Install this theme
animalcrossingwii:

I’m the mayor. Remove the cliff.

animalcrossingwii:

I’m the mayor. Remove the cliff.

princessjanecrocker:

kris0ten:

thearetical:

Death Buy Lemonade

too cute

Am i the only one who saw that coming?

girljanitor:

randomproxy:

donotchoosesidesyet:

Sir Reginald Wiggly

/SCREAMS FOREVER

I see your knitted octopus and raise you a needle-felted squid

image

YESSSSSS

I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox

and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast

Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold

This Is Just To Say, William Carlos Williams (via casinpanties)

candicedionysus:

This is literally my most favorite scene in any anime, ever.

Teen Titans Theme Song by Hi Hi Puffy Ami Yumi from the album: Teen Titans

droptehbass113:

lie-a-dream:

ca-ca-ca-ca-canyahstahp:

glamstructed:

versoseprosa:

Teen Titans Theme Song

Left Ear: Japanese, Right Ear: English

image

image

I’m not that much of a Teen Titans guy but gosh this is really cool

SCREEEEEEEECH

come back on my blog 

this.

medacris:

Haruhara Haruko: Forever the Best.

medacris:

Haruhara Haruko: Forever the Best.

toastradamus:

I refuse to die until I see either sentient robots, first contact, virtual reality or all three

I will keep myself alive via pure spite and vitriol until I’m 300 years old

We praise people for being “naturally” smart, too, “naturally” athletic, and etc. But studies continue to show, as they have for some time now, that it is generally healthier to praise schoolchildren for being hardworking, than for being naturally gifted. We know now that to emphasize a child’s inherent ability places pressure on that child to continue to be accidentally talented, which is something that is hard for anyone to control. When the children who are applauded for their natural skills fail, they are shown to take the failure very personally. After all, the process of their success has always seemed mysterious and basic and inseparable from the rest of their identity, so it must be they who are failing as whole people. When students are instead complimented and rewarded for their effort and improvement, they tend to not be so hard on themselves. When they fail, they reason, “Well, I’ll work harder next time.” They learn that they are capable of success, rather than constantly automatically deserving of it, and they learn simultaneously that they are bigger and more complex than their individual successes or failures.
Kate of Eat the Damn Cake, The Stupidity of “Natural” Beauty (x)