December 2011
14 posts
did you catch yourself in the mirror? it's a sight...
Lately, I’ve been so bound that I don’t even know if I can peel my skin off the back of the couch. It’ll glue itself to it like cheap paste, and fall off my body in strips. It’s easy to lose yourself in things other people want. It’s also easy to lose yourself in your own selfishness. That balance between the right and the selfish - I don’t think it’s...
1 tag
and confess your love as well as your folly?
un happy
home?
caught.
1 tag
And he told me all romantics meet the same fate someday:
Cynical and drunk and...
– Joni Mitchell (via baroquedown)
2 tags
calling sophia, goddess of power. instead i got...
The amount of times I have to tell myself how silly I’m being is exponentially greater than the amount of times I know I am mentally sound in my assumptions.
I once heard it takes twenty-one days to turn something into a habit. Twenty-one days for something to become so ingrained in your daily life that it doesn’t even require second thought. I think I agree.
I often wish I could...
1 tag
a nugget (not deep fried)
Does the meaning of something change once it transcends past the confines of your mind into the hands of someone else?
There’s a lot that I don’t tell others.
I think it is because of fear.
Fear of what?
I’m not entirely sure. All I know is that it is paralyzing. And cyclical.
Unable.
Unwilling?
2 tags
finals music mood map
maximum balloon - tiger
lonely boy - the black keys
the book of mormon - you and me (but mostly me)
laura marling - the beast
#myconfusedmusictaste
1 tag
bits and pieces
It’s not apathy. Apathy isn’t the proper word to describe it. it’s not a void of feeling. In fact, it’s the exact opposite. It’s a raging battle of conflicting, contradicting emotions so beyond you that the body can hardly contain it. All functions shut down and you might as well be walking in a skeleton of melting flesh, strips left behind you everywhere you go. The...
2 tags
philosophy is basically the most ridiculous...
The partisan admits that many things may and do count against his belief: whereas Hare’s lunatic who has a blik about dons doesn’t admit that anything counts against his blik. Also the partisan has a reason for having in the first instance committed himself, viz. the character of the Stranger; whereas the lunatic has no reason fro his blik about dons — because, of course, you...
1 tag
3 tags