(Source: meiji-choco, via gorogoroiu)

ieromcdougall:

paramore + color palette.

(via 26paramore)

heynowaimee:

still funny

(via unsounded)

dancingontiptoes:

Kate Beckett has been one of the most influential and important characters to ever grace my screen. She has given me so much courage in dealing with my mental illness and made me feel like I wasn’t weak or a bad person because of it. She has shown me that it is okay to ask for help and that you do not need to always be perfect and alright in order to be loved. Kate Beckett has shown me what it means to be a strong woman and that you do not have to choose between love, family and a career. Kate Beckett has shown me how to grow up to be a woman and how to make my way in life and that even though you may stumble and make bad choices, you can always find your solid ground again. For this I am incredibly grateful and beyond sad to hear about today’s news. Thank you Kate Beckett for everything you have been. 

(via youremyalways47)

(via unsounded)

stanakattic:

“I don’t believe in weak woman. I believe woman in general are pretty powerful beings.”

(via youremyalways47)

dulect:

“you’re old enough to pay for your own things”

image

image

(via unsounded)

stability:
“ true love
”

stability:

true love

(via unsounded)

beexception:

Some paramore lockscreens coz I am trash (=゚ω゚)ノ

(via hayleywgilbert-deactivated20181)

freckledlightskin:

Napping together is an important part of a relationship

(via comparingmeerkats)

diabolical-mastermind:

maskedlinguist:

rale:

it’s kinda cool how our generation has created actual tone in the way we write online. like whether we: write properly with perfect grammar, shrthnd everythin, use capitals to emphasise The Point, use extra letters or characters for emotion!!!!!, and much more - it means we can have casual conversations, effectively make jokes using things like sarcasm that’s usually hard to understand without context and much more. this “incorrect English” has really opened avenues of online conversation that isn’t accessible with “correct English” which is pretty interesting

#this is why attempts by the media to portray online communication by “’‘millenials”“ really frustrate me #because there are Rules okay #like see that’s different to saying ’'there are rules” (tags via @soaringsparrows)

My class and I literally taught some of the nuances of this to our english teacher, things such as the difference between “yes” and “yes.” or “..” and “…”. It makes perfect sense linguistically that we would create this complexity to ease communication in a medium without body language and tone, but what my teacher was really floored about was that none of this had ever “learned” it, we’re “native speakers” of a whole new type of english.

(via comparingmeerkats)