“It starts with the eyes. She’s gotta have those kind of eyes that can look right through the bullshit, to the good in someone. 20% angel, 80% devil. Down to earth. Ain’t afraid to get a little engine grease under her fingernails.”
I saw this and my heart just broke……
OF COURSE YOU’RE WELCOME YOU BEAUTIFUL HUMAN!
(Source: cookiesporn)
REBLOG THIS AND I’LL WRITE YOUR URL ON A PAPER AND PUT IT IN THIS JAR
I’ll bring this jar to the upcoming concerts I’m going to and let the band members pick a piece of paper, take a picture of them holding the URL and promo and post it on here.
MUST HAVE A GOOD TASTE IN MUSIC!
MUST BE FOLLOWING ME!
I swear to god that I’ll write them all down.
Reblog if you will gladly read about a 65 year old Harry still at Hogwarts playing bingo with Ron and Hermione.
Since JK Rowling thinks that no one will, I think it’s high time that we prove our queen wrong
Recap of BVB at the Golden Gods
(Source: bvbarmyuk)
(x)
(Source: bvbimagines)
Whatever happens, I will always ship them. And their children. Well if they get married then I wouldn’t ship their children…but they’re not. So therefore, I also ship their children.
OH MY GOD i didnt know i could love drake bell this much
(Source: unicornrainbows)
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The original story of the little mermaid is that she must kill the prince in order to be human, and in the end, she loves him too much and kills herself instead.
The artwork is too great not to reblog.
Ok, ok - important expansion: she only has to kill the Prince because the deal was if he fell in love with her she could be human forever, and he didn’t. By which I mean, he was a good person and genuinely nice to her, but he didn’t fall in love. He fell in love with someone else, also perfectly nice - not the seawitch in disguise, fu Disney. The Mermaid is told she can only return to the sea now if she kills the Prince. She goes into the room where he and his lover lie sleeping and they look so beautiful and happy together that she can’t do it.
That’s why she kills herself. And because it was a noble act she returns to sea as foam.
One moral of the story was that women shouldn’t fundamentally change who they are for love of a man, and in theory Han Christian Anderson wrote it for a ballerina with whom he fell in love. She was marrying someone else who wouldn’t let her dance.
I want this painted on my wall.
(Source: xxdardarxx)


