“Someday” and “one of these days” should vanish from your vocabulary. If something is worth seeing, hearing or doing, go and see, hear or do it now.
@2 days ago with 4 notesYou know how much I’d love to live in the moment. As if it were that easy.
My name is Erin. 19 years old, aspiring author, bisexual, pro-choice, egalitarian, agnostic theist, INFJ. The Legend of Zelda series is pretty much my favourite thing ever. :D Other things I like include cats, Florence + the Machine, House of Leaves, The Vampire Diaries (TV show as well as book series), Silent Hill, the Slenderman mythos, poutine, and other odd things.
I also have severe social anxiety, but I'm always willing to talk to new people on here, so come say hi if you want. <3
@2 days ago with 4 notesYou know how much I’d love to live in the moment. As if it were that easy.
PEOPLE ARE COMPLAINING ABOUT AGGRESSIVE BEES BEING CALLED AFRICANIZED BEES WHEN THERE ARE LITERALLY HUMAN BEINGS BEING BURNT ALIVE IN KENYA FOR BEING WITCHES.
TUMBLR
THIS IS AN INTERVENTION
LEAVE
NOW
(via socialjustinope)
@2 days ago with 180 notesIf I Were A Banned Book
If I were a banned book, I’d be the dirty bits and the heaving breasts and the twisted sheets and the scented oils and the chains and rope and dripping candle wax. I would coax you into multiples, and I would urge you to invite another. I’d be the empty bottle of gin on the kitchen table. I’d promise to call, but never would.
If I were a banned book, I’d tell you to challenge authority and question everything and demand answers. I’d tell you that the 1 percent is nothing without the rest of us labeling the 1 percent the 1 percent. I’d teach you to cook anarchy and embrace diversity and kiss your same-gender lover in public.
If I were a banned book, I’d let you ask me about sex and growing up, and I’d sing the caged-bird songs, and I’d be each of the nobodies who would answer to the name nobody. I’d teach you to sail a raft and swim against tides and dance in towns where dances aren’t danced.
If I were a banned book, I’d be the light on long-past midnight in your attic, and I’d be the cauldron around which dance witches and in which fire burns and toil and trouble doubles.
If I were a banned book, I’d bring flowers to the grave of a mouse and I’d teach you that forever sometimes means forever and sometimes means less than forever but always means what forever will mean to you, then, at that moment.
If I were a banned book, I’d be the secrets you write in your diary and I’d be the lies you write in your diary and I’d be the truths that you wish weren’t truths that you write in your diary.
If I were a banned book, I’d be cupboards and wardrobes and the hidden door under a stairwell in which lives the boy who lived. I’d be beanstalks and magic shoes and godmothers, winged and otherwise. I’d be potion poultice poetry. I’d be words wings wizardry.
If I were a banned book, I’d dance with insects outside of an enormous peach, and I’d race wolves in woods overgrown with ivy and snow. I’d be the substitute teacher who’d let you smoke cigarettes outside. I’d be the comic book hidden behind your history book.
If I were a banned book, I’d urge you to go ask Alice, and wrinkle time, and ride in talking cars. Everyday, I’d crown a new king fly-lord, and everyday would be a good day to say goodbye to something.
If I were a banned book, I’d be the Pigman and I’d be a Wallflower and I’d be the story of Sleeping Beauty, written under a penname. I’d kill mockingbirds and I’d talk about the things we talk about when we talk about things like death and love and sex and forever, which, as I already would have taught you, sometimes means less than forever but always mean what forever will mean to you, then, at that moment.
"(via neverfeedthesarcophagi)
“Please don’t talk about him in front of me” “Why? He’s changed for the better!”
Marguerite Gérard (1761-1837), Motherhood (Detail)
Oil on canvas, 1815-1820
Musée des beaux-arts, Lyon
(Source: professionnal, via snowwhiteseviltwin)