Sølastalgia
jordan, 17, philadelphia, pa



archive / / flickr // soundcloud // message

jordynnfrescotty.tumblr.com is da otha blog dat i be on & shit nigga

"I think you can have anything that you want. Find someone who has a life that you want and figure out how they got it. Read books. Figure out what you’re passionate about. Pick your role models wisely. Find out what they did and do it."

— Lana Del Rey (via adjectival)

(via galaxiabender)

untitled on Flickr.

untitled on Flickr.

#chinatown

(via dual-ity-deactivated20120213)

glared:

go wild - NZ outside

glared:

go wild - NZ outside

(via terroriss)

(via terroriss)

(via potent)

Guess who’s going to the car show todeeeyyyyy

Wolf

To see a wolf in your dream symbolizes survival, beauty, solitude, mystery, self-confidence and pride. You are able to keep your composure in a variety of social circumstances and blend into any situation with ease and grace. You are also a loner by choice. Negatively, the wolf represents hostility, aggression, or sneakiness.It may reflect an uncontrollable situation or an all-consuming force in your life.This could point to an obsession, an addiction or something that is beyond your control.

donotcockblock:

blue-tofu:


On June 11th 1963, Thích Quảng Đức, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk, sat down in the middle of a busy intersection in Saigon, covered himself in gasoline and He then ignited a match, and set himself on fire. Đức burned to death in a matter of minutes, and he was immortalized in a famous photograph taken by a reporter who was in Vietnam in order to photograph the war. All those who saw this spectacle were taken by the fact that Duc did not make a sound while burning to death. Đức was protesting President Ngô Đình Diệm’s administration for oppressing the Buddhist religion.

I understand this is tragic and beautiful but it highlights the extreme lengths people will go to for religion.

Not necessarily religion I think, more like the lengths they will go to, to be able to express their beliefs and to be able to live freely

donotcockblock:

blue-tofu:

On June 11th 1963, Thích Quảng Đức, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk, sat down in the middle of a busy intersection in Saigon, covered himself in gasoline and He then ignited a match, and set himself on fire. Đức burned to death in a matter of minutes, and he was immortalized in a famous photograph taken by a reporter who was in Vietnam in order to photograph the war. All those who saw this spectacle were taken by the fact that Duc did not make a sound while burning to death. Đức was protesting President Ngô Đình Diệm’s administration for oppressing the Buddhist religion.

I understand this is tragic and beautiful but it highlights the extreme lengths people will go to for religion.

Not necessarily religion I think, more like the lengths they will go to, to be able to express their beliefs and to be able to live freely

melhoneycat:

Clot by Jeff Simpson
“Photoshop, Acrylic

melhoneycat:

Clot by Jeff Simpson

“Photoshop, Acrylic

(via tsfye)

I would give up all of this to go back to 2007

because this sucks


/avant
t h e m e