museyumm-deactivated20211006:

The six descriptions of Love :

image
image
image

David Richo, How to Be an Adult in Love.

(via iamhannalashay)

13100 Notes

10486 Notes

7347 Notes

6425 Notes

spongebobssquarepants:

what’s wrong babe? you haven’t touched your shrekfast yet

image

16095 Notes

327 Notes

1273 Notes

doggosource:

Cheeky boi

(via itsexclusive)

128514 Notes

41750 Notes

dduane:

killerzebras:

traycakes:

catchymemes:

image

I want to make this absolutely clear to kids: children didn’t used to be stuck inside the house like you are today. There used to be public places you could hang out. It used to be fairly safe to walk around because trucks weren’t designed to kill children. You didn’t need a car to go anywhere so kids without a license weren’t trapped. There weren’t 24/7 cable news networks constantly scaring parents with anecdotes even as crime was at all time lows and the biggest danger comes from adults kids know not strangers.

It’s easy to ignore old people talking about “the good ol’ days” because a lot of the people saying that shit are racist assholes, but the way society treats kids today really is objectively worse than how kids used to be treated. You deserve better, and you should know that better things are possible. We just need to kill the suburbs and for-profit news.

When I was a kid in the 80s and 90s, I could go for a bike ride or walk with my sister or friends and we could leave after breakfast and not come back until dinner and our parents weren’t worried. We lived on the edge of town, so we could turn left into the woods or turn right and go downtown or go straight and go to a friend’s house in the neighborhood. I went to a park or the community pool or went out for ice cream alone from a young age.

I also regularly walked to and from school alone from as young as first grade (so, about age 6). And I’m not saying I walked three miles uphill in snow both ways, but I checked a map and it was over half a mile and crossed at least one street that people drive pretty fast on. And that was normal.

All the same for the ‘60s.

(via itsexclusive)

65887 Notes