Rosemary, lavender, sage, rain, grass, the smell of the person you love.
Jillian Anderson - âWhatâs your favourite smell?â (via siriuhs)
sheepfilms
Xuebing Du
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

pixel skylines

Janaina Medeiros

Discoholic đȘ©
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JVL

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Jules of Nature
hello vonnie
Keni

â

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â
Claire Keane
will byers stan first human second

if i look back, i am lost
we're not kids anymore.
ojovivo
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@ripetomatoes
Rosemary, lavender, sage, rain, grass, the smell of the person you love.
Jillian Anderson - âWhatâs your favourite smell?â (via siriuhs)
I know. Sometimes it becomes a terrible thing to not be able to stop loving. But this wasnât. We have our differences, too many. But donât ever think my love for you today is any less than when we first exchanged glances. And I felt you thinking of me. But weâll do it again. Somewhere else. Somewhere magical. Some place where we are less lost and less human. Somewhere in dreams. Some place where we lock the madness and it never escapes. Somewhere I can taste forever in our lips. And until then, all poetry shall still remind me of you.
A.K
holdyoutonight.tumblr.com
(via holdyoutonight)
At some point, being angry is just another bad habit, like smoking, and you keep poisoning yourself without thinking about it.
Jonathan Tropper, This is Where I Leave You (via elenamjacobs)
Amor eterno
Close your eyes. A lover is standing too close to focus on. Leave me blurry and fall toward me with your entire body. Lie under the covers, pretending to sleep, while I'm in the other room. Imagine my legs crossed, my hair combed, the shine of my boots in the slatted light. I'm thinking My plant, his chair, the ashtray that we bought together. I'm thinking This is where we live. When we were little we made houses out of cardboard boxes. We can do anything. It's not because our hearts are large, they're not, it's what we struggle with. The attempt to say Come over. Bring your friends. It's a potluck, I'm making pork chops, I'm making those long noodles you love so much. My dragonfly, my black-eyed fire, the knives in the kitchen are singing for blood, but we are the crossroads, my little outlaw, and this is the map of my heart, the landscape after cruelty which is, of course, a garden, which is a tenderness, which is a room, a lover saying Hold me tight, it's getting cold. We have not touched the stars, nor are we forgiven, which brings us back to the hero's shoulders and the gentleness that comes, not from the absence of violence, but despite the abundance of it. The lawn drowned, the sky on fire, the gold light falling backward through the glass of every room. I'll give you my heart to make a place for it to happen, evidence of a love that transcends hunger. Is that too much to expect? That I would name the stars for you? That I would take you there? The splash of my tongue melting you like a sugar cube? We've read the back of the book, we know what's going to happen. The fields burned, the land destroyed, the lovers left broken in the brown dirt. And then it's gone. Makes you sad. All your friends are gone. Goodbye Goodbye. No more tears. I would like to meet you all in Heaven. But there's a litany of dreams that happens somewhere in the middle. Moonlight spilling on the bathroom floor. A page of the book where we transcend the story of our lives, past the taco stands and record stores. Moonlight making crosses on your body, and me putting my mouth on every one. We have been very brave, we have wanted to know the worst, wanted the curtain to be lifted from our eyes. This dream going on with all of us in it. Penciling in the bighearted slob. Penciling in his outstretched arms. Our father who art in Heaven. Our father who art buried in the yard. Someone is digging your grave right now. Someone is drawing a bath to wash you clean, he said, so think of the wind, so happy, so warm. It's a fairy tale, the story underneath the story, sliding down the polished halls, lightning here and gone. We make these ridiculous idols so we can to what's behind them, but what happens after we get up the ladder? Do we simply stare at what's horrible and forgive it? Here is the river, and here is the box, and here are the monsters we put in the box to test our strength against. Here is the cake, and here is the fork, and here's the desire to put it inside us, and then the question behind every question: What happens next? The way you slam your body into mine reminds me I'm alive, but monsters are always hungry, darling, and they're only a few steps behind you, finding the flaw, the poor weld, the place where we weren't stitched up quite right, the place they could almost slip right into through if the skin wasn't trying to keep them out, to keep them here, on the other side of the theater where the curtain keeps rising. I crawled out the window and ran into the woods. I had to make up all the words myself. The way they taste, the way they sound in the