that heavy love

thatfunnyblog:

Funny Stuff you like?

(Source: thecuntiestcunt, via gallowsofgelatinousgoo)

We can’t jump off bridges anymore because our iPhones will get ruined. We can’t take skinny dips in the ocean, because there’s no service on the beach and adventures aren’t real unless they’re on Instagram. Technology has doomed the spontaneity of adventure and we’re helping destroy it every time we Google, check-in, and hashtag.
Jeremy Glass, We Can’t Get Lost Any more  (via wryer)

(Source: her0inchic, via wryer)

gallowsofgelatinousgoo:

This album cover would have been better.. thanks photoshop

gallowsofgelatinousgoo:

This album cover would have been better.. thanks photoshop

(via gallowsofgelatinousgoo)

Breaking News: FDA makes morning-after pill available for girls 15 and older without prescription

breakingnews:

NBC News: U.S. regulators on Tuesday approved Plan B One-Step emergency contraception for sale to girls and women ages 15 and older without a prescription and on store shelves instead of behind pharmacy counters, Food and Drug Administration officials announced.

The move, which grants an…

good:

Starting a New Tradition: Georgia Students Hold School’s First-Ever Integrated Prom- Liz Dwyer wrote in Education, Race and Georgia

A group of high school seniors at Wilcox County High School in rural south Georgia made history this past weekend by bucking their community’s longstanding tradition of racially segregated proms—yes, one prom for white teens and one for black teens. Indeed, thanks to the inspiring students behind the Integrated Prom movement, for the first time ever, black and white students in the community dressed up and danced the night away together.
How does a community get around having a prom that’s open to everyone without violating any civil rights laws? Easy. You just don’t let the school sponsor it. After the courts integrated the schools in the area, proms became private, invite-only events. White parents began raising funds for an all-white senior prom, leaving black families with no choice but to follow suit and host proms for their children.
Yes, this still goes on on 2013, and not just in this town, either. And yes, some white Wilcox students still attended the all-white only prom. But as you can see from the video above, what happens when students say they’ve had enough and take action is truly inspiring.

good:

Starting a New Tradition: Georgia Students Hold School’s First-Ever Integrated Prom
Liz Dwyer wrote in Education, Race and Georgia

A group of high school seniors at Wilcox County High School in rural south Georgia made history this past weekend by bucking their community’s longstanding tradition of racially segregated proms—yes, one prom for white teens and one for black teens. Indeed, thanks to the inspiring students behind the Integrated Prom movement, for the first time ever, black and white students in the community dressed up and danced the night away together.

How does a community get around having a prom that’s open to everyone without violating any civil rights laws? Easy. You just don’t let the school sponsor it. After the courts integrated the schools in the area, proms became private, invite-only events. White parents began raising funds for an all-white senior prom, leaving black families with no choice but to follow suit and host proms for their children.

Yes, this still goes on on 2013, and not just in this town, either. And yes, some white Wilcox students still attended the all-white only prom. But as you can see from the video above, what happens when students say they’ve had enough and take action is truly inspiring.

petoskeyarea:

73 degrees at sunset in the Petoskey Area - oh, yes! http://on.fb.me/ZkK60w

petoskeyarea:

73 degrees at sunset in the Petoskey Area - oh, yes! http://on.fb.me/ZkK60w

One writes of scars healed, a loose parallel to the pathology of the skin, but there is no such thing in the life of an individual. There are open wounds, shrunk sometimes to the size of a pin-prick but wounds still. The marks of suffering are more comparable to the loss of a finger, or of the sight of an eye. We may not miss them, either, for one minute in a year, but if we should there is nothing to be done about it.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night (via larmoyante)

(via scribnerbooks)

oberstingwithconor:

milkfloat:

RED RED WINE

this is literally me rn

oberstingwithconor:

milkfloat:

RED RED WINE

this is literally me rn

(Source: sodomyy)

I once had a real-life encounter with a poet at four a.m. in a Las Vegas Denny’s. He leaned over the back of his booth, made some awkward introduction, and began reciting lines from a wrinkled paper about the haunting sound wind makes or some nonsense. This encounter gave me an acute poet-phobia that lasted for years.
Patrick Wensink, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Poets” (via millionsmillions)

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Minimalist Quotation Print, Ryan McArthur