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Maya, 18, dreamer.


"There is always some madness in love
but there is always a reason for madness."

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are you under the same sky?
tenketsu said: Surprise beautiful person!! Once you receive this award, you must paste it into 8 people’s asks who deserve it. If you break the chain, nothing will happen, but it’s good to know someone thinks you’re beautiful inside and out <3

waaah thank you so much lovely :D

Posted 3 months ago

youwereinthewindofsummer:

I have been thinking about this for a while now…

but I might close this blog for good and transfer into another one.

I am still not sure when I will be moving but I think this is the best decision after everything that happened. 

Thank you to those wonderful people I met there and whom I am proud I can call friends, I love you all :)

If you want to follow me on the other blog send me an ask and I will tell you who I am and add you (if you haven´t already found out ;D)

Posted 4 months ago with 1,287 notes
avatarjuice / lady-stoneheart

I have been thinking about this for a while now…

but I might close this blog for good and transfer into another one.

I am still not sure when I will be moving but I think this is the best decision after everything that happened. 

Thank you to those wonderful people I met there and whom I am proud I can call friends, I love you all :)

If you want to follow me on the other blog send me an ask and I will tell you who I am and add you (if you haven´t already found out ;D)

Posted 4 months ago with 1 note

bleachlists:


As requested by various anons and also reira69. ;)


Man, I’ve gotten so many “Rukia butt” requests in the past couple of days! I think you guys are obsessed! I mean, I don’t blame you, because she has a great ass, but I figure I should post this before I drown in a sea of assks (get it?)!

So, Bleach characters, Rukia’s butt has now been seen. Your thoughts?


Byakuya: The noble Kuchiki ass is not a sight for peasants. I will have to kill anyone who had the ill fortune to see it.


Sentoki: Yeah…that’s gonna have to wait. You’re currently unconscious and mostly naked in the blood pool.


Byakuya:


Byakuya: I-I’m what?? DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHO I AM?!


Sentoki: Yeah. Too floaty.


Byakuya: ….I hate Squad 0.


Renji: Maaaan! I pick the WORST times to be unconscious!


Matsumoto: I always did say that Rukia’s butt was her best asset!


Hitsugaya: Y-you did not!


Matsumoto: Well….I was thinking it. Believe me.


Hisagi: Heh. Ass-et.


Matsumoto: Hey, yeah! I didn’t even mean to do that!


Kira: I-I could have been there….if only someone had remembered that I was injured too…


Kira: Man, my life sucks!


Kenpachi:
So she has a butt. I don’t see what the big deal is.


Kurotsuchi: You don’t understand. It was perfectly formed. Glistening. Shapely. Ample.


Kenpachi: It was a butt.


Kurotsuchi: So you really are a barbarian, then?


Yoruichi: Man oh man! What is it with Ichigo and naked ladies in hot springs?


Ukitake: I-I don’t think we should all be discussing my lieutenant’s….hind parts.


Kyoraku: There are like 30 fan clubs dedicated to it already, Ukitake. That ship has sailed.


Ishida: Please! Everyone knows that the finest ass on the show is MINE!


Chad: Is that why you’re always talking over your shoulder, Ishida? So that we look at your butt?


Ishida: ………maybe.


Orihime:
I-I think I should have been there with her! I was on the cover after all, in a towel! I was robbed!


Tatsuki: The world couldn’t handle the sexiness of you AND Rukia in a hot spring together, Orihime.


Orihime: I-I guess you’re right…


Ichigo:


Ichigo:


Ichigo:


Ichigo:


Ichigo:
p-peaches….


Hinamori: I, um, think you broke him, Rukia.


Rukia:


Rukia: I must use this power wisely.

Posted 5 months ago with 163 notes
bleachlists / bleachlists

Aiyyaa infinity: Meenakshi’s faces

Posted 5 months ago with 123 notes
kanave / kanave

housewifeswag:

iamrickyhoover:

nathansummers:

In 1961, Leonid Rogozov, 27, was the only surgeon in the Soviet Antarctic Expedition. During the expedition, he felt severe pain in the stomach and had a high fever. Rogozov examined himself and discovered that his appendix was inflamed and could burst at any time. With a local anesthesia, he operated himself to remove the appendix. An engineer and a meteorologist assisted surgery.

Like a boss

Fuck!

certified bad. ass.

