HeadCase Study
zodiacsociety:

Cancerians are very dependable, mood swings and all. They are caring and understanding when they themselves are understood. Others also feel safe and secure around them because of their protective quality.

zodiacsociety:

Cancerians are very dependable, mood swings and all. They are caring and understanding when they themselves are understood. Others also feel safe and secure around them because of their protective quality.

marshalmouse:

octopickles:

BRING ME SOLO AND THE SPRINKLES.

I SAID WOOKIE. NOT COOKIE.
but since you brought it…

marshalmouse:

octopickles:

BRING ME SOLO AND THE SPRINKLES.

I SAID WOOKIE. NOT COOKIE.

but since you brought it…

staygold91:

I tried Yoga for the first time today. During the last few poses, I just started openly weeping. To anyone who knows me, you know that this is ridiculously rare. While I was talking to the instructor afterwards, I starting crying again for no reason. He smiled kindly at me and…

I cry a lot when I practice. I’ve been practicing yoga for about 5 years and it’s become a way for me to release an immense amount of pain that I’ve carried with me. I’ve had a very tough road to travel, and yoga is something that helps me manage. :)

littleblondethoughts:

new bathing suit!

LOL I’M A BIOTECH MAJOR NOW
panchromaticrhythm:

emergentfutures:

The Next Time Someone Says the Internet Killed Reading Books, Show Them This Chart
“Remember the good old days when everyone read really good books, like, maybe in the post-war years when everyone appreciated a good use of the semi-colon? Everyone’s favorite book was by Faulkner or Woolf or Roth. We were a civilized civilization. This was before the Internet and cable television, and so people had these, like, wholly different desires and attention spans. They just craved, craved, craved the erudition and cultivation of our literary kings and queens. Well, that time never existed. Check out these stats from Gallup surveys. In 1957, not even a quarter of Americans were reading a book or novel. By 2005, that number had shot up to 47 percent. I couldn’t find a more recent number, but I think it’s fair to say that reading probably hasn’t declined to the horrific levels of the 1950s.”
Full Story: The Atlantic

FUCK YEAH INTERNET

panchromaticrhythm:

emergentfutures:

The Next Time Someone Says the Internet Killed Reading Books, Show Them This Chart

“Remember the good old days when everyone read really good books, like, maybe in the post-war years when everyone appreciated a good use of the semi-colon? Everyone’s favorite book was by Faulkner or Woolf or Roth. We were a civilized civilization. This was before the Internet and cable television, and so people had these, like, wholly different desires and attention spans. They just craved, craved, craved the erudition and cultivation of our literary kings and queens. 

Well, that time never existed. Check out these stats from Gallup surveys. In 1957, not even a quarter of Americans were reading a book or novel. By 2005, that number had shot up to 47 percent. I couldn’t find a more recent number, but I think it’s fair to say that reading probably hasn’t declined to the horrific levels of the 1950s.”

Full Story: The Atlantic

FUCK YEAH INTERNET