I love cooking, baking, creating recipes, photography, playing volleyball, talking on the phone, hanging out with friends, giving advice to people (people always come to me for some reason), and I'm a bookworm. Hope you like the blog!
Whole Wheat and Chocolate. Need I say more?
(via therocktomyroll)
This up to 1000 years old snow has metamorphosed into highly pressurized glacier ice that contains almost no air bubbles. Thus it absorbs the visible light despite the scattered shortest blue fraction, giving it its distinct deep blue waved appearance. This cavity in the glacier ice formed as a result of a glacial mill, or moulin.
Rain and meltwater on the glacier surface is channelled into streams that enter the glacier at crevices. The waterfall melts a hole into the glacier while the ponded water drains towards lower elevations by forming long ice caves with an outlet at the terminus of the glacier. The fine grained sediments in the water along with wind blown sediments cause the frozen meltwater stream to appear in a muddy colour while the top of the cave exhibits the deep blue colour.
Due to the fast movement of the glacier of about 1 m per day over uneven terrain this ice cave cracked up at its end into a deep vertical crevice, called cerrac. This causes the indirect daylight to enter the ice cave from both ends resulting in homogeneous lighting of the ice tunnel.
(via lickystickypickywe)
(via keep-me-sane)
Hi. Today, I had a life-changing experience.I was in Target looking for some nail polish, when I walked passed a middle-aged looking woman with a younger boy. he looked older than me, maybe in his late teens or early 20’s. They were near the isle I needed to look through, so I overheard their conversation. I overheard it quite clearly, actually, because the older woman was yelling. She yelled, “I refuse to have a fag for a son! You are not my son! I thought I taught you well enough to know that homosexuality is wrong! Where did I go wrong as a parent?” I was shocked. I looked over, and the boy was tearing up. I wanted to hug him. I looked at his mother, and we made eye contact. She said, “My son is a fucking queer! Tell me what I did wrong!” I stood there for a moment, stunned. Then I looked her dead in the eye and said “What did you do wrong? Let me ask you this: Do you still love him?” She looked at him, then back at me. “No”, she said, coldly. “What you’ve done wrong,” I started, “is you’re selfish. Sickeningly selfish. You don’t care about what your son thinks, or how your son feels. Did you ever think of the courage it took for him to tell you? The least you could do is love him unconditionally, the way any mother should. The way I see it, you’re more worried about your feelings than your son’s.”
She retorted, “You don’t know anything. He was angry with me, and this is his way of getting me back. He wants to be a rebellious son of a bitch and call himself a fag because he wants attention. This is all an attention-seeking stunt.” She looked at him. “You’re going to hell for this. You’re a disgrace of a human being.”
I interjected “With all due respect, if anyone here is a disgrace, it’s you. People like you, sicken me. How quickly you can turn away your son, your own flesh and blood, as soon as you find something out about him that displeases you. With all due respect, you’re ignorant and selfish.”
She looked at me, her eyes like daggers piercing through my skull. Then she stalked away. Just like that, without another word. She just left. And I was standing there awkwardly in the middle of the nail care isle in Target with this boy. I looked around, shocked that all this commotion hadn’t caused a crowd to form. Maybe nobody needed nail polish today.
He looked at me with an awkward smile. One of those “What do we do now?” kind of smiles. I hugged him. “Thanks.” he said. “Thanks for standing up for me. That meant a lot.”
I may never see him again, but I feel good. I feel good knowing that I did the right thing, and he’ll probably remember me for quite some time. I’m sure his mother will also. I can feel comfortable with the knowledge that after all these years of trying, I can finally be comfortable with the fact that I’ve made an impact on someone’s life. And all at the age of fourteen. I don’t know how he’s doing now, but I wish the best for him, whoever he was.
REBLOG FOREVER!
good for you, man. im proud.
(via keep-me-sane)
You go to school like this :
When someone says something rude to you:
& then when everyone asks what’s wrong your just like :
(Source: xoanson, via keep-me-sane)
(Source: dropyourweapon, via tfloersch)
(Source: tumboner, via backofthevanhandy)