February 22nd, 2022 (2/22/22) falls on a Tuesday, making it 2’s day
February 22nd, 2022 (2/22/22) falls on a Tuesday, making it 2’s day
(Source: helpingg, via annesmiless)
“what do you think about when you daydream or get distracted?”
nothing. my head is just a running loop of the hamilton original cast recording
VERY GOOD.
(via obiwan-mybeloved)
phrases that mean the world to someone:
- I love you
- this reminded me of you
- you make me so happy
- I’d like to know more about you
- I have missed you
- I am so happy to see you
- I believe in you
- look how far you’ve come
(via melancholy-introvert)
“You know it’s love when all you want is that person to be happy, even if you’re not part of their happiness.”— Julia Roberts (via wordsnquotes)
(via melancholy-introvert)
Unpopular opinion: straight people using “partner” to refer to their SO actually helps normalize the term so that lgbt folx can use it without automatically outing themselves to strangers. It also helps other straight ppl get comfortable with the fact that strangers aren’t entitled to information about other people’s gender or sexuality.
Give op their hard-earned notes
At my wedding we had the officiant pronounce us “partners in life” instead of “husband and wife”
My grandfather doesn’t use the word “calories” when talking about food…he uses the word “value” instead. I was eating fruit for lunch and he said “if you’re going for a run later you need something more valuable”. I sat there for a while just thinking about the way he said that. Change out a negative word with a positive one and you’ll see start seeing positive change.
(via simply-stacy-h)
“The practice of assertiveness means acting. Act as if you are already the healthiest person you can be. Do not wait until you feel better about yourself or until you believe you have what it takes. Act as if you are self-actualised and your beliefs will follow suit. Act while you fear rather than waiting until you feel unafraid. “Acting as if” is a form of playfulness. Play successfully combines contrasts and opposites. When we act as if we are already more advanced than we imagine ourselves to be, we are creatively playing with an old, habitual self-image and welcoming a new self that wants to emerge. This new self is encouraged into existence by the image we are displaying when we “act as if.””— David Richo, How to Be an Adult
(via growing-despite)