Look up!

Take every chance.
Drop every fear.
There’s nothing like fighting.
"I have a reason."

Ask me anything.

Archive

RSS

Theme
  1. iamsolucid:

    “Most of us learn early on to think of love as a feeling. When we feel drawn to someone, we cathect with them; that is, we invest feelings or emotion in them. That process of investment wherein a loved one becomes important to us is called ‘cathexis.’ In his book [M. Scott] Peck rightly emphasizes that most of us ‘confuse cathecting with loving.’ We all know how often individuals feeling connected to someone through the process of cathecting insist that they love the other person even if they are hurting or neglecting them. Since their feeling is that of cathexis, they insist that what they feel is love. When we understand love as the will to nurture our own and another’s spiritual growth, it becomes clear that we cannot claim to love if we are hurtful and abusive. Love and abuse cannot coexist. Abuse and neglect are, by definition, the opposities of nurturance and care.”

    — bell hooks, All About Love: New Visions (via owning-my-truth)

  2. (Source: extramadness, via extramadness)

  3. shesnake:

    Kim Tae-ri for Dazed Korea, December 2018

  4. liluchihahurt:

    Anyways… we’ve let europeans get away with pretentious definitions of whats good cinema for far too long.

    (via shesnake)

  5. clashing-plaids:

    image
    image
    image
    image
    image
    image

    YO THEY DIDN’T EVEN TRY LMAOOOOO

    LOOOLL everyone go watch his bit about a horse loose in a hospital it is gold

  6. aphotovici:

    okcupidescapades:

    okcupidescapades:

    i feel like the most important piece of wisdom i can impart on teenagers is that no one–no one–knows what the fuck they’re doing

    my brother is 26 years old, makes $200k a year, and just bought a house with his fiance. he’s the success story you hear about but never actually meet in person, but it all happened by accident. he wanted to go to college for clarinet performance, but he got rejected from all the top schools. so he decided to major in physics instead, and then went on to get a doctorate to put off being an adult for a few more years. but then he ended up dropping out halfway through the program and accepting a job with google as a software engineer. so to reiterate: my brother majored in something he was not interested in, and then he got a job that had nothing to do with his degree. 

    he isn’t successful because he had some master plan he followed, he just stumbled around blindly until something worked out. and that’s what we’re all doing–i majored in political science and now i do customer service for a company that makes industrial-sized gas detection monitors. the marketing director at my company has a degree in biology, and my mom has an MBA and works at a middle school.  no one knows what they’re doing, we’re all just trying different things until something works out.

    so if you don’t have a plan, that’s fine. most of us don’t. and even those of us who do, don’t usually end up doing the thing they thought they would. it’s okay to relax and let life carry you wherever it’s gonna carry you. because even though a lot of us don’t end up doing the thing we wanted, most of us end up happy anyway.

    I’ve been thinking about this post since I made it a few hours ago, and I realized that I literally don’t know anyone who’s doing what they thought they’d be doing at this point in their life.
    I know a girl that has a degree in neuroscience and works in a restaurant (and makes quite a bit more money than I do, might I add), and a guy who wanted to be a parole officer but is now a security guard. I know people who wanted to be lawyers but ended up not having the grades for law school. I have a friend who’s 24 and just finished her bachelor’s, and two friends who decided to go to grad school because the idea of joining the adult world terrified them.

    When I was seventeen, I was 100% sure that I was going to get a job as a bureaucrat and save the world. When I was a 21-year-old recent college grad, I found out that it’s impossible to get a government job unless you know someone. So I gave up and found something else. I know my teenage self would be disappointed if she could see where I’m at, but you know what? I don’t care. Because teenage me was an idiot. She didn’t know anything about the world or how it worked, and she couldn’t have possibly predicted the curveballs that life would throw at her. And because I don’t know a single person who’s doing the thing they wanted to do when they were teenagers.

    I know a thousand people who aren’t where they thought they’d be, and zero people who are following the path they set out for themselves. All of us are confused and all of us are scared, and it’s okay if you are too.

    Honestly thank u, i needed to hear this again

    (via edmundofthewest)

  7. sickboywolfgang:
“ @TessaThompson_x as Detroit in #SorryToBotherYou
” sickboywolfgang:
“ @TessaThompson_x as Detroit in #SorryToBotherYou
”
    High Resolution
  8. maisonderriere:

    The Onion’s review of Mamma Mia 2 is the only one I need

    (via shesnake)

  9. brookbooh:

    The perfect aesthetic

  10. michaelwwilson-blog:

    Decent fog around the suburbs of Perth this morning. June, 2018.

    (via shesnake)