
Whose palms are bulls in china, burs in linen,
And have no cunning with any soft thing

Except all ill-at-ease fidgeting people:
The refugee uncertain at the door
You make at home; deftly you steady
The drunk clambering on his undulant floor.

Unpredictable dear, the taxi drivers’ terror,
Shrinking from far headlights pale as a dime
Yet leaping before apopleptic streetcars—
Misfit in any space. And never on time.

A wrench in clocks and the solar system. Only
With words and people and love you move at ease;
In traffic of wit expertly maneuver
And keep us, all devotion, at your knees.

Forgetting your coffee spreading on our flannel,
Your lipstick grinning on our coat,
So gaily in love’s unbreakable heaven
Our souls on glory of spilt bourbon float.

Be with me, darling, early and late. Smash glasses—
I will study wry music for your sake.
For should your hands drop white and empty
All the toys of the world would break.

When I see stupid statuses on Facebook, and try my hardest to not make rude sarcastic comments.

the-absolute-best-posts:

This simulation shows the future behaviour of a gas cloud that has been observed approaching the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way. This is the first time ever that the approach of such a doomed cloud to a supermassive black hole has been observed and it is expected to break up completely during 2013.

So this is where it all boils down to, huh? A magnificent thing, being devoured into darkness. It’s frightening to think that maybe someday, somehow, this image will be how it will all end.
Perhaps, it could be our most symbolic ending: the brightness of the enlightened, fading away, getting sucked in, going deeper and deeper into a downwards spiral of the unknown. All our lives, memories, the very fact of our existence, left questionable with everything erased, as we get swallowed by the black abyss of nothingness.
It’s as if we never existed. It’s as if nothing ever were.

the-absolute-best-posts:

This simulation shows the future behaviour of a gas cloud that has been observed approaching the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way. This is the first time ever that the approach of such a doomed cloud to a supermassive black hole has been observed and it is expected to break up completely during 2013.

So this is where it all boils down to, huh? A magnificent thing, being devoured into darkness. It’s frightening to think that maybe someday, somehow, this image will be how it will all end.

Perhaps, it could be our most symbolic ending: the brightness of the enlightened, fading away, getting sucked in, going deeper and deeper into a downwards spiral of the unknown. All our lives, memories, the very fact of our existence, left questionable with everything erased, as we get swallowed by the black abyss of nothingness.

It’s as if we never existed. It’s as if nothing ever were.

(Source: demoncolbert)


http://www.psychofactz.com/
The twitter page posts accurate WWII facts on the date and time they occurred. They claim to do so for the next six years. They have over 200,000 followers and tweet every couple of hours. To date they have sent out 1,773 tweets about WWII 1940.

Link to the said twitter account, please? Anyone?

http://www.psychofactz.com/

The twitter page posts accurate WWII facts on the date and time they occurred. They claim to do so for the next six years. They have over 200,000 followers and tweet every couple of hours. To date they have sent out 1,773 tweets about WWII 1940.

Link to the said twitter account, please? Anyone?

(via thatfunnyblog)

tyleroakley:

Before you defend Chris Brown, let alone support him, read the police report of what happened between him and Rihanna in 2009.

(via itscandidlycara)

thedailywhat:

Dress Code Violation of the Day: Brigham Young University student Brittany Molina thought she was getting a love note when a fellow student handed her a folded piece of paper while she was standing around the school’s Provo campus on Valentine’s Day.

I wonder if they have these in my college. Probably not. Or, if they did, I probably won’t get any… since my wardrobe is practically all jeans, shirts, sneakers and nothing more. Haha.

thedailywhat:

Dress Code Violation of the Day: Brigham Young University student Brittany Molina thought she was getting a love note when a fellow student handed her a folded piece of paper while she was standing around the school’s Provo campus on Valentine’s Day.

I wonder if they have these in my college. Probably not. Or, if they did, I probably won’t get any… since my wardrobe is practically all jeans, shirts, sneakers and nothing more. Haha.

