Florence Welch (via quotemadness)
Unknown (via wordsnquotes)
Nikita Gill (via wordsnquotes)
Nikita Gill (via thelovejournals)
Rules my Grandma's Psychiatrist gave her in 56'
- Get some cheap dishes and break them when you get upset.
- Learn how to say “NO” and don’t feel guilty about it
- Buy something frivolous for yourself once in awhile, like a new hat.
- Never again do anything you don’t want to do.
that’s damn good advice
I never thought I would I catch myself thinking this but I actually hate my ex. I’ve only hated one previously because he cheated but I’m gonna up that number to two.
Yes. But. One cannot hate a creep.
I’m currently reading “Désireé”, by Annemarie Selinko. 800 pages of pure perfection.
Yes! ❤️
I would recognize you blindfolded.
Watch it. ❤️
Fire Dragon Witch
Someone don’t know who my GF are.
And into your arms she went.
we accept the patterns we think we deserve
The life I left. Well worth the struggle.
Dubliners James Joyce (via maisamy)
…seeing you smile is all that matters to me…
I have a request, could you maybe make a post explaining the "Stolpersteine" that are in many places in Germany by now? They are my favourite thing about Germany dealing with its history and I want people to know about them because it is something I always pay attention to whenever I see them :)
A Stolperstein (literally “stumbling stone”) is a type of monument created by artist Gunter Demnig in 1992 to commemorate victims of Nazi oppression, including the Holocaust. Stolpersteine are small, cobblestone-sized memorials for individual victims of Nazism. They commemorate individuals who were consigned by the Nazis to prisons, euthanasia facilities, sterilization clinics, concentration camps, andextermination camps, as well as those who responded to persecution by emigrating or committing suicide.
While the vast majority of Stolpersteine commemorate Jewish victims of the Holocaust, others have been placed for Sinti and Romani people, homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, black people, Christians (both Protestants and Catholics) opposed to the Nazis, members of the Communist Party and the anti-Nazi Resistance, military deserters, and the physically and mentally disabled.
The list of places that have Stolpersteine now extends to several countries and hundreds of cities and towns. As of 20 August 2014, over 48,000 Stolpersteine have been laid in 18 countries in Europe, making the project the world’s largest.
They’re placed in front of the last residence or workplace of the victims. “Hier wohnte” means “here lived,” and the idea was to not only remember the victims but to–sadly only in a symbolic way–return to them their old homes and neighborhoods, and to have a memorial that is very present in modern people’s daily lives.
To read them, you have to look down, so you symbolically bow to the victims.
There is no such thing as too many Dracula book covers!!! (My edit - black and white post)
“I am longing to be with you, and by the sea, where we can talk together freely and build our castles in the air.” ― Dracula by Bram Stoker
period drama + powerful women (requested by @elzabetholsens)
The cutest thing is - they look like us. Almost. From some angles.
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️