Posted 5 months ago with 121,217 notes
the-cellardoor / auroralynne
ryanestradadotcom:


Do it wrong.
Cartoonists, writers, musicians, actors, filmmakers, we all get the same questions. And we all have boring, stock answers like ‘draw every day’ or ‘practice a lot’. Sometimes it’s because we don’t know what we did right. But the real reason is that every bit of advice we give you has an expiration date. The world of art is always changing. The things people like, the way those things are distributed and sold is always changing. By the time you put in all that practice to get good at what someone else told you is the way things are done, they aren’t done that way any more. The only sure way to become great at what you do is to break the rules. Not for the sake of being a rebel, but so that you can make something only you can make, in a way only you can make it. If you do something wrong well enough, it becomes the new right. So here are 5 steps in the right way to do it wrong.
STEP 1: Practice
To become a good artist:
Focus on making perfect art. Don’t show weakness. Use the tools that everyone else recommends. If you can’t draw hands, put them in pockets. If you can’t draw feet, crop them off the page. If you’re not very good at an instrument, play something easier. If you’re not knowledgable in a subject, write about something else.
To become a great artist:
Just make a bunch of crappy art. Do things wrong. Trust me, even the art you think is great, give it a few years and you’ll think it’s crap. So you might as well shoot for the moon. Grab tools that no one else has ever even imagined using, and see what happens. Draw everyone on horses even though you know the legs are going to come out all weird. Perform that long, flowery monologue you know you’re going to forget the words to. Film that science fiction epic even though the only creature effects you can afford are sticking Halloween stuff on your cat. Doing things you know you can’t do well so that you can do them later is the whole idea behind exercise.
STEP 2: Taking criticism
To become a good artist:
Show your only your best work to people you trust. Enjoy the praise, and ignore the haters.
To become a great artist:
Share your work with everyone, even the jerks. Put it online, show it to strangers. Show them the stuff you’re proud of, and the stuff you’re not sure of. When you show just your average art, people have nothing to say, so they just give you empty praise. But show them something that can be improved, and they’ll tell you about it. The stuff they tell you is gold. Don’t just be disappointed, write that crap on a post-it and put it above your desk. Think about it when you work. Each and every one of them gave you a free mini art lesson.  If they were dicks about it, that makes them a bad teacher, it doesn’t make you a bad artist. There’s a very good chance that they are wrong. But thinking about what they said, and why you disagree with it, helps turn that problem into a technique. Sifting through critiques is like panning for gold. Sift through the muck of poor wording and trolls to your own little takeaways. Write it on a post-it note and put it above your desk. Think about it while you draw. Use it.
STEP 3: Improving
To become a good artist:
Did you try something new and get a bad reaction? Oh no! Listen to the advice people give you and take that element out of your work. Make something people like.
To become a great artist:
Did you try something new and got a bad reaction? Awesome. There are two reasons that people say negative things about your art: because they see something worth improving, or because you’ve somehow struck a chord. Either way, you made them feel something. Figure out how you did it, and how best to use that skill. Did something you did make someone angry? If you offended or hurt someone, you now know how to avoid doing that in the future. But if you made someone feel something about the story or characters, you now have a skill that you can hone and use as a tool at a better point in the story. To make people angry, sad, happy, uncomfortable, or in any way emotional when looking at your work is a skill that few have because we’re so used to beating it out of our work. Many people compensate for this by adding shock value. You can learn to do it with emotion.
STEP 4: Dealing with rejection
To become a good artist:
Find out where art like yours is being published. Submit to them! Rejected? That’s too bad! Try again! Send them your new stuff every year! Never give up! One of these years, it will all work out!
To become a great artist:
Getting rejected is great! When you get a rejection letter, you aren’t losing a job, you’re gaining one. Finding a venue and an audience is now up to you, which is great, because if you’re successful, you’ll be the one getting rich from your work. All of those places were created because someone needed a new place to put a different kind of work. You’re now in the same boat.
STEP 5: Building a career
To become a good artist:
After a lot of practice and study, take all the advice people have given you, follow their lead. Make something you know will be successful, put it in all the right venues.
To become a great artist:
Do it wrong. Don’t do it right just because of all the people around you who say ‘that’s not art,’ ‘that’s not music, ‘there’s no money in that,’ ‘it’s not a real book unless it’s in print,’ etc.  Some of those people will be your heroes. Every generation hates the next generation’s music. Every generation of artists thinks the next generation are hacks. Following the leader is a good way to make art that pleases people in the moment, but doing something that breaks all of the rules is the way be the leader and make something historic. Tell a story only you can tell in a way only you can tell it. When you see a piece of new technology, a piece of ancient technology, an interesting bit of trash on the street and think ‘I could put art on that’, then put art on that. You’ll be reaching new people in places no one else is even trying. There’s no money in ANYTHING until someone puts something great on it. When someone tells you you’re doing it wrong, that’s your clue that you’re doing something that could change all of the rules, and a few decades from now, your style will be the one someone’s drilling into a beginner’s head, and that beginner will be coming to you for advice. Feel free to tell them what you did right, but be sure to also tell them: Do it wrong.

