“Maybe some girls aren’t meant to be tamed. Maybe they’re supposed to run wild until they find someone just as wild to run with.”
Love of the wild nature, and a heart as tenaciously soft as the ocean
(via daddyfuckedme)
better than getting to know a partner.
Two weeks ago I was thinking of becoming a diplomat and translator.
Last week I plunged into behavioral economics, applying psychology to account for the irrationality that cannot be explained by pure mathematical models.
This week, I’m giving creative writing a try, about all of my favorite songs for—sentimental purposes, while polishing my writing skills at the same time. YES!!
Applying to the school’s newspaper for Arts&Entertainment section, and I just might be able to go to concerts and travel and talk to people for fun and make a career living out of that.
Journalism maybe? Second Amy Tan?? (chuckling to myself so hard now with excitement)
PS: For those who don’t know the background of Amy Tan, she is a Chinese immigrant who never considers herself good at writing by her teachers, and didn’t do well on the SAT verbal section. Her story proves that it’s the creative thought that determines a good writer, skills come afterward.
Confidence booster
This is more than my heart can take.
(via wecouldonlywhisper)
Environmental Graffiti’s gallery Plumbing the Depths of the Largest Underwater Gypsum Cave on Earth is a fantastic look inside Russia’s Orda Cave.
Probably just a correlation… What do you guys think and why might this be true?
because your heart is on the right and it’d be intimate and protected by the person on other side?
(via psychology2010)
stop calling stop calling I don’t wanna hear anymore
you only want things you don’t deserve for
(Source: fckypym, via nirvikalpa-deactivated20130416)
which horny geologist named this mineral
Now I want a shirt that says ‘If you get with me you will be (Mg,Fe)7Si8O22(OH)2’
Originally I thought it could be a madeup mineral as anyone can edit wiki, then I read this “Cummingtonite was first discovered in 1824 near the town of Cummington, Massachusetts, and it is from this town that the mineral takes its name.”
(via thisdarkmark)