Has It Ever Really Gone Wrong?

You're young, You're beautiful, Everything is going to be just fine

26,088 notes

happyhealthyhopeful:

mystracarlile:

tbskyen:

nekomcevil:

Cat replying at the meowing mobile.

My heart! It sounds so concerned, like “are you in there, tiny cat? Why aren’t you coming out of there?”

It is so adorable.

I think that ringtone is a kitten calling for it’s mom. Our cat used to do something similar every time kittens came on the TV and started meowing - she’d come running into the room like: “BABIES?! Ohmygod, babies? Where are they? Are they okay? Are they my babies? Babies?”

my cat hissed, scratched the hell out of my lap, and ran away

i guess she doesn’t have any motherly instincts

I just played this and my cat woke up and started sniffing my computer and meowing at it no joke omg

(Source: youtube.com)

65 notes

chinosaurus:

Pros of long hair:
It’s pretty
You can do a lot with it
You’re usually warm

Cons:
Your hair takes 2 years to dry
It takes forever to straighten or curl
Usually have split ends
You’re hot in the summer and your hair sticks to your neck
You always lay on it
You get it caught in desks/other furniture
It’s easily tangled
When you make out, they lay on it somehow
When you make out your hair gets in your/their face
You find hair in your mouth
You find hair all over clothes

Make that “You find hair everywhere, all the time, and so do your closest friends and family.”

(Source: dracarrrys, via melamarg)

97,920 notes

It turns out procrastination is not typically a function of laziness, apathy or work ethic as it is often regarded to be. It’s a neurotic self-defense behavior that develops to protect a person’s sense of self-worth.

You see, procrastinators tend to be people who have, for whatever reason, developed to perceive an unusually strong association between their performance and their value as a person. This makes failure or criticism disproportionately painful, which leads naturally to hesitancy when it comes to the prospect of doing anything that reflects their ability — which is pretty much everything.

But in real life, you can’t avoid doing things. We have to earn a living, do our taxes, have difficult conversations sometimes. Human life requires confronting uncertainty and risk, so pressure mounts. Procrastination gives a person a temporary hit of relief from this pressure of “having to do” things, which is a self-rewarding behavior. So it continues and becomes the normal way to respond to these pressures.

Particularly prone to serious procrastination problems are children who grew up with unusually high expectations placed on them. Their older siblings may have been high achievers, leaving big shoes to fill, or their parents may have had neurotic and inhuman expectations of their own, or else they exhibited exceptional talents early on, and thereafter “average” performances were met with concern and suspicion from parents and teachers.

David Cain, “Procrastination Is Not Laziness” (via pawneeparksdepartment)

oh.

(via sapphicslut)

Is it alright that the more I read the more I thought this guy was describing my life? I know i need to fix my procrastination, but it’s interesting to think that some people understand some of where I’m coming from. 

(via thesweepea)