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elbowed:

summer interior, 1909 (edward hopper)
scientificillustration:

By Rachael Jenkins

littlealienboy:

shmegeh:

I found this card at the pharmacy today and it was good.

this is almost too accurate right now

(via irrelevantlyrics)

(via im-12-and-what-is-this)

declaringwar:

Spin
backyardskills:

hotllamasex:

latterman:

it0ldyous0:

hhumanoid:

lanaisqueen:

coastalnative:

grace-ala-face:

te-rquoise:


Don’t get any closer to each other

This is the most interesting thing I’ve seen all year.

I don’t know how to feel about this

I feel like this has some really deep meaning. I see it as two people can be close and it can allow for something beautiful, but as soon as they get to know each other too well it becomes ugly. Because if you knew every thought in someones head, the bad might out weigh the good. And you could never undo what you have learned about them. The spots on the butterfly’s wings are human eyes which have seen the truth but have no way of revealing it, or warning you not to get closer and protect the butterfly. The butterfly is their beautifully balanced relationship threatened by the knowing/seeing of too much, or closeness. The people symbolize anyone
theybuildbuildings:

vintagegal:

Girls pose by a jail that recalls the witch trials of 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. Photo taken in 1945.

I recently learned that the water in Salem was contaminated with the fungus from which LSD is derived and a legitimate theory for the whole thing is that everyone in the town was tripping balls 

mudwerks:

(via Slay, Monstrobot of the Deep!!: Manic Monday Final Countdown—The Ironic Twist!!)

theswinginsixties:

Jimi Hendrix listening to records.
fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

Empress Xiaokemin (Wan Rong,) last Qing empress of China. She was married at 16 to Puyi, the final emperor in the Qing dynasty, and would later become the empress of the puppet state Manchukuo in the 1930s and 1940s. She was an educated woman who was fluent in English and loved to write letters to her friends, read mystery novels, dabble in photography, and play the piano. She lived a very bizarre and cloistered existence controlled by the Japanese in Manchukuo and turned to opium to dull the loneliness and pain of her husband’s rejection. She died as a political prisoner at 39. This photo is of her on her wedding day, when she was really a beautiful girl. 

ewok-gia:

The Thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger/Tasmanian Wolf)

(Source: the-devil-goodfellow, via mermaidsexual)