Tagged with:  #Reblog  #Photo  #Text  #Link  #February  #2012  #College

90skidandcompany: So, listened to Cockiness and Birthday Cake for the first time...

Yeah, Rihanna, we get it. You love sex. You like guys biting your vagina. You sing about sucking penis(es). It’s your style. But you could at least act like your songs are really metaphors for serious issues like:

  • consumerism (”I love it / I love it / I love it when you eat it”)
  • the black market and illegal trading in Sierra Leone (Enter my diamond matrix / If you want my golden flower”)
  • authoritarianism (“I can be your dominatrix / Just submit to my every order”)
  • the French Revolution and Marie Antoinette (“He want that cake, cake, cake / cake, cake, cake, cake”)

Y’know.

I am a zombie, and it’s not so bad. I’m learning to live with it. I’m sorry I can’t properly introduce myself, but I don’t have a name anymore. Hardly any of us do. We forget them, like anniversaries and PIN numbers. I think mine might have started with a “T”, but I’m not sure. It’s funny, because back when I was alive, I was always forgetting other people’s names. I am finding that irony abounds in the zombie life, an ever-present punch line. But it’s hard to smile when your lips have rotted off.
Before I became a zombie, I think I was a businessman or  young professional of some kind. I think I worked in one of those stifling office jobs in a highrise somewhere. The clothes clinging to the remains of my body are high-quality business-casual. Fine gabardine slacks, silvery silk shirt, red Armani power tie. I would probably look pretty sharp if my intestines weren’t dragging at my feet. Ha.
We like to joke and speculate about our remaining outfits, since these final fashion choices are usually the only indication of who we were before we became no-one. Some people’s are less obvious than mine. Jeans and a white t-shirt. Skirt and a tanktop. So we make random guesses.
You were a plumber. You were a barista. Ring any bells?
It usually doesn’t.
No one I know has any specific memories. We recognize some things — buildings, cars, ties — but context eludes us. We are here, we do what we do. We lack excellent diction, but we can communicate. We grunt and groan, we make hand gestures, and sometimes a few words slip out. It’s not that different from before.
There are a few hundred of us living in a wide plain of dust outside some large city. We don’t need shelter or warmth, obviously. We stand around in the dust, and time passes. I think we’ve been here for a long time. Despite my dragging entrails, I am in decay’s early stages, but there are a few elderly ones here who are little more than skeletons with clinging bits of muscle. Somehow, it still extends and contracts, and they keep moving. I have never seen any of us “die” of old age. Maybe we live forever, I don’t know. I don’t think much about the future anymore. That’s something that’s very different from before. When I was alive, the future was all I thought about. Obsessed about. Death has relaxed me.
But it makes me sad that we’ve forgotten our names. Out of everything, this seems to me the most tragic. I don’t miss my own, but I mourn for everyone else’s, because I want to love them, but I don’t know who they are.
 
