1992andbeyond

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apomakrysmenophobia

everyonesmiles:

n. fear that your connections with people are ultimately shallow, that although your relationships feel congenial at the time, an audit of your life would produce an emotional safety deposit box of low-interest holdings and uninvested windfall profits, which will indicate you were never really at risk of joy, sacrifice or loss.

(Source: dictionaryofobscuresorrows, via tesiento)

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Corinne Bailey Rae: Seasons Change

my new theme song


So, let’s say that “theoretically,” I really like you, and “theoretically,” even though it sounds moronically cliché and overused, you give me butterflies. And, just for kicks , let’s add that—all in theory of course— you may be one of the most wonderful people I have ever met. and hypothetically, my heart beats ten times faster when I see you. Do you think that you would suppossedly (and in the most theoretical sense) feel the same way?

I just think this is funny.

(Source: boootyluv, via ohhheybeautiful)

Sometimes you climb out of bed in the morning and you think, I’m not going to make it, but you laugh inside — remembering all the times you’ve felt that way. Charles Bukowski (via pythons)

(via skysignal)

skysignal:

Photograph by Stephen Alvarez.

Skulls rest atop an inscription revealing the original resting place of some of the first of the six million residents of the Paris catacombs: the Cemetery of the Innocents. The cemetery, which sat at what is now Les Halles in central Paris, was emptied between 1786 and 1788; up to a thousand years of human remains were dumped into an old quarry. The bones from other cemeteries soon followed. Some of France’s greatest luminaries, including Rabelais and Robespierre, are believed to lie somewhere in the massive ossuary.

skysignal:

Photograph by Stephen Alvarez.

Skulls rest atop an inscription revealing the original resting place of some of the first of the six million residents of the Paris catacombs: the Cemetery of the Innocents. The cemetery, which sat at what is now Les Halles in central Paris, was emptied between 1786 and 1788; up to a thousand years of human remains were dumped into an old quarry. The bones from other cemeteries soon followed. Some of France’s greatest luminaries, including Rabelais and Robespierre, are believed to lie somewhere in the massive ossuary.