ryanestradadotcom:

Do it wrong.

Cartoonists, writers, musicians, actors, filmmakers, we all get the same questions. And we all have boring, stock answers like ‘draw every day’ or ‘practice a lot’. Sometimes it’s because we don’t know what we did right. But the real reason is that every bit of advice we give you has an expiration date. The world of art is always changing. The things people like, the way those things are distributed and sold is always changing. By the time you put in all that practice to get good at what someone else told you is the way things are done, they aren’t done that way any more. The only sure way to become great at what you do is to break the rules. Not for the sake of being a rebel, but so that you can make something only you can make, in a way only you can make it. If you do something wrong well enough, it becomes the new right. So here are 5 steps in the right way to do it wrong.

STEP 1: Practice

To become a good artist:

Focus on making perfect art. Don’t show weakness. Use the tools that everyone else recommends. If you can’t draw hands, put them in pockets. If you can’t draw feet, crop them off the page. If you’re not very good at an instrument, play something easier. If you’re not knowledgable in a subject, write about something else.

To become a great artist:

Just make a bunch of crappy art. Do things wrong. Trust me, even the art you think is great, give it a few years and you’ll think it’s crap. So you might as well shoot for the moon. Grab tools that no one else has ever even imagined using, and see what happens. Draw everyone on horses even though you know the legs are going to come out all weird. Perform that long, flowery monologue you know you’re going to forget the words to. Film that science fiction epic even though the only creature effects you can afford are sticking Halloween stuff on your cat. Doing things you know you can’t do well so that you can do them later is the whole idea behind exercise.

STEP 2: Taking criticism

To become a good artist:

Show your only your best work to people you trust. Enjoy the praise, and ignore the haters.

To become a great artist:

Share your work with everyone, even the jerks. Put it online, show it to strangers. Show them the stuff you’re proud of, and the stuff you’re not sure of. When you show just your average art, people have nothing to say, so they just give you empty praise. But show them something that can be improved, and they’ll tell you about it. The stuff they tell you is gold. Don’t just be disappointed, write that crap on a post-it and put it above your desk. Think about it when you work. Each and every one of them gave you a free mini art lesson.  If they were dicks about it, that makes them a bad teacher, it doesn’t make you a bad artist. There’s a very good chance that they are wrong. But thinking about what they said, and why you disagree with it, helps turn that problem into a technique. Sifting through critiques is like panning for gold. Sift through the muck of poor wording and trolls to your own little takeaways. Write it on a post-it note and put it above your desk. Think about it while you draw. Use it.

STEP 3: Improving

To become a good artist:

Did you try something new and get a bad reaction? Oh no! Listen to the advice people give you and take that element out of your work. Make something people like.

To become a great artist:

Did you try something new and got a bad reaction? Awesome. There are two reasons that people say negative things about your art: because they see something worth improving, or because you’ve somehow struck a chord. Either way, you made them feel something. Figure out how you did it, and how best to use that skill. Did something you did make someone angry? If you offended or hurt someone, you now know how to avoid doing that in the future. But if you made someone feel something about the story or characters, you now have a skill that you can hone and use as a tool at a better point in the story. To make people angry, sad, happy, uncomfortable, or in any way emotional when looking at your work is a skill that few have because we’re so used to beating it out of our work. Many people compensate for this by adding shock value. You can learn to do it with emotion.

STEP 4: Dealing with rejection

To become a good artist:

Find out where art like yours is being published. Submit to them! Rejected? That’s too bad! Try again! Send them your new stuff every year! Never give up! One of these years, it will all work out!

