Pick the one who holds you when you cry.
I’ll never ever forget the first time I saw you.
You were a stranger when I saw you for the first time last February. Now here we are a year later, and once again you’re a stranger.
Has anyone else noticed how, when you have a chronic condition of some kind, that there’s always the basic assumption from people around you that you’re not already doing everything you can?
It’s all about the illusion of control. People who are healthy like to believe they can always keep being healthy if they do the right things. They don’t want to think about how good people get struck with terrible circumstances for no reason. So they keep assuming that if they got sick, they could do something to make it better. And if you’re still sick, that must mean you’ve done something wrong or not done enough.
Nail. Head. The same attitude can be seen in how a lot of people talk about poverty.
we all have that one person that we wasted just too much time on
everyone i’ve ever needed, needed someone else more.
Fun Fact: Quiet people are aware that they are quiet. They don’t need you to point it out to them. They know. Please stop.
You don’t tell people you’re not okay,“ she said, “because it’s hard watching them not know what to do.
“Then you end up comforting them, even though the one who needed comforting was you.
Lingerie under oversized hoodies
makin my way down town, walkin fast, haulin ass cause its cold out
my response to “you should see a doctor” 98% of the time is just “haha yeah probably” followed by me not seeing a doctor
It’s all going to be okay. (Trust me, I’m a doctor.) But it’s up to us to make it okay. It’s time to be positively rebellious and rebelliously positive. As long as we stand up for what we believe in, don’t give in to anger or violence, look out for the little guy, keep an eye on the big guys, refuse to keep our mouths shut, and just generally try not to be dicks, every little thing is gonna be alright.