Today a group of us are going into town to find some food. How this expedition begins is one of us gets hungry and starts shuffling toward town, and a few others follow him. Focused thought is a rare occurrence with us, and we follow it when we see it. Otherwise we would just be standing around groaning. We do a lot of standing around groaning, and it’s frustrating sometimes. Years pass this way. The flesh withers on our bones, and we stand around, waiting for it. I am curious how old I might be.
The city where the people live is not that far. We arrive around noon and start looking for living flesh. The new kind of hunger is a strange feeling. You don’t feel it in your stomach -  of course not, since some of us don’t even have stomachs. You feel it just…everywhere. You start to feel “more dead”. I’ve watched some of my friends go back to being full-dead, when food is scarce. They just slow down, and stop, and become corpses again. I don’t really understand it.
I guess the world has mostly ended, because the cities we wander through are decaying as fast as we are. Buildings are collapsed. Dead, rusted cars fill the streets. All glass everywhere is shattered. I don’t know if there was a war, or a plague, or if it was just us. Maybe it was all three. I don’t know. I don’t think about things like that anymore.
In a cluster of broken down apartment buildings we find some people, and we eat them. Some of them have weapons, and as usual we lose some of our number, but we don’t care. Why would we care? What’s death, now?
Eating is not a pleasant business. I chew off a man’s arm, and I hate this, it’s disgusting. I hate his screams, because I don’t like pain, I don’t like to hurt things, but this is the world now, this is what we do. Of course, if I don’t eat all of him, if I leave enough, he’ll rise up and follow me back to our dusty field outside the city, and that might make me feel better. I’ll introduce him to everyone, and maybe we’ll stand around and groan for a while. It’s hard to say what “friends” are anymore, but maybe that’s close. If I don’t eat all of him, if I leave enough…
 But of course I don’t leave enough. I eat his brain, because that’s the good part. That’s the part that, when I swallow it, makes my head light up with feelings. Clear memories. For about three to ten seconds, depending on the person, I get to feel alive. I get traces of delicious meals, beautiful music, perfume, sunsets, orgasms, life. Then it fades, and I get up and stumble out of the city, still dead, but feeling a little less so. Feeling ok.
I don’t know why we have to eat people. I don’t understand what chewing off a man’s neck accomplishes. We certainly don’t digest the meat and absorb the nutrients. My stomach is a rotted bag of dried bile, useless. We don’t digest, we just eat until the weight forces it out our ass holes, and then we eat more. It feels so useless, and yet it keeps us walking. I don’t know why. None of us really understand why we are the way we are. We don’t know if we’re the result of some kind of global infection, or some ancient curse, or something even more senseless. We don’t talk about it much. Existential debate is not a major part of zombie life. We are here, and we do things. We are simple. It’s nice sometimes.
Outside the city again, back with the others in the dust field, I start walking in a circle for no reason. I plant one foot in the dirt and pivot on it, around and around, kicking up clouds of dust. Before, when I was alive, I could never have done this. I remember stress. I remember bills and deadlines, Asset Retention Reports. I remember being so occupied, so always, everywhere, all the time occupied. Now I’m just standing in a wide-open field of dust, walking in a circle. The world has been distilled. Being dead is easy.
After a few days of this, I stop walking, and I stand still, swaying back and forth and groaning a little. I don’t know why I groan. I’m not in pain, and I’m not sad. I think it’s just air being squeezed in and out of my lungs. When my lungs decompose, it will probably stop. And now, while swaying and groaning, I notice a dead woman standing a few feet away from me, facing the distant mountains. She doesn’t sway or groan, her head just lolls from side to side. I like that about her, that she doesn’t sway or groan. I walk over and stand beside her. I wheeze some kind of greeting, and she responds with a lurch of her shoulder.
I like her. I reach out and touch her hair. She has not been dead very long. Her skin is grey and her eyes slightly sunken, but she has no exposed bones or organs. Her death outfit is a black skirt and a snug white button-up. I suspect she used to be a waitress.
Pinned to her chest is a silver nametag.
I can read her name. She has a name.
Her name is Emily.
I point to her chest. Slowly, with great effort, I say, “Em..ily.” The word rolls off what’s left of my tongue like honey. What a good name. I feel warm saying it.
Emily’s cloudy eyes widen at the sound, and she smiles. I also smile, and then maybe I’m a little nervous because my femur snaps and I fall backwards into the dust. Emily just laughs, and it’s a choked, raw, lovely sound. She reaches down and helps me to my feet.
Emily and I have fallen in love.
I’m not sure how this happens. I remember what love was like before, and this is different. This is simpler. Before, there were complex emotional and biological factors at work. We had long checklists and elaborate tests to be passed. We looked at hairstyles and careers and breast sizes. And sex was there, in everything, confusing everyone, like hunger. It created longing, it created ambition, competition, it drove people to leave their houses and invent automobiles, space craft, and atom bombs when they could instead just sit on the couch until they died. Animal cravings. Subconscious urges. Sex made the world go ‘round.
This is all gone now. Sex, once a force as universal as gravity, is now irrelevant. Ambition and longing have left the equation. My penis fell off two weeks ago.
So the equation is deleted, the blackboard erased, and things are different now. Our actions have no ulterior motives. We shuffle around in the dust and occasionally have lumbering, grunted exchanges with our peers. No one argues. There are no fights, ever.
And Emily is not a complicated process. I just see her, and walk over to her, and for no reason, really, I decide I want to be with her for a long time. So now we shuffle around in the dusttogether instead of alone. For whatever reason, we enjoy each other’s company. When we have to go into town to eat people, we do it at separate times, because it’s unpleasant, and we don’t want to share that. But we share everything else, and it’s nice.
We decide to walk to the mountains. It takes us three days, but now we are standing on a cliff looking up at a fat white moon. At our backs, the night sky is red from distant cities burning, but we don’t care about that. I clumsily grab Emily’s hand, and we stare at the moon.
 There’s no real reason for any of this, but like I said, the world has been distilled. Love has been distilled. Everything is easy now. Yesterday my leg broke off, and I don’t even mind.
By Isaac Marion
End

