hello vonnie
RMH
Mike Driver

Love Begins

pixel skylines

Andulka

@theartofmadeline
Today's Document
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
KIROKAZE
Keni

Kiana Khansmith
Sade Olutola
Claire Keane
Monterey Bay Aquarium
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Discoholic šŖ©
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
will byers stan first human second

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@smurfmeinthebooty
Lemme tell u guys a story
In my freshman year, my great grandma passed away. She never threw out or sold anything worth keeping if she could help it, having grown up in the Depression, so when she passed, my grandma suddenly inherited a lifetimeās worth of treasured items. She distributed most of them to her kids and grandkids, saved some sentimental items, and donated most of the clothing and trinkets to charity. I got back the stuffed leopard Iād given great-grandma in the hospital; the fur was still as soft as itād been when I bought it. One of the biggest things she had to sort through was jewelry. For a year after my great-grandma died, my grandma was setting out organized rows of costume jewelry on basement tables and chivvying her granddaughters to take what they wanted.
And then, after all the choosing, she snuck me into her room while my cousins picked through wristwatches. On her bed were two small jewelry boxes: an old wooden one, and a cushioned one in white pleather.
āI brought you in here because if I gave these to your cousins, theyād sell it. I donāt want these sold. Do you understand?ā
I understood.
This is the story of the biggest lie my grandma ever told her mom.
Great-grandmaās birthstone was garnet, and she loved the look of the stones, but could never justify paying for some. Her husband worked constantly, and so did she, and new clothes for the kids was more important than jewelry at the time. When my grandma was 16, she saved her first paychecks to buy her mom a garnet ring for Motherās Day; thatās what was in the wooden box. The original receipt, handwritten, was crammed into the lid. Great-grandpa saw that ring and teared up; heād always wanted to get his wife something nice like that, but hadnāt ever had enough money for it. Determined, he vowed to change that. He set aside money for years, slowly, hiding it away in a box in the attic, vowing to buy his wife something she could always wear with her ring.
Time passed, and inflation happened, and he slowly squirreled money away in the hopes that jewelry might get cheaper again sometime. Time passed again, and age had little mercy on him. He got older, typed up a note, and placed in in the box, describing what the money was for; he knew his time was near. Under no circumstances was the money to be spent on anything other than giving his wife a nice gift. The letter read, āOne day, my dear Ruth, youāll have garnet earrings to match that ring.ā Itās what great-grandma had always mourned missing; she had such a nice ring, and no good earrings to go with it.
Well, men donāt live forever, and when great-grandpa passed away, my grandma cleaned out her momās attic as she prepared to move somewhere smaller. Going through boxes of polaroids and paper clips, she stumbled on the box of earrings money, note and all. She stashed it with her coat, and after that day of cleaning, went to the jeweler before her mom could try and spend the money on something too sensible. She came back with the white pleather box; sure enough, still nestled inside that box were two clip-on garnet earrings.
āMom never got her ears pierced, you know. Thatās why it took so long to find a good pair.ā
Once sheād gotten the earrings, grandma presented them to her mom, along with the note. The paper was obviously old and warped by moisture, but it was legible. My great grandma cried happy tears and treasured those earrings more than any other jewelry; the last gift her husband could give her. Decades after the fact, Iād seen her wear them to Christmas parties and worry over them, checking that they stayed on her earlobes.
There was never any note from great-grandpa. Never any box. Never any earring money. My great-grandpa had spent his saved money keeping himself and his wife confortable throughout retirement. To set aside hundreds of dollars, even a bit at a time, for garnet earrings, was never a thought that crossed his mind. My grandma had seen her mom, exhausted, wracked with grief, and lied through her teeth about where sheād gotten the money for those earrings. She faked the note and everything, making sure her mom wouldnāt wonder where the money came from, and never winced at the pinch in her own pockets. And she never told a soul, not even my mom, until great-grandma was safely and thoroughly buried herself.
jigsaw trap glitches out midway through & he has to come in with a bunch of tools and reset the whole thing. "sorry about that, should be good now"
