wayward-watson:

freyahere:

chibibuizel:

what’s worse

no wifi

or horribly slow wifi

it’s better to have loved and lost than never loved at all

it does not matter how slow you go as long as you do not stop

(via death-walked-the-earth)

lepanoramasurrealiste:

The Discovery of Fire. 1935. Rene Magritte.

(via eternas-platitudes)

chaboneobaiarroyoallende:

from Newcastle upon Tyne, England…VENOM

(via ratttlehead)

ohmyyesgothiclolita:

Atelier Pierrot

(via classicalrabbit)

o0torikago0o:

++Alice & the Pirates - Elizabethe~Bride of the death++

This dress is so elegant…love it! (●´∀`●) 

(via lolita-tips)

amexicanwithamustache:

motherstrickle:

partybarackisinthehousetonight:

do catholics fail trigonometry because they’re afraid of sin

do irish people fail trigonometry because they can’t tan

does everyone else fail trigonometry just cos

(via ms-behave)

"Perhaps my youth was too short for that, in which case, now in my forties, I still rejoice over its shortness with all my heart. That alone made it possible for me to have enough strength left to become conscious of the deprivations of my youth; further, to suffer through these deprivations; further, to reproach the past in all respects; and, finally, to have left a remnant of strength for myself."

Franz Kafka, Diaries

(Kafka was twenty-eight years old at the time.)

(Source: simpledoyle, via ataxie)

bleed-the-victim-dry:

cons of being a girl

  • period
  • ???PERIOD
  • bLOOD COMING OUT OF VAGINA
  • CHUNKS OF UTERUS COMING OUT OF VAGINA
  • not being able to fap on the second day of period
  • gotta shave/wax often
  • bleeding

pros of being a girl

  • being able to rub boobs whenever

immortal-ice:

scandinavian weather <3

(via deadrocker)

pbsthisdayinhistory:

June 19, 1964: The Senate Passes Civil Rights Act

On this day in 1964, the Senate passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The act was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on July 2. The landmark act barred discrimination based on race, color, religion, or national origin in public facilities — such as restaurants, theaters, or hotels. Discrimination in hiring practices was also outlawed. 

The Civil Rights Act paved the way for future anti-discrimination legislation, including the Voting Rights Act of 1965. 

To learn more about milestones in the Civil Rights Movement, visit Eyes on the Prize online.

 Photo: President Lyndon Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law. Martin Luther King, Jr. is among those looking on. (National Archives and Records Administration)

(via collectivehistory)

Thrash metal and constitutional law.

Good.