• astronomypartners:

    my mom just yelled from our kitchen “SHE SHOULD HAVE ENDED UP WITH BENJAMIN” like join the club mom

  • After that second season, I want to go on stage, dressed in a black cocktail dress with pearls, and rant about that ending

  • mughler:

    i wonder where i’ll be this time next year

    (via thesilentandthehopeful)

  • aidashakur:

    S/O to myself fr because this year wasn’t easy at all.

    (via thesilentandthehopeful)

  • ziraseal:

    saintblackhat:

    Inspired @connorsquarter ‘s post

    I feel like I’m playing the most suspenseful moment of a Bioshock game and this is the audio recording I’ve found in the bottom of a trash can

    (via estrojenn)

  • luxembourgroyals:

    Sam Hoevenaar had an exclusive conversation with Grand Duchess Maria Teresa of Luxembourg during a visit to The Hague || November 28, 2018.

  • redlipstickresurrected:

    Thomas Ruckstuhl (German, b. 1969, Mannheim, Germany) - Day In Day Out Paintings: Oil

    (Source: thomasruckstuhl.com, via garrulus)

  • If you’re old enough to remember it, you just lost The Game.

    wildnoutinwildemount:

    witchaj:

    proncus:

    nerdtistheword:

    raggedyanndy:

    image


    I have no idea what’s going on here

    Back in the early aughts, when many millenials were in high school, before Facebook and Youtube, The Game began. No one knows who started it, but the moment we learned we were playing it, we began to lose. The goal of The Game is to forget you are playing The Game for as long as possible. The rules of The Game are as follows: Everyone is always playing The Game all the time; at school, during breakfast, at night when you are asleep, etc. The Game never ends. The moment you remember that you are playing The Game, you lose and must immediately announce to those around you, “I just lost The Game!” thus making them remember they are also playing The Game and causing them to lose as well. Upon losing, you begin The Game again. Sometimes players could go weeks or months without losing, sometimes only minutes. At the height of The Game’s popularity, it became common to see people at events such as Comic Con or midnight movie premieres, wearing t-shirts proclaiming “You just lost The Game!” Once they were noticed, groans and shouts of “Fuck you!” could be heard for miles. These people thrived on the chaos, taking great pleasure in the cries of their victims. Most people eventually grew bored of The Game, and many began to claim they won by choosing not to care about it anymore. Some rely on a particular XKCD comic strip or Tumblr post to lend a sense of legitimacy to their feeling of victory. They are fools. It is impossible to win The Game. There is only losing. Only a few diehards remain loyal to the rules. The drop in popularity has allowed many to keep from losing The Game for years at a time. The growth of social media has caused a minor resurgence, although without the satisfaction of real time auditory feedback when causing others to lose, The Game will likely fade back into obscurity once again. Someday when we are old and gray, our grandchildren will innocently ask us to play a game of checkers, and we will shriek and shout until the whole nursing home joins us in defeat. Death is the only release from The Game.

    Millennials have always been pretty nihilistic lol.

    (Source: rainnecassidy, via kid-with-the-bullet-soul)

  • yellowsweater-wonwoo:

    Movies were invented just for the world to see Astrid telling Michael it was not her job to make him feel like a man

  • whereiseefashion:

    WISF x MET Gala ✨ Part 2/2

    Lana Del Rey, Ariana Grande, Kate Bosworth, Gigi Hadid, Cardi B attending the 2018 MET Gala in New York.

    (Updating with full credits as soon as possible! First part here)

  • whereiseefashion:

    WISF x MET Gala ✨ Part ½

    Zendaya, Lily Collins, Stella Maxwell, SZA, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley attending the 2018 MET Gala in New York.

    (I will update with full credits as soon as possible! Second part here)

    (via whereiseefashion)

  • master-painters:

    From Birth till Death

    La Vierge au Lys - 1899 and Pieta - 1876 - William Bouguereau

    (via garrulus)