I am a zombie, and it’s not so bad. I’m learning to live with it. I’m sorry I can’t properly introduce myself, but I don’t have a name anymore. Hardly any of us do. We forget them, like anniversaries and PIN numbers. I think mine might have started with a “T”, but I’m not sure. It’s funny, because back when I was alive, I was always forgetting other people’s names. I am finding that irony abounds in the zombie life, an ever-present punch line. But it’s hard to smile when your lips have rotted off.

Before I became a zombie, I think I was a businessman or  young professional of some kind. I think I worked in one of those stifling office jobs in a highrise somewhere. The clothes clinging to the remains of my body are high-quality business-casual. Fine gabardine slacks, silvery silk shirt, red Armani power tie. I would probably look pretty sharp if my intestines weren’t dragging at my feet. Ha.

We like to joke and speculate about our remaining outfits, since these final fashion choices are usually the only indication of who we were before we became no-one. Some people’s are less obvious than mine. Jeans and a white t-shirt. Skirt and a tanktop. So we make random guesses.

You were a plumber. You were a barista. Ring any bells?

It usually doesn’t.

No one I know has any specific memories. We recognize some things — buildings, cars, ties — but context eludes us. We are here, we do what we do. We lack excellent diction, but we can communicate. We grunt and groan, we make hand gestures, and sometimes a few words slip out. It’s not that different from before.

There are a few hundred of us living in a wide plain of dust outside some large city. We don’t need shelter or warmth, obviously. We stand around in the dust, and time passes. I think we’ve been here for a long time. Despite my dragging entrails, I am in decay’s early stages, but there are a few elderly ones here who are little more than skeletons with clinging bits of muscle. Somehow, it still extends and contracts, and they keep moving. I have never seen any of us “die” of old age. Maybe we live forever, I don’t know. I don’t think much about the future anymore. That’s something that’s very different from before. When I was alive, the future was all I thought about. Obsessed about. Death has relaxed me.

But it makes me sad that we’ve forgotten our names. Out of everything, this seems to me the most tragic. I don’t miss my own, but I mourn for everyone else’s, because I want to love them, but I don’t know who they are.

 

Today a group of us are going into town to find some food. How this expedition begins is one of us gets hungry and starts shuffling toward town, and a few others follow him. Focused thought is a rare occurrence with us, and we follow it when we see it. Otherwise we would just be standing around groaning. We do a lot of standing around groaning, and it’s frustrating sometimes. Years pass this way. The flesh withers on our bones, and we stand around, waiting for it. I am curious how old I might be.

The city where the people live is not that far. We arrive around noon and start looking for living flesh. The new kind of hunger is a strange feeling. You don’t feel it in your stomach -  of course not, since some of us don’t even have stomachs. You feel it just…everywhere. You start to feel “more dead”. I’ve watched some of my friends go back to being full-dead, when food is scarce. They just slow down, and stop, and become corpses again. I don’t really understand it.