Jigsaw is super apologetic throughout the whole thing but the victim has worked retail so theyre like āno donāt worry, take your time. i understandā
youāve just described what itās like to work in an escape room
Magical Forest by Artur Tomaz
I love everything about every single one of these
is it just me or is NASA weirdly aggressive in their article about black holes?
can a black hole destroy the earth?
no, you idiot.
black holes arenāt planet gluttons, you bitch.
and the earth isnāt some weak-ass planet that would just fall in to a black hole like a sucker.
and that dumbass sun that weāve got isnāt big enough to make a black hole like other stars.
you fool.
This reads like an exhausted doctor explaining that no, you fucking moron, vaccines do not cause autism.Ā
do you see this shit my liege
ābaking sheet?ā holds so much weight
Please make home economics mandatory again.
little kids r so funny when presented with any new information like theres this girl I teach who has two moms and a sister and I was like "wow your family is all girls! that's so funny, if my husband and I had a boy, we'd be all boys haha!" And she was shocked that two boys could get married like honey did you think gay marriage was a girls only event
Does anybody else get legitimately worried when a fanfic author who was updating regularly just suddenly disappears with no warning? Like, is it a serious case of writers block or are they in a coma? Did they just up and quit? Was it me? Were my reviews not good enough?! Did they die š³?! Were they kidnapped? Do I need to file a missing persons report? Excuse me officer, thereās been 13 weekly updates and now nothing for months! Find them! Whatās their name?! Name!? I donāt know their name but they write 3k+ chapters and I need them safe and back in my life!
Sir, thatās my emotional support fanfic author.
Officer: iām sorry, but you canāt file this person missing.
Me: you donāt have all the facts.
Officer: which are?
Me: i love them.
So, painful story, but Iāve really needed to tell it for a while.
My best friend, the woman I loved for 13 years, was a fic writer in the middle of an especially long piece. She updated on a schedule and had for years. She had a small, but loyal following.
And then she died out of nowhere. One day we were laughing, the next she was in a coma, 3 days later she was dead. She hadnāt been ill and to this day we donāt know what took her. She was just gone.
I knew she had friends all over the world so I went into her email to see if I could find addresses and notify people after a week of blind grief. In her inbox were about a dozen concerned messages from her readers. I cried. I cried and cried and I responded to all of them, telling people she had passed.
And the messages kept coming. Those people spread the word and message after message came in, most of them addressed to me now, as I had given those original readers my contact info. There were words of comfort and grief and just every emotion imaginable in that scenario. I wrote back to them all, thanking them and comforting them.
For months after she died, during the worst of my grief, I had those messages. I had those people. And they had me. I really think I might not have made it to the other side without them.
So, the fact that you care? That you think of them? That these authors who became a presence in your world are missed when they arenāt there? It means something very real. On the off chance that the author did die? Anyone who has seen this post will find comfort during the loss of their friend or family member, knowing that you all exist. That they arenāt alone. That you CARE that the world now lacks their loved one.
So, yeah. Iāve seen this post and ones like it for years and wanted to share this story. I finally could today.
Thank you, every person who reblogged this post. People like you are the biggest reason Iām alive today.
Something similar happened in one of my fandoms. The author had been so well-known in the 2000s that a lot of headcanons came from her.
its fun to enjoy things
this is a joke but in jewish lore angels are jealous of humans for our ability to create
So I hadnāt yet come out to my mum and today I got home to see that someone had changed the cover on my bed to this
And then I saw that they left a note on the bed, so I went over to take a look at it and
My mum is the bestĀ
Whenever I see this I think well what if you werenāt gay and you came home one day to this
On top of the Yankees field cat there was a praying mantis on top of the nationals players hat tonight. Huge night in baseball
He was keeping the mantis updated on the number of outs, too
the mantis is making him good at baseball ratatouille style
Imagine being Friend Bear and the embodiment of friendship in Care-a-Lot and some fuck named āBestā Friend Bear suddenly comes into town
i would turn into fucking Enemy Bear