No title available

ellievsbear
šŖ¼
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n
YOU ARE THE REASON

izzy's playlists!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Today's Document

Discoholic šŖ©

shark vs the universe
KIROKAZE
Misplaced Lens Cap
No title available
Stranger Things

#extradirty
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
seen from Syria
seen from Iraq

seen from Hungary

seen from Russia
seen from Iraq
seen from Tunisia

seen from Brazil

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from Colombia
seen from United States
seen from South Africa

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from South Africa
seen from South Africa
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Iraq

seen from United Kingdom
@wholelottaluv
CUZ SHES DEAD
ā¤ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøā¼ļøāļø
Love someone who is kinder to you than you are to yourself.
Nikita Gill (via thelovejournals)
The fault dearā¦is not in our stars, but in ourselves.
William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar (via wordsnquotes)
the best thing you will see all year
Fake Service Dogs?
Youāre sitting at a cafe with your friend when suddenly a woman walks in with a toy poodle in her purse. The manager at the counter informs her āIām sorry, but we do not allow dogsā. She replies with a heavy sigh and a āSheās a service dog. She can come with meā. Not knowing much about service dog law, and worrying about getting sued for asking further questions, he sits this woman down at a booth. There, she promptly unzips her purse and places the dog on the booth seat next to her. When the womanās food comes out, the little dog begs and she feeds her bits off her plate. This dog is not public access trained, and proceeds to bark at those who walk by. This dog is a nuisance and causes many in the restaurant to complain. The manager cannot do anything but inform the unhappy customers that this is a service dog, so he canāt ask her to leave. In the end, itās the customers who end up leaving.
Now I walk in with my highly trained service dog pressed against my leg in a perfect heel position, and Iām quickly bombarded by the manager telling me āNo dogs! No dogs! We ALL know what happened last timeā. Confused, I tell him āThis is my medical alert and medical response service dog. Her right to accompany me is protected under federal law.ā With a sigh, he seats me at a table far away from others where my dog promptly tucks under my feet, out of sight. When my food arrives my dog is still tucked tightly under the table because she knows sheās not supposed to eat when sheās on duty. She stays there ignoring those who walk past for the remainder of my meal. When we leave, a woman by the door exclaims āWoah, I didnāt know there was a dog here!ā
See the difference?
Scenario number two occurs at a local grocery store when a man decides to bring his certified emotional support animal into the store with him. Upon entering he flashes a fancy ID card and certification papers. This dog is not as unruly as the first, but he still forges ahead of his handler, sniffs the food on display, and may seek attention from those who walk past. You find this dog adorable, and when he and his owner walk past you ask to pet him. The owner says yes and explains how all he had to do was go online, register his dog, and a few weeks later they sent him a vest, ID card, and certification papers.
Now I pull into the same grocery store. Iām in a rush to get an ingredient for a dish Iām making so I hurry into the store with my service dog next to me. Iām quickly stopped by a manager who demands to see my service dogās certification card. Remember, this is NOT required by law, and most real service dog teams donāt have them. After 15 minutes of trying to educate, pulling up the ADA website on my phone, back and forth bickering, and drawing more of a crowd than I want to describe⦠Iām finally allowed in. I grab my ingredient, stand in line (where my service dog obediently moves between my legs to make space for those around me), and I get bombarded by people asking to pet my dog. I explain that sheās working, she has a very important job to do, and sheās not allowed to be pet while on duty. People walk away grumbling and complaining about how rude I was when other handlers like the man they met earlier allow their dog to be pet.
Moral of the story? Fake service dogs create real problems. The ones who are impacted the most are the true service dog handlers who rely on their dogs every day to help mitigate their disability. How would you feel if everywhere you went, you couldnāt make it 10 feet in the door because people were asking you questions? Imagine how much time that would take out of your already hectic day. Businesses lose customers because word gets out that there are unruly dogs in their store, customers become misinformed and start thinking some of these behaviors are okay, some people even start to believe the lies that anyone can just register their dog online and make him a service dog. The result? MORE fake service dogs. MORE real problems.
As I am. As I am. All or not at all.
James Joyce, Ulysses (via wordsnquotes)
ā
This show is gold.
wow this is the first time in months iāve actually seen the real post instead of the dialogue posted on screencaps of other shows
The original is the best because everyoneās reactions are spot on
This is the first time Iāve EVER seen a gifset of the original scene.