»


12 minutes ago
5,422 notes

tinababeh:

I want to get lost here.

14 minutes ago
3,283 notes

@VeronicaRoth: @realjohngreen Oh no! You left your Gus & Hazel in Chicago!

@VeronicaRoth: @realjohngreen Oh no! You left your Gus & Hazel in Chicago!

15 minutes ago
83,392 notes

thefaultinourscarves:

hmuifyoureblack:

hmuifyoureblack:

i’m flipping a coin

heads ill do my homework

tails i wont

it was heads but im going to pretend it was tails

this sums up my entire life

15 minutes ago
117,303 notes

how the fuck are some people so attractive how does dna do that why doesn’t mine do that how do i make it do that what’s the html code where’s the youtube tutorial

franky fitzgerald fashiongasm  series six

16 minutes ago
5,768 notes
mayorbelle:

waiting-for-the-tardis:

IS THAT TEN

THAT’S NOT JUST TEN
THAT’S THE LIBRARY

mayorbelle:

waiting-for-the-tardis:

IS THAT TEN

THAT’S NOT JUST TEN

THAT’S THE LIBRARY

16 minutes ago
26,648 notes

that one song that starts playing and you recognize it immediately and you just

image

17 minutes ago
29,750 notes
stfuprolifers:

kor71:

If you think abortions ok, remember what Horton says.

Awkward. Dr. Seuss and his wife were really liberal and pro-choice. They’ve even threatened to sue pro-life organizations for using this quote the wrong way (the way you’re doing it actually). I guess you didn’t already know that Horton Hears a Who is about the American occupation of Japan post-WWII. He even dedicated it to his dear Japanese friend.
Mrs. Geisel (Mrs. Seuss) continued donating to Planned Parenthood and advocating for reproductive health and rights after her husband died.

stfuprolifers:

kor71:

If you think abortions ok, remember what Horton says.

Awkward. Dr. Seuss and his wife were really liberal and pro-choice. They’ve even threatened to sue pro-life organizations for using this quote the wrong way (the way you’re doing it actually). I guess you didn’t already know that Horton Hears a Who is about the American occupation of Japan post-WWII. He even dedicated it to his dear Japanese friend.

Mrs. Geisel (Mrs. Seuss) continued donating to Planned Parenthood and advocating for reproductive health and rights after her husband died.

image

It almost contradicts itself,” she says after a moment. “It’s as if there is love and loss at the same time, together in a kind of beautiful pain.
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern (via aaadonta)
51 minutes ago
1,202 notes
(c) T H E M E