I guess the world has mostly ended, because the cities we wander through are decaying as fast as we are. Buildings are collapsed. Dead, rusted cars fill the streets. All glass everywhere is shattered. I don’t know if there was a war, or a plague, or if it was just us. Maybe it was all three. I don’t know. I don’t think about things like that anymore.

In a cluster of broken down apartment buildings we find some people, and we eat them. Some of them have weapons, and as usual we lose some of our number, but we don’t care. Why would we care? What’s death, now?

Eating is not a pleasant business. I chew off a man’s arm, and I hate this, it’s disgusting. I hate his screams, because I don’t like pain, I don’t like to hurt things, but this is the world now, this is what we do. Of course, if I don’t eat all of him, if I leave enough, he’ll rise up and follow me back to our dusty field outside the city, and that might make me feel better. I’ll introduce him to everyone, and maybe we’ll stand around and groan for a while. It’s hard to say what “friends” are anymore, but maybe that’s close. If I don’t eat all of him, if I leave enough…

 But of course I don’t leave enough. I eat his brain, because that’s the good part. That’s the part that, when I swallow it, makes my head light up with feelings. Clear memories. For about three to ten seconds, depending on the person, I get to feel alive. I get traces of delicious meals, beautiful music, perfume, sunsets, orgasms, life. Then it fades, and I get up and stumble out of the city, still dead, but feeling a little less so. Feeling ok.

I don’t know why we have to eat people. I don’t understand what chewing off a man’s neck accomplishes. We certainly don’t digest the meat and absorb the nutrients. My stomach is a rotted bag of dried bile, useless. We don’t digest, we just eat until the weight forces it out our ass holes, and then we eat more. It feels so useless, and yet it keeps us walking. I don’t know why. None of us really understand why we are the way we are. We don’t know if we’re the result of some kind of global infection, or some ancient curse, or something even more senseless. We don’t talk about it much. Existential debate is not a major part of zombie life. We are here, and we do things. We are simple. It’s nice sometimes.

Outside the city again, back with the others in the dust field, I start walking in a circle for no reason. I plant one foot in the dirt and pivot on it, around and around, kicking up clouds of dust. Before, when I was alive, I could never have done this. I remember stress. I remember bills and deadlines, Asset Retention Reports. I remember being so occupied, so always, everywhere, all the time occupied. Now I’m just standing in a wide-open field of dust, walking in a circle. The world has been distilled. Being dead is easy.

After a few days of this, I stop walking, and I stand still, swaying back and forth and groaning a little. I don’t know why I groan. I’m not in pain, and I’m not sad. I think it’s just air being squeezed in and out of my lungs. When my lungs decompose, it will probably stop. And now, while swaying and groaning, I notice a dead woman standing a few feet away from me, facing the distant mountains. She doesn’t sway or groan, her head just lolls from side to side. I like that about her, that she doesn’t sway or groan. I walk over and stand beside her. I wheeze some kind of greeting, and she responds with a lurch of her shoulder.

I like her. I reach out and touch her hair. She has not been dead very long. Her skin is grey and her eyes slightly sunken, but she has no exposed bones or organs. Her death outfit is a black skirt and a snug white button-up. I suspect she used to be a waitress.

Pinned to her chest is a silver nametag.

I can read her name. She has a name.

Her name is Emily.

I point to her chest. Slowly, with great effort, I say, “Em..ily.” The word rolls off what’s left of my tongue like honey. What a good name. I feel warm saying it.

Emily’s cloudy eyes widen at the sound, and she smiles. I also smile, and then maybe I’m a little nervous because my femur snaps and I fall backwards into the dust. Emily just laughs, and it’s a choked, raw, lovely sound. She reaches down and helps me to my feet.

Emily and I have fallen in love.

