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24

Sep

May you fall in love with someone who loves the flame in your eyes so much, that you grow to love them too.
Maybe my soul is too old,
maybe it remembers leaving twine
along the walls of lovers so that I
could find my way out again,
I have never known young love,
the feeling of being consumed.
I hope to never lose myself in the maze
of someone else’s heart,
for if I did, I know
there is a Minotaur waiting
and only recently have I realized
I am too important to disappear
in the mindless destruction that is love.
King Minos, do you remember leaving me? || O.L. (via chlorinecoveredgirl)

20

Oct

miaalyse96:

“…people who have redefined what it means to be beautiful, to be sexy, to be a leading woman, to be black…” -Viola Davis

Representation: It matters.
Thank you ladies, thank you so much.

10

Oct

triliv:
“caseykaui:
“ My last bike ride in amsterdam, after afternoons in the city, it was always magic ending the evening riding through the northern countryside and falling asleep on the farm. I will be back.
” ”

triliv:

caseykaui:

My last bike ride in amsterdam, after afternoons in the city, it was always magic ending the evening riding through the northern countryside and falling asleep on the farm. I will be back.

~

landmarks-of-the-universe:

ohhjenesuispas:

I will reblog this every time.

Literally this.

(Source: youtube.com)

enchant-r:

sprousetwinsblog:

Cole Sprouse aka Milo Thatch

LOOK at him

huffingtonpost:

Bill Nye Debunks Anti-Abortion Logic With Science

That’s what Bill Nye has to say in his latest educational video, “Can We Stop Telling Women What to Do With Their Bodies?” In the video, which you can watch above, Nye explains how the idea of “life at conception” simply doesn’t make sense – because many more eggs are fertilized than become humans, due to factors like failure to attach to a woman’s uterine wall.

Watch the full video here. 

archatlas:

Urban Giants

Between 1928 and 1932, Western Union and AT&T Long Lines built two of the most advanced telecommunications buildings in the world, at 60 Hudson Street and 32 Avenue of the Americas in Lower Manhattan. Nearly a century later, they remain among the world’s finest Art Deco towers—and cornerstones of global communication. Urban Giants is a 9-minute filmic portrait of their birth and ongoing life, combining never-before-seen-construction footage, archival photographs and films, interviews with architectural and technology historians, and stunning contemporary cinematography.

See the full video (less than 10min) below: