thedahlingdarling replied to your post: Hey, does anybody have recommendations for a…

If I find an affordable one I will send it your way. I’m actually making my own and it only cost me about 20 for the materials, I can send you the article tonight when I get home. Also double sports bras work with less risk of damage to your organs.

Cool, thanks! 

Hey, does anybody have recommendations for a relatively inexpensive, good quality binder? I’ve never bought one before and a lot comes up on Google. 

6/10 favorite quotes - Big damn heroes, sir.

(Source: imrollingmyeyes)

queensummers:

Anya Christina Emanuella Jenkins, twenty years old. Born on the fourth of July, and don’t think there weren’t jokes about that my whole life, mister, ‘cause there were. “Who’s our little patriot?” they’d say, when I was younger, and therefore smaller and shorter than I am now.

captorihardlyknowher:

stravaganza:

chasing-snitches-in-the-tardis:

hungarian:

if there’s a watermelon there should be an earthmelon, a firemelon, & an airmelon

The Four Elemelons.

Avatar: The Last Melonbender.

image

I AM MELONLORD

When was super depressed, I wasn’t working—I was always too depressed. Hemingway did his best work when he didn’t drink, then he drank himself to death and blew his head off with a shotgun. Someone asked John Cheever, “What’d you learn from Hemingway?” and he said “I learned not to blow my head off with a shotgun.” I remember going to the Michigan poetry festival, meeting Etheridge Knight there and Robert Creeley. Creeley was so drunk—he was reading and he only had one eye, of course, and had to hold his book like two inches from his face using his one good eye. But you look at somebody like George Saunders—I think he’s the best short story writer in English alive—that’s somebody who tries very hard to live a sane, alert life.

You’re present when you’re not drinking a fifth of Jack Daniel’s every day. It’s probably better for your writing career, you know? I think being tortured as a virtue is a kind of antiquated sense of what it is to be an artist.

In an interview with The FixMary Karr debunks the toxic mythology that it is necessary to be damaged in order to be creative. My own vehement defiance to that mythology is what led me to choose Ray Bradbury – the ultimate epitome of creating from joy rather than suffering – as the subject of my contribution to The New York Times’ The Lives They Lived.

Pair with Karr on why writers write.

(via explore-blog)

(Source: )

Be back before dawn.

(Source: marlayouliar)

crowleyscuddlebuddy:

Jo Harvelle & Rufus Turner
"Jo, listen to me. You know I'm gonna do everything I can. 
Your mom's gonna be okay."

cloysterbell:

I’m sure this has been done a thousand times, but I don’t care. 

Last panel stolen lovingly from Kate Beaton