beaten ruthlessly has more reward than being held up under false honor.
I was thinking about this as if I was being treated unfair in both LOLxDD
to win an unfair battle or to be beaten ruthlessly in one?
Not to be rude, but people shouldn’t let the bad things that happen during their adolescence linger and define them. Stop being so serious. Learn from them and stay positive. Don’t worry too much.
(Unless you’re like Lisbeth Salander and crazy sh!t happens and they send you to a psychiatric clinic and everyone thinks you’re schizophrenic and mentally retarded, when actually you’re a genius with photographic memory.)
LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL. what and what? xD
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
Vivian will be a good child.
Vivian will behave.
I have trust issues. People can be so low, indecisive, and manipulative.
I was pretty much a lone wolf, till 7th grade. I changed in 7th grade. I changed again this year. To think that its safe to take down that wall that protects me from people. No. Never again.
(by cinderellusion.)
omg, planning to avoid as many yearbook photos as possible next year …
/MaximumDerping.
These are so hot, I couldn’t not buy these
Send Us Your Solar Eclipse Images!
According to Space.com—
The full “ring of fire” effect will be visible to observers in parts of eight states in the western United States during the late afternoon and evening Sunday. Much of the rest of North America will be treated to a partial eclipse.
Several different organizations will broadcast live footage of the solar eclipse Sunday, as seen through telescopes in various locations around the world. Viewers can track the eclipse as it moves from East Asia, crosses the Pacific and darkens the skies over much of western Northern America. SPACE.com will offer several of the solar eclipse webcasts for readers.
You can submit images here
Image: This NASA graphic of the United States depicts the path of the annular solar eclipse of May 20, 2012, when the moon will cover about 94 percent of the sun’s surface as seen from Earth. CREDIT: NASA/JPL, Jane Houston Jones
(Source: news.discovery.com)
Brinicle: The Icy Finger of Death
Imagine being a seastar off the coast of Antarctica. Sure life is cold, but you crawl around feeling out for food and keeping an eye - or rather five eye spots, those light sensitive organs on the tip of each of your arms - on the ground. And despite your slow and steady motion you are a ruthless predator: a carnivore with a voracious appetite for bivalves, urchins and yes you’ll even take on the occasional crab if it crosses your path.
Indeed, on the Southern Ocean seafloor you are still king of the creepy crawlies; the top predator in a sea where cold waters allow for slow motion assault. But there is one thing that can take you down and it also moves not with lightning fast speed, but in a slow freezing trickle. And similar to your own attack method of extending your stomach out of your body and enveloping your prey in digestive enzymes, this killer enshrines everything it touches in an icy tomb.
Beware the brinicle.
This amazing phenomena was captured for the first time on film during the shooting of Discovery’s Frozen Planet series, which airs Sunday, March 18 at 8 p.m. ET
Watch it.
It could save your life.


