Post reblogged from ☾ An Introvert in an Extroverted World with 115,448 notes
and if yes, I will reply with the story :))))))
Source: megan-hansenn
Photoset reblogged from ☾ An Introvert in an Extroverted World with 16,323 notes
Source: Flickr / alexkrook
immagoat asked: It's definitely worth it! Good luck
Thanks! I’m going to catch up on this week’s Hannibal then dive right in!
Post reblogged from The Hyena's Den with 9 notes
It’s one of those lazy Saturday mornings with nothing goin’ on, one of those mornings when finally getting around to something feels so right.
Supernatural, Season 1: Ep1
I’m ready.
Tell me everyone, what should I know? what should I be prepared for? is it worth it?
Ohhhh, Philip.
Good luck.
And yes, it’s probably worth it. Just don’t get too attached to…well…anyone! And you should be fine.
:)
Source: authorphilip
Post with 9 notes
It’s one of those lazy Saturday mornings with nothing goin’ on, one of those mornings when finally getting around to something feels so right.
Supernatural, Season 1: Ep1
I’m ready.
Tell me everyone, what should I know? what should I be prepared for? is it worth it?
Photo reblogged from I think what you do is amazing with 252,454 notes
One night President Obama and his wife Michelle decided to do something out of routine and go for a casual dinner at a restaurant that wasn’t too luxurious. When they were seated, the owner of the restaurant asked the President’s Secret Service if he could please speak to the First Lady in private. They obliged and Michelle had a conversation with the owner. Following this conversation President Obama asked Michelle, “Why was he so interested in talking to you?” She mentioned that in her teenage years, he had been madly in love with her. President Obama then said, “So if you had married him, you would now be the owner of this lovely restaurant,” to which Michelle responded, “No. If I had married him, he would now be the President.”
get it girl
z snap
oh snap!
BAM!
Source: lvmrsmn
Photo reblogged from The Paris Review with 243 notes
“Although a novel takes place in the larger world, there’s always some drive in it that is entirely personal—even if you don’t know it while you’re doing it. I realized some years after A Book of Common Prayer was finished that it was about my anticipating Quintana’s growing up. I wrote it around 1975, so she would have been nine, but I was already anticipating separation and actually working through that ahead of time. So novels are also about things you’re afraid you can’t deal with.”
Joan Didion in her bedroom, from issue 176, Spring 2006.
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