Boyfriends and Literature;

Aug 02

“You’re waiting for a train; a train that will take you far away. You know where you hope this train will take you, but you can’t be sure. Yet it doesn’t matter - because we’ll be together.” — Dom Cobb, Inception

school starts in four days; what a bummer

Aug 01

he’s my favorite actor just because of the movie inception

he’s my favorite actor just because of the movie inception

Jul 26

i don’t seem to have time for this anymore

Jul 09

oh how i love harry potter weekend on abc family

Jun 28

I’m sorry that you think it’s wrong of me to want to stay home and read or listen to music instead of going to a party with a bunch of immature drunk strangers who won’t remember meeting me the next day. If you think that makes me boring I guess you’re just missing out on a potentially great relationship. You’d know that if you actually took the time to get to know me.

(via eulogysinger)

so i sorta love this….

Jun 19

1950s ROYAL
want;

1950s ROYAL

want;

Jun 17

nattyboo:


The best.

always <3

nattyboo:

The best.

always <3

annantoinette:

allcreatures:

mabelmoments:

The owl and the pussycat: This picture - taken by Sheila Hassanein at Paignton Zoo Environmental Park in Devon - puts a new twist on the old nursery rhyme. It shows seven-year-old female Asiatic lion Indu and a tiny tawny owl chick which had fallen out of its nest. Paignton Zoo keeper Lucy Manning says: “The tawny owls nested in a lime tree in the lion enclosure. One day the chick just turned up on the ground. Indu peered at it for a while but then lost interest. I think it was too small to eat. We believe it got away - if she had eaten it there would have been fluff and feathers”
Picture: SHEILA HASSANEIN / SWNS. Telegraph UK


WHAT KIND OF OWL IS THAT?! I NEED IT!

it&#8217;s a tawny owl chick. that&#8217;s why it looks all fluffy because it&#8217;s feathers are not yet adult

annantoinette:

allcreatures:

mabelmoments:

The owl and the pussycat: This picture - taken by Sheila Hassanein at Paignton Zoo Environmental Park in Devon - puts a new twist on the old nursery rhyme. It shows seven-year-old female Asiatic lion Indu and a tiny tawny owl chick which had fallen out of its nest. Paignton Zoo keeper Lucy Manning says: “The tawny owls nested in a lime tree in the lion enclosure. One day the chick just turned up on the ground. Indu peered at it for a while but then lost interest. I think it was too small to eat. We believe it got away - if she had eaten it there would have been fluff and feathers”

Picture: SHEILA HASSANEIN / SWNS. Telegraph UK

WHAT KIND OF OWL IS THAT?! I NEED IT!

it’s a tawny owl chick. that’s why it looks all fluffy because it’s feathers are not yet adult