I’m not sure how this happens. I remember what love was like before, and this is different. This is simpler. Before, there were complex emotional and biological factors at work. We had long checklists and elaborate tests to be passed. We looked at hairstyles and careers and breast sizes. And sex was there, in everything, confusing everyone, like hunger. It created longing, it created ambition, competition, it drove people to leave their houses and invent automobiles, space craft, and atom bombs when they could instead just sit on the couch until they died. Animal cravings. Subconscious urges. Sex made the world go ‘round.

This is all gone now. Sex, once a force as universal as gravity, is now irrelevant. Ambition and longing have left the equation. My penis fell off two weeks ago.

So the equation is deleted, the blackboard erased, and things are different now. Our actions have no ulterior motives. We shuffle around in the dust and occasionally have lumbering, grunted exchanges with our peers. No one argues. There are no fights, ever.

And Emily is not a complicated process. I just see her, and walk over to her, and for no reason, really, I decide I want to be with her for a long time. So now we shuffle around in the dusttogether instead of alone. For whatever reason, we enjoy each other’s company. When we have to go into town to eat people, we do it at separate times, because it’s unpleasant, and we don’t want to share that. But we share everything else, and it’s nice.

We decide to walk to the mountains. It takes us three days, but now we are standing on a cliff looking up at a fat white moon. At our backs, the night sky is red from distant cities burning, but we don’t care about that. I clumsily grab Emily’s hand, and we stare at the moon.

 There’s no real reason for any of this, but like I said, the world has been distilled. Love has been distilled. Everything is easy now. Yesterday my leg broke off, and I don’t even mind.

By Isaac Marion

End

Tagged with:  #Photo  #Text  #Link  #Love  #February  #2012

Every (bad) crowd has a silver lining

  • When I was in college, I used to work in the cafeteria. On this day, two girls are making fun of a third.
  • (Mean) Girl #1: Oooooh, a hamburger? So much for that diet.
  • (Mean) Girl #2: Are you kidding? She’s never been on a diet in her life!
  • The third girl who they are talking to is, for the record, very nice looking.
  • Girl #3: *Taken aback* I…I worked out today. I need the protein.
  • Me: Come on, leave her alone. She can eat whatever she wants!
  • Mean Girl #1: Yeah, I guess you don’t have to worry about what you eat if you’re already fat and ugly!
  • One of my coworkers has been listening from a distance. He walks over, looks all three girls up and down, and then turns to the third.
  • Coworker: Excuse me, miss, but do you think I could get your phone number?
  • Girl #3: Are you serious?
  • Coworker: Completely! Who wouldn’t want a date with a beautiful girl who knows how to take care of herself?
  • This was five years ago. I’m going to be the best man at their wedding.

What is love?

Love is a slow kiss goodnight

It is anticipation.

Love is an imperfection in yourself not bothering you.

It is acceptance.

Love is passing up an opportunity because the time isn’t right yet.

It is patience.

Love is a back massage that starts above the hairline and ends around the innersoles.

It is exploration.

Love is not having to say, “Let’s make love”, because you know what the other person wants.

It is understanding.

Love is being given an honest chance to say no when you thought you were committed.

It is consideration.

Love is saying the perfect phrase to make a solemn embrace dissolve into giggles.

It is humor.

Love is being told, “Stop and I’ll kill you”.

It is desire.

Love is reviewing the damage to your living room and realizing personal effects are strewn in a clockwise pattern from the front door to the bedroom.

It is abandonment.

Love is seeing what your lover really looks like for the first time.

It is truth.

Love is knowing what time it is and not caring.

It is joy.

Love is the arms around you tightening their embrace.

It is ecstasy.

Love is telling a person, if you have to leave, you will let them sleep, and being told they would rather be awakened.

It is tenderness.

Love is waking up to find the subject of the dream you were having asleep on your shoulder.

It is where fantasy meets reality.

Love is being there to wake your lover… slowly.

It is sensuousness.

Love is belatedly knowing why you bought a king size bed three years ago.

