Don’t listen to the haters. I care about your spotify wrapped.
(via grizzlybairparty)
just...really gay || TX || 24 || they/them www.granolamulletgarbage.WordPress.com
Don’t listen to the haters. I care about your spotify wrapped.
(via grizzlybairparty)
artists please divorce yourself from the internet attention machine and focus on becoming weirder and having more fun instead of creating more engagement for corporate social media giants
(via captainpunchmerica)
When you become 20 something, you have to forgive yourself or you will never grow up. You have to forgive yourself for everything and learn from it.
(via waves-of-time)
Sometimes as a woman it’s important for you to wake up late and be alone in the house on a cloudy cold day with your feelings.
(via smalleared)
Richard Siken, Boot Theory // Frank Bidart, The War of Vaslav Nijinsky // astralcorbozo on TikTok // Mary Herbert, A Long Time in the Desert // Dan Deacon, When I Was Done Dying
(via waves-of-time)
Anonymous asked:
Remember when you'd turn on the radio and almost always Poker Face was playing
peanutpalace-deactivated2023011 Answer:
Back when God was still listening
these images of sandra oh in the 90’s/early 00’s live in my mind rent free
hey god it’s me again
(via skincareroutine)
“Two thousand years ago, Aristotle wondered why the great poets, philosophers, artists, and politicians often have melancholic personalities. His question was based on the ancient belief that the human body contains four humors, or liquid substances, each corresponding to a different temperament: melancholic (sad), sanguine (happy), choleric (aggressive), and phlegmatic (calm). […] But Aristotle’s question never went away; it can’t. There’s some mysterious property in melancholy, something essential. Plato had it, and so did Rumi, so did Charles Darwin, Abraham Lincoln, Maya Angelou, Nina Simone … Leonard Cohen. But what, exactly, did they have? I’ve spent years researching this question, following a centuries-old trail laid by artists, writers, contemplatives, and wisdom traditions from all over the world. […] And I’ve concluded that bittersweetness is not, as we tend to think, just a momentary feeling or event. It’s also a quiet force, a way of being, a storied tradition–as dramatically overlooked as it is brimming with human potential. It’s an authentic and elevating response to the problem of being alive in a deeply flawed yet stubbornly beautiful world.”— Susan Cain, from Bittersweet: How Sorrow and Longing Make Us Whole (Crown, 2022)
(via littleoases)