people who need to come out of the closet
- nobody unless they damn well want to now shut your mouth
via cuposunny
Things that don’t make you a bad person:
- Drinking alcohol responsibly
- Doing drugs recreationally
- Eating Meat
- Abstaining from drinking alcohol, doing drugs or eating meat
Things that make you a bad person:
- Condemning someone for their life choices
via tree--sha
I have decided that I will no longer go down with my ships.
I will merely convert them all to submarines, and continue on.
(Source: azorahai)
via mypradasatthecleaneretc
As a Supernatural fan I have to post this…
So I heard Sera Gamble is leaving?
Well personally I never had a beef with her as a person, so I can’t say I hate her.
Wasn’t fond of her writing, but hey still watched the show and there were bits that were genuinely awesome!
I will admit, while I’ve got absolutely nothing against the actresses that play Meg. BUT I DO LOATHE MEG. So I’ll be glad to see her go.
Moving on,
To the Destiel fans, I hope your ship keeps sailing.
To everyone else, if you’re gonna hate, don’t let it be petty. There’s no room for that in the Supernatural family. Sera is still one of us. Go home.
So here’s to you Sera, good luck in all your future endeavors. :)
Because after all…
YOU GAVE US THIS.
AND WE THANK YOU.
via 18thcenturylove
Youtube comment (via exxal)
via tardisblueimpala
Because this really fucking pisses me off.
Our readers are right — almost all the prominent female characters in George R.R. Martin’s popular series are totally bad-ass. Jim Scott champions Arya, pointing out that “unlike her sister Sansa, who took 4000 pages to finally grow a backbone, Arya has been the picture of strength and resolve since the moment she watched her betrayed father be executed.” Others suggested Catelyn Stark, Brienne Tarth, Cersei Lannister and — probably our pick for the strongest lady in the books — the Mother of Dragons, Daenerys Targaryen.This is the write-up for the Women of ASoIaF in a list of 10 of The Most Powerful Female Characters in Literature. Notice how each major female character gets a mention. Now notice the mention that Sansa gets. I know people love Arya and that’s great. (I don’t, but that’s mainly because I just grew bored with her storyline and now can’t be bothered to care beyond hoping that she lives.) But really, Mr. Jim Scott? Really? The whole tearing one female character down in order to build one up approach aside, this is just gross. The implication here is that Arya (with Needle in hand, of course) becomes strong and powerful while on the run, but Sansa (who also saw her father beheaded) takes “4000 pages to finally grow a backbone.” So, she didn’t have a backbone when she took it upon herself to plead for her father’s life in front of king and council? She didn’t have a backbone when Joffrey made her see her father and septa’s heads on spikes? Or surviving constant beatings by grown men in armor? Or saving Ser Dontos Hollard’s life? Or going to the godswood, risking her own life every time? Or simply surviving? All of that points to her not having a backbone, apparently. I would love to know when Sansa gets a backbone according to Jim Scott because from my reading, she’s always had one.
(Source: lemonylemonylemoncakes)
via triumphofbeingalive








