skuhll:

ah i love this picture

skuhll:

ah i love this picture

(Source: c8tlinm, via freskai)

aliasvaughn:

breatheinsync:

I’m here for Tony in plaid, now and then!

Damn.

Must always reblog.

(via beaucoupjolie-deactivated201305)

beaucoupjolie:

agent-355:

Casual reminder that this was an Actual Thing that actually aired on Cartoon Network.

IT’S BAAAAAACK~

(via beaucoupjolie-deactivated201305)

p0ndorica:

it really pisses me off how people who are good at maths/science/history/etc are seen as the intelligent ones and will go far in life but also seen as the “boring” ones, but writers and artistic/creative people are seen as the interesting and talented ones but also unintelligent and doomed to be unsuccessful like shit bro how the fuck do any of us win 

(via beaucoupjolie-deactivated201305)

Stop comparing where you’re at with where everyone else is. It doesn’t move you farther ahead, improve your situation, or help you find peace. It just feeds your shame, fuels your feelings of inadequacy, and ultimately, it keeps you stuck. The reality is that there is no one correct path in life. Everyone has their own unique journey. A path that’s right for someone else won’t necessarily be a path that’s right for you. And that’s okay. Your journey isn’t right or wrong, or good or bad. It’s just different. Your life isn’t meant to look like anyone else’s because you aren’t like anyone else. You’re a person all your own with a unique set of goals, obstacles, dreams, and needs. So stop comparing, and start living. You may not have ended up where you intended to go. But trust, for once, that you have ended up where you needed to be. Trust that you are in the right place at the right time. Trust that your life is enough. Trust that you are enough.

—Daniell Koepke   (via moriarty)

(Source: internal-acceptance-movement, via beaucoupjolie-deactivated201305)

“My mother fought cancer for almost a decade and died at 56. She held out long enough to meet the first of her grandchildren and to hold them in her arms. But my other children will never have the chance to know her and experience how loving and gracious she was. I decided to be proactive and to minimize the risk as much I could. I made a decision to have a preventive double mastectomy.

Life comes with many challenges. The ones that should not scare us are the ones we can take on and take control of” - My Medical Choice by Angelina Jolie, New York Times (14 May, 2013)

(via beaucoupjolie-deactivated201305)

NIGHTNIGHT by DEDDY

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