Verklempt

(Source: blazeberg, via kidtanev)

Matthew Tammaro

laughingsquid:

Bacon Condoms Said to ‘Make Your Meat, Look Like Meat’

laughingsquid:

Bacon Condoms Said to ‘Make Your Meat, Look Like Meat’

“Nobody’s coming out of this thing happy. Especially not us. I can’t deny we’ve had fun though.” - Badlands (1973)

(Source: jacknicholson, via freecocaine)

ydrill:

Cats and blinds don’t fit

(via androphilia)

(Source: kreuzen, via casabet64)

vintageanchor:

Star struck Sylvia Plath interviews the great novelist Elizabeth Bowen for Mademoiselle magazine, Cambridge, MA, May 1953. Photograph: Black Star

vintageanchor:

Star struck Sylvia Plath interviews the great novelist Elizabeth Bowen for Mademoiselle magazine, Cambridge, MA, May 1953. Photograph: Black Star

(Source: vintageanchorbooks)

ilovecharts:

School Project Showing the Amount of Sugar In Beverages
via Kurt White

ilovecharts:

School Project Showing the Amount of Sugar In Beverages

via Kurt White

tinyhousesmallspace:

Best Doormat Ever…

tinyhousesmallspace:

Best Doormat Ever…

It turns out procrastination is not typically a function of laziness, apathy or work ethic as it is often regarded to be. It’s a neurotic self-defense behavior that develops to protect a person’s sense of self-worth.

You see, procrastinators tend to be people who have, for whatever reason, developed to perceive an unusually strong association between their performance and their value as a person. This makes failure or criticism disproportionately painful, which leads naturally to hesitancy when it comes to the prospect of doing anything that reflects their ability — which is pretty much everything.

But in real life, you can’t avoid doing things. We have to earn a living, do our taxes, have difficult conversations sometimes. Human life requires confronting uncertainty and risk, so pressure mounts. Procrastination gives a person a temporary hit of relief from this pressure of “having to do” things, which is a self-rewarding behavior. So it continues and becomes the normal way to respond to these pressures.

Particularly prone to serious procrastination problems are children who grew up with unusually high expectations placed on them. Their older siblings may have been high achievers, leaving big shoes to fill, or their parents may have had neurotic and inhuman expectations of their own, or else they exhibited exceptional talents early on, and thereafter “average” performances were met with concern and suspicion from parents and teachers.

David Cain, “Procrastination Is Not Laziness” (via pawneeparksdepartment)

This totally justifies every excuse I’ve been giving myself from not doing that thing I’m supposed to do.

(via aaronmoles)

(via conglamourate)

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