May 2012
234 posts
1 tag
May 31st
4,404 notes
2 tags
May 31st
752 notes
1 tag
May 31st
279 notes
1 tag
May 31st
113 notes
2 tags
May 31st
66 notes
2 tags
May 31st
197,649 notes
2 tags
May 31st
718 notes
1 tag
May 31st
11,226 notes
3 tags
May 31st
4,878 notes
2 tags
May 30th
54 notes
2 tags
May 30th
11,670 notes
4 tags
May 30th
8,030 notes
1 tag
May 30th
65 notes
3 tags
May 30th
115 notes
1 tag
May 30th
637 notes
2 tags
May 29th
57,166 notes
3 tags
May 29th
406,123 notes
1 tag
May 29th
1,005 notes
3 tags
May 29th
78 notes
2 tags
May 28th
45,460 notes
1 tag
May 28th
43 notes
2 tags
May 28th
3,274 notes
1 tag
May 28th
37 notes
1 tag
May 28th
39,815 notes
1 tag
May 26th
330 notes
4 tags
May 25th
941 notes
1 tag
May 25th
592 notes
1 tag
“Lost opportunities, lost possibilities, feelings we can never get back. That’s...”
– Haruki Murakami, Kafka on the Shore (via velsier)
May 25th
46 notes
1 tag
May 24th
2,189 notes
2 tags
May 24th
308 notes
2 tags
May 24th
4,406 notes
1 tag
May 24th
2,266 notes
1 tag
May 23rd
30 notes
4 tags
May 23rd
3,450 notes
3 tags
May 23rd
14,231 notes
1 tag
May 23rd
240 notes
degrassé
dictionaryofobscuresorrows: adj. entranced and unsettled by the vastness of the universe, experienced in a jolt of recognition that the night sky is not just a wallpaper but a deeply foreign ocean whose currents are steadily carrying off all other castaways, who share our predicament but are already well out of earshot—worlds and stars who would’ve been lost entirely except for the scrap of...
May 22nd
3,131 notes
4 tags
sonder
dictionaryofobscuresorrows: n. the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own—populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness—an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you’ll never know existed, in...
May 22nd
31,446 notes
2 tags
May 22nd
371 notes
3 tags
May 22nd
258 notes
1 tag
“To me, at least in retrospect, the really interesting question is why dullness...”
– David Foster Wallace, The Pale King (via caulfielding)
May 21st
1 note
5 tags
May 21st
205 notes
1 tag
May 21st
6,522 notes
2 tags
May 21st
817 notes
3 tags
May 21st
791 notes
2 tags
May 21st
8,552 notes
1 tag
May 21st
48 notes
3 tags
May 21st
1,836 notes
2 tags
May 21st
76,736 notes
2 tags
May 20th
222 notes