Permalink for this post 1. You are invincible.
2. You can create your own worlds/universes.
3. Convention sucks.
4. Mistakes are good (as long as they don’t kill you).
5. The answers are everywhere.
6. Reading is crucial. And most importantly…
7. Question everything.
[Via Lola, go!]

1. You are invincible.

2. You can create your own worlds/universes.

3. Convention sucks.

4. Mistakes are good (as long as they don’t kill you).

5. The answers are everywhere.

6. Reading is crucial. And most importantly…

7. Question everything.

[Via Lola, go!]

Permalink for this post “Don’t hide the madness”. Print by The Big Harumph.

“Don’t hide the madness”. Print by The Big Harumph.

Permalink for this post I believe in miracles.

I believe in miracles.

Permalink for this post
"How soon ‘not now’ becomes ‘never’."

Martin Luther

[German Priest and Scholar whose questioning of certain church practices led to the Protestant Reformation. 1483-1546].

Permalink for this post “Real men don’t cry tears, they cry mustaches” by and via eyesores

“Real men don’t cry tears, they cry mustaches” by and via eyesores

Permalink for this post ariadnaguiteras:

venga va, una mica d’autocompassió
FFFFOUND! | Tumblr

ariadnaguiteras:

venga va, una mica d’autocompassió

FFFFOUND! | Tumblr

(via wunderkammern)

Permalink for this post
"I could go anywhere, do anything. It was dizzying. Suddenly, to see that the world was so large, the cosmos so black. The unbounded fascination of it, the unbounded loneliness… For the first time, these days, I was touching it with these hands, these eyes. I’ve been looking at the world half-blind, I thought."

—I sarted reading “Kitchen” by Banana Yoshimoto alone in Tokyo one May 31st, when I was her age in the time of writing it. I love it unconditionaly.

Permalink for this post “Work hard & be nice to people”, unknown author.
That’s all.

“Work hard & be nice to people”, unknown author.

That’s all.

Permalink for this post
"Rather than love, than money, than faith, than fame, than fairness… give me truth."

—Henry David Thoreau