Bumble Bees and Honey Trees |
I am what you see, and what you make an effort to see. I find the most beauty in words and images.. so see through my eyes. |
(via thewastedgeneration)
(via 4doors)
(Source: tumblr.com, via 4doors)
(Source: tumblr.com, via zeroing)
Because you used to feel like nothing would matter anymore,
and if you were gone it wouldn’t really matter either.
Because you took the courage to realize that that was all wrong,
and because you made so much progress.
Because you were beautiful, you did so good, they were all so proud.
And especially because you were happy, and everyone knew.
Because everyone remembered how hard you tried to be happy and how incredibly hard it was,
even though it’s a silly thing. They remembered.
They just wanted to know if you could do it all over again,
because some people don’t make the same mistake twice.
Some people make the same mistake five or six times to make sure it’s all right,
and you’re left to pick it up every time.
You’re left to pick yourself up.
(Source: tumblr.com)
I like the times that Gary talks about my childhood epilepsy and how it could secretly mean that I can see the future. Even though it’s silly it makes me imagine a world where I’M FAMOUS.
…. Or whatever that would mean. Famous/Freak/WHATEVER.
#tootiredtofunction
(via thewastedgeneration)
Two years ago, Judy Gelles was volunteering at an inner city public school and was assigned to a fourth-grade class. The school was as diverse as they come with children from African American, Hispanic and Asian immigrants. After several months of helping the students with their reading skills, she felt the need to connect with them on a deeper level. Mostly, she wanted to find out their stories.
She asked each student the following three questions:
Whom do they live with?
What do they wish for?
What do they worry about?
The project turned out to be an eye-opening experience. “Their stories seemed to capture the gamut of societal issues that we face today; violence, immigration, the demise of the nuclear family, global hunger, and the impact of the media and popular culture,” she tells us. “The gray fortress door of the school became a blank slate for their words. Since the student is not be facing the camera, he or she remains anonymous. The words and images become more universal, rather than specific to that particular student.”
(via 4doors)
(via liquidtime)
(Source: spiritualinspiration, via raeana)
(via raeana)
Anonymous asked: i love you
Hold me.
The Big Man of Columbine.
(Source: chemenlavi, via gamer-barbie)
Rachel’s Challenge: A Columbine Legacy
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Here’s one that’s particularly affecting:
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