It is practicality.

Love is two people only taking up a third of a king size bed.

It is closeness.

Love is knowing you gave the extra set of keys to the right person.

It is trust.

Love is saying goodbye and knowing you will be back by mutual consent.

It is faith.

Love is stretching your arms and discovering the real meaning of the word “sore”.

It is a lesson in human fragility.

Love is opening your medicine cabinet and finding your toothpaste turned into a pretzel.

It is adaptation.

Love is sitting at the window, looking out, and remembering who you were with the night before.

It is reflection.

Love is hearing the weather forecast for a winter storm, and wishing you could spend it in bed with your lover.

It is loneliness.

Love is stories that will never be told.

It is personal.

Heather Powers


(Source: healingeagle.net)

3 months ago

Tagged with:  #Text  #Link  #Love  #E  #February  #2012

I’ve learned

I’ve learned that you cannot make someone love you.
All you can do is be someone who can be loved. 
The rest is up to them.
I’ve learned that no matter how much I care, 
some people just don’t care back.
And it’s not the end of the world.
I’ve learned that it takes years to build up trust, 
and only seconds to destroy it.
I’ve learned that it’s not what you have in your life, 
but who you have in your life that counts.
I’ve learned that you can get by on charm for about fifteen minutes.
After that, you’d better know something.

I’ve learned that you shouldn’t compare yourself 
to the best others can do, 
but to the best you can do.
I’ve learned that it’s not what happens to people,
It’s what they do about it.
I’ve learned that no matter how thin you slice it, 
there are always two sides.
I’ve learned that you should always leave loved ones with loving words. 
It may be the last time you see them.
I’ve learned that you can keep going
long after you think you can’t.

I’ve learned that heroes are the people who do what has to be done
When it needs to be done
regardless of the consequences.
I’ve learned that there are people who love you dearly, 
but just don’t know how to show it.
I’ve learned that sometimes when I’m angry I have the right to be angry,
but that doesn’t give me the right to be cruel.
I’ve learned that true friendship continues to grow even over the longest distance.
Same goes for true love.
I’ve learned that just because someone doesn’t love you the way you want them to 
doesn’t mean they don’t love you with all they have.

I’ve learned that no matter how good a friend is,
they’re going to hurt you every once in a while
and you must forgive them for that.
I’ve learned that it isn’t always enough to be forgiven by others.
Sometimes you have to learn to forgive yourself.
I’ve learned that no matter how bad your heart is broken,
the world doesn’t stop for your grief.
I’ve learned that our background and circumstances may have influenced who we are, 
but we are responsible for who we become.
I’ve learned that just because two people argue, it doesn’t mean that they don’t love each other.
And just because they don’t argue, it doesn’t mean they do.

I’ve learned that sometimes you have to put the individual
ahead of their actions.
I’ve learned that two people can look at the exact same thing
and see something totally different.
I’ve learned that no matter the consequences,
those who are honest with themselves get farther in life.
I’ve learned that your life can be changed in a matter of hours
by people who don’t even know you.
I’ve learned that even when you think you have no more to give,
when a friend cries out to you,
you will find the strength to help.

I’ve learned that writing,
as well as talking,
can ease emotional pains.
I’ve learned that the people you care most about in life
are taken from you too soon.
I’ve learned that it’s hard to determine where to draw the line between being nice
and not hurting people’s feelings and standing up for what you believe.
I’ve learned to love
and be loved.
I’ve learned…

Omer B. Washington

(Source: thylacineslair.com)

3 months ago 2 notes

Tagged with:  #Text  #Link  #Quote  #February  #2012  #E

6 Extremely Rare National Animals

mentalflossr:

Here are six of the coolest, strangest, and most endangered animals repping countries today.

Tagged with:  #Photo  #Quote  #Link  #January  #2012
Tagged with:  #Photo  #Quote  #Link  #January  #2012
Tagged with:  #Photo  #Quote  #Link  #January  #2012
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