sorry I didn’t mean to start tearing up as soon as I start trying to talk about my feelings, my bad
sorry I didn’t mean to start tearing up as soon as I start trying to talk about my feelings, my bad
I need several hours of Quiet Time each day or i become the worst person alive
grippiersockgangggg-deactivated:
I was not made for….*gestures broadly at the world*
— August 15, 1913 / Franz Kafka diaries
been thinking a lot about anticipatory grief lately. i love you so much that i know losing you will devastate me. i haven’t lost you yet but i already miss you. we still have time, but it won’t be enough. i think about what i would say at your funeral, and say some of it to you now cause i need you to know how loved you are before you go. you will go where i cannot follow, but you will never really leave me. it won’t make it hurt less but it is a part of healing somehow.
i am doomed by the narrative. ignore that i am also the author of the narrative
every girl should be allowed to lie on the floor for 16 hours a day to cope with the agonies
You know, when I see fictional characters who repress all their emotions, they’re usually aloof and very blunt about keeping people at a distance, sometimes to an edgy degree—but what I don’t see nearly enough are the emotionally repressed characters who are just…mellow.
Think about it. In real life, the person that’s bottling up all their emotions is not the one that’s brooding in the corner and snaps at you for trying to befriend them. More often than not, it’s that friendly person in your circle who makes easy conversation with you, laughs with you, and listens and gives advice whenever you’re upset. But you never see them upset, in fact they seem to have endless patience for you and everything around them—and so you call them their friend, you trust them. And only after months of telling them all your secrets do you realize…
…they’ve never actually told you anything about themselves.
The Berkshire Eagle, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, October 7, 1963
giving your dash a little clean
my favorite childhood memory is having energy
Georgia O’Keeffe, in a letter to Russel Vernon Hunter, from Georgia O’Keeffe: Art and Letters
Art by René Magritte
Your late 20s are not old and there is still lots of time left at 26 or 27 or 30. You haven’t wasted your potential. Not me tho im running out of time by the day
Childhood made everything feel like it lingered. The time it took for hot chocolate to cool down was eternal. Christmas day took weeks. The two-hour drive to my grandparents’ house took us to a new world. It’s all too fast now.
Man, that little scrolly wheel to pick your year of birth getting kinda far