
(Source: horrorgrafia, via limited-edition-d0rk)

(Source: horrorgrafia, via limited-edition-d0rk)
falling apart again and I’m too scared to ask you for help this time.
yeah i encourage all of you to get out to your local a+c armed with some stink bombs ;) (their stores smell disgusting anyhow) i’ve always hated this store, but now i feel entirely justified for using that word.
This just pissed me off so much…
What a total bonehead.go fuck yourself.
(Source: lacigreen)

After changing to fit into society, you are eventually going to want your old self back sooner or later

(Source: sydney-williams16, via suuckmydisick)
(Source: cakenomics, via haveyouseentheroses)
All these lovely ladies weigh 154lbs. We all carry weight differently, don’t live your life by an outdated chart. Find a number that looks and feels good.
(via beccassecret)
All of this. Encourage people to try new words, to mess them up, to experiment with vocabulary, to learn complicated adjectives and verbs and nouns, because words are fun.
Also, don’t be a jerk.
(via beccassecret)
Justin Bartels, Impression.
‘The series focuses on the clothing that women think they should wear, or are told what to wear, to impress someone in a sexual manner. There is a physical mark that is left from these clothes, showing the discomfort women go through.’
(Source: anorsexic, via thegr0tesque)

This Ad Has a Secret Anti-Abuse Message That Only Kids Can See
In an effort to provide abused children with a safe way to reach out for help, a Spanish organization called the Aid to Children and Adolescents at Risk Foundation created an ad that displays a different message for adults and children at the same time.
The secret behind the ad’s wizardry is a lenticular top layer, which shows different images at varying angles. So when an adult—or anyone taller than four feet, five inches—looks at it, they only see the image of a sad child and the message: “Sometimes, child abuse is only visible to the child suffering it.”
But when a child looks at the ad, they see bruises on the boy’s face and a different message: “If somebody hurts you, phone us and we’ll help you,” alongside the foundation’s phone number.
The ad is designed to empower kids, particularly if their abuser happens to be standing right next to them.
(via beccassecret)

(Source: the-ghost-insideme, via askandrewandreilly)

(Source: hailthepeople, via limited-edition-d0rk)
(Source: shootupblood, via tigerishtown)