Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow...

Tomorrow we'll go on an adventure and tomorrow we'll face obstacles and tomorrow we'll dream together, and when we've gone they'll tell our stories and we'll forever live on in the dreams of beings to come.

- Dwelling in Possibility

(title from Macbeth-5.5.22)
~ Wednesday, February 17 ~
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startorialist:

One more dress to for today’s Valentino love fest! I managed to download these images from farfetch before the dress sold out (tears…) so I guess now I can just day dream about it without the damage to my non-existent savings.  Thanks, Universe. 

Le sigh.

- Summer


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~ Wednesday, December 30 ~
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pale-dandelion:

Everyone: You’re too old for Disney movies
Me: image


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kittykatexxl:

harryandcarrison:

The trio became inseparable–Ford and Fisher particularly so. Whenever anyone couldn’t find Harrison, you’d say, “Have you tried Carrie Fisher’s changing room?”

Stop
Drop
Roll me into a volcano


13,206 notes
reblogged via surelyisadream
~ Friday, December 25 ~
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best-buffy-lines:

image
image

Amends, 3.10


110 notes
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~ Wednesday, November 18 ~
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Tags: i reblog because I laughed
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petitengel:

thegoldenlocketgirl:

alllteensrelate:

trust:

noblehumor:

honeynipple:

noblehumor:

hbunot:

bragged:

earloffabulousness:

When i was little i wanted to grow up to be a disney princess but im pretty sure i just became Yzma 

image

This is my life

Where’s my Kronk!?


1,046,744 notes
reblogged via petitengel
~ Sunday, November 8 ~
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dereksabiston:
“Nikolai Lutohin
”

dereksabiston:

Nikolai Lutohin


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reblogged via n-a-sa
~ Sunday, September 6 ~
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sagansense:

hydrogeneportfolio:

The complete ‘Women Who Changed Science - And The World" collection in honor of the 95th Women’s Equality Day.

Purchase Here!

#WomenInScience


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reblogged via mindblowingscience
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I’m an English major. It is a language of conquest.

What does it say that I’m mastering the same language that was used to make my mother feel inferior? Growing up, I had a white friend who used to laugh whenever my mother spoke English, amused by the way she rolled her r’s. My sister and I tease Mami about her accent too, but it’s different when we do it, or is it? The echoes of colonization linger in my voice. The weapons of the death squads that pushed my mother out of El Salvador were U.S.-funded. When Nixon promised, “We’re going to smash him!” it was said in his native tongue, and when the Chilean president he smashed used his last words to promise, “Long live Chile!” it was said in his. And when my family told me the story of my grandfather’s arrest by the dictatorship that followed, my grandfather stayed silent, and meeting his eyes, I cried, understanding that there were no words big enough for loss.

English is a language of conquest. I benefit from its richness, but I’m not exempt from its limitations. I am ‘that girl’ in your English classes, the one who is tired of talking about dead white dudes. But I’m still complicit with the system, reading nineteenth-century British literature to graduate.

Diversity in my high school and college English literature courses is too often reduced to a month, week, or day where the author of the book is seen as the narrator of the novel. The multiplicity of U.S. minority voices is palatably packaged into a singular representation for our consumption. I read Junot Díaz and now I understand not only the Dominican-American experience, but what it means to be Latina/o in America. Jhumpa Lahiri inspired me to study abroad in India. Sherman Alexie calls himself an Indian, so now it’s ok for me to call all Indians that, too. We will read Toni Morrison’s Beloved to understand the horrors of slavery, but we won’t watch her takedowns on white supremacy.

Even the English courses that analyze race and diasporas in meaningful ways are still limited by the time constraints of the semester. Reading Shakespeare is required, but reading Paolo Javier and Mónica de la Torre is extra credit. My Experimental Minority Writing class is cross-listed at the most difficult level, as a 400-level course in the Africana Studies, Latina/o Studies, and American Studies departments, but in my English department, it is listed as a 300-level. I am reminded of Orwellian democracy: All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.

— Monica Torres, “Majoring In English,” The Feminist Wire 3/29/13 (via racialicious)

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~ Thursday, September 3 ~
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reblogged via cup-o-teatay
~ Wednesday, August 26 ~
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vibesofamoonchild:
“ bl-ossomed:
“ “We met at the wrong time. That’s what I keep telling myself anyway. Maybe one day years from now, we’ll meet in a coffee shop in a far away city somewhere and we could give it another shot.”
Eternal Sunshine of the...

vibesofamoonchild:

bl-ossomed:

“We met at the wrong time. That’s what I keep telling myself anyway. Maybe one day years from now, we’ll meet in a coffee shop in a far away city somewhere and we could give it another shot.”
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)

:(


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~ Tuesday, August 25 ~
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myuniverse137:

Yes yes yes


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~ Sunday, August 23 ~
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(Source: loganslaugh)

Tags: my brain on school
642,215 notes
reblogged via j-moriarty