To become a great artist:

Getting rejected is great! When you get a rejection letter, you aren’t losing a job, you’re gaining one. Finding a venue and an audience is now up to you, which is great, because if you’re successful, you’ll be the one getting rich from your work. All of those places were created because someone needed a new place to put a different kind of work. You’re now in the same boat.

STEP 5: Building a career

To become a good artist:

After a lot of practice and study, take all the advice people have given you, follow their lead. Make something you know will be successful, put it in all the right venues.

To become a great artist:

Do it wrong. Don’t do it right just because of all the people around you who say ‘that’s not art,’ ‘that’s not music, ‘there’s no money in that,’ ‘it’s not a real book unless it’s in print,’ etc.  Some of those people will be your heroes. Every generation hates the next generation’s music. Every generation of artists thinks the next generation are hacks. Following the leader is a good way to make art that pleases people in the moment, but doing something that breaks all of the rules is the way be the leader and make something historic. Tell a story only you can tell in a way only you can tell it. When you see a piece of new technology, a piece of ancient technology, an interesting bit of trash on the street and think ‘I could put art on that’, then put art on that. You’ll be reaching new people in places no one else is even trying. There’s no money in ANYTHING until someone puts something great on it. When someone tells you you’re doing it wrong, that’s your clue that you’re doing something that could change all of the rules, and a few decades from now, your style will be the one someone’s drilling into a beginner’s head, and that beginner will be coming to you for advice. Feel free to tell them what you did right, but be sure to also tell them: Do it wrong.

Posted 5 months ago with 23,657 notes
ryanestradadotcom / burdge

thewinchesterswagger:

sometimes i forget quality blogs follow me and i’m like

image

Posted 5 months ago with 21,654 notes
thewinchesterswagger / auroralynne
amillionmadmusings:

political-dharma-initiative:

badwolfcomplex:

findaroadtoahumbleabode:

Somewhere in my life I want this to work it’s way in a speech I have to give.

Gpoy.

Oh, Bilbo.  You speak my mind exactly.

this is gonna be my yearbook quote.

amillionmadmusings:

political-dharma-initiative:

badwolfcomplex:

findaroadtoahumbleabode:

Somewhere in my life I want this to work it’s way in a speech I have to give.

Gpoy.

Oh, Bilbo.  You speak my mind exactly.

this is gonna be my yearbook quote.

Posted 5 months ago with 22,169 notes
d20crit / auroralynne

masterarrowhead:

agentsokka:

airspeedprime:

http://avatarthelastairbenderonline.com/free-comic-book-day-2013-to-have-avatar-comic/

image

Avatar Comic for Free Comic Book Day 2013 announced. A focus on Mai :)

I’m not sure whether to be happy or horrified.

“And the smash hit Avatar: The Last Airbender follows Mai as she deals with her broken heart…”

image

Posted 5 months ago with 883 notes
airspeedprime / daffyloins
"

Here’s what our parents never taught us:

You will stay up on your rooftop until sunlight peels away the husk of the moon,
chainsmoking cigarettes and reading Baudelaire, and
you will learn that you only ever want to fall in love with someone
who will stay up to watch the sun rise with you.

You will fall in love with train rides, and sooner or later you will
realize that nowhere seems like home anymore.

A woman will kiss you and you’ll think her lips are two petals
rubbing against your mouth.

You will not tell anyone that you liked it.
It’s okay.
It is beautiful to love humans in a world where love is a metaphor for lust.

You can leave if you want, with only your skin as a carry-on.

All you need is a twenty in your pocket and a bus ticket.
All you need is someone on the other end of the map, thinking about the supple
curves of your body, to guide you to a home that stretches out for miles
and miles on end.

You will lie to everyone you love.
They will love you anyways.

One day you’ll wake up and realize that you are too big for your own skin.

Molt.
Don’t be afraid.

Your body is a house where the shutters blow in and out
against the windowpane.

You are a hurricane-prone area.
The glass will break through often.

But it’s okay. I promise.

Remember,
a stranger once told you that the breeze
here is something worth writing poems about.

"
“Here’s What Our Parents Never Taught Us,” Shinji Moon  (via nooremberg)

# quotes
Posted 5 months ago with 691 notes
ohmydaarling / matargashtiya

i have this problem where i don’t have enough time to actually do things because i’m too busy sitting on my ass doing nothing