air. I passed through the narrow gate, stumbled in, stumbled around for a while, and stumbled back out. I made this place for you. A place for to love me. If this isn't a kingdom then I don't know what is. So how would you catalog it? Dawn in the fields? Snow and dirty rain? Light brought in in buckets? I was trying to describe the kingdom, but the letters kept smudging as I wrote them: the hunter's heart, the hunter's mouth, the trees and the trees and the space between the trees, swimming in gold. The words frozen. The creatures frozen. The plum sauce leaking out of the bag. Explaining will get us nowhere. I was away, I don't know where, lying on the floor, pretending I was dead. I wanted to hurt you but the victory is that I could not stomach it. We have swallowed him up, they said. It's beautiful. It really is. I had a dream about you. We were in the gold room where everyone finally gets what they want. You said Tell me about your books, your visions made of flesh and light and I said This is the Moon. This is the Sun. Let me name the stars for you. Let me take you there. The splash of my tongue melting you like a sugar cube... We were in the gold room where everyone finally gets what they want, so I said What do you want, sweetheart? and you said Kiss me. Here I am leaving you clues. I am singing now while Rome burns. We are all just trying to be holy. My applejack, my silent night, just mash your lips against me. We are all going forward. None of us are going back.
Snow and Dirty Rain, Richard Siken
There are no passengers on spaceship earth. We are all crew.
Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980)
Can you honestly love a dishonest thing?
John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent. (via wordsnquotes)
Do not mistake me for my mask. You see light dappling on the water and forget the deep, cold dark beneath.
Patrick Rothfuss (via quotemadness)
Iâm always afraid of opening up when my mind is louder than my heart; afraid of what the monsters will let slip. I want to get the story out, but I keep swallowing my words and they crumble before I can put them down on paper.
Joshua Greenaway (via quotemadness)
Being alone has nothing to do with how many people are around.
Richard Yates, Revolutionary Road (via reluctantreader00)
Once a little boy sent me a charming card with a little drawing on it. I loved it. I answer all my childrenâs letters â sometimes very hastily â but this one I lingered over. I sent him a card and I drew a picture of a Wild Thing on it. I wrote, âDear Jim: I loved your card.â Then I got a letter back from his mother and she said, âJim loved your card so much he ate it.â That to me was one of the highest compliments Iâve ever received. He didnât care that it was an original Maurice Sendak drawing or anything. He saw it, he loved it, he ate it.
Maurice Sendak (via ripetomatoes)
âLignin, the stuff that prevents all trees from adopting the weeping habit, is a polymer made up of units that are closely related to vanillin. When made into paper and stored for years, it breaks down and smells good. Which is how divine providence has arranged for secondhand bookstores to smell like good quality vanilla absolute, subliminally stoking a hunger for knowledge in all of us.â
Perfumes: The Guide, on âWhy secondhand bookstores smell goodâ (via ripetomatoes)
I still donât know how to love someone without swallowing them.
Blythe Baird, Give Me a God I Can Relate To (via wordsnquotes)
Itâs in the will, in the heart! To hell with these rotten doubts. I defy them and spit on them.
Jack Kerouac, from a diary entry featured in Windblown World: The Journals of Jack Kerouac (1947 - 1954)
People say âdestroy what destroys youâ but what if the thing destroying you is yourself?
(via burmous)
Collect books, even if you donât plan on reading them right away. Nothing is more important than an unread library.
John Waters (via theperksofbeingabookseller)
Why you should fall to your knees and worship a librarian!! Ok, sure. Weâve all got our little preconceived notions about who librarians are and what they do. Many people think of librarians as diminutive civil servants, scuttling about âSssh-ingâ people and stamping things. Well, think again buster. Librarians have degrees. They go to graduate school for Information Science and become masters of data systems and human/computer interaction. Librarians can catalog anything from an onion to a dogâs ear. They could catalog you. Librarians wield unfathomable power. With a flip of the wrist they can hide your dissertation behind piles of old Field and Stream magazines. They can find data for your term paper that you never knew existed. They may even point you toward new and appropriate subject headings. People become librarians because they know too much. Their knowledge extends beyond mere categories. They cannot be confined to disciplines. Librarians are all-knowing and all-seeing. They bring order to chaos. They bring wisdom and culture to the masses. They preserve every aspect of human knowledge. Librarians rule. And they will kick the crap out of anyone who says otherwise.
Anonymous (via celtic-poetry)