Why does this remind me of someone in specific, and why does reading this make me feel worse ?
(Source: pyrrhiccomedy, via thinspocean)
Why does this remind me of someone in specific, and why does reading this make me feel worse ?
(Source: pyrrhiccomedy, via thinspocean)
A bestfriend is someone who does everything with you, who loves you when everything goes wrong, and stands when everything else falls down. I love my bestfriend, and I need her <3 I love you bbg <3
Pain please fly away…I want my colour back
Not exactly sure ;p British Columbia or Hawaii I guess :)
There are days when you wake up feeling beautiful, and days when you don’t, but just know that when you wake up and you don’t think you’re beautiful someone else thinks you are! <3
I hate society…nuff said
(via skinnydreamdiary)
Feeling the effects come back….Feeling the opposite of the name of the blog once more…make it go away… please save me
Happy Friday! :)
(Source: a-million-times-over, via blaziingbarbiie)
The thing is, its not just you or me, its not just happiness, its not even just love. Its forever which is actually so much different.
Sweet kisses in the sand, touches of wave splashed skin, water rushing underneath us, I miss the summer. It was ours <3
Tomorrow, March 1st, is Self-Injury Awareness Day.
Myth: People who cut and self-injure are trying to get attention.
Fact: The painful truth is that people who self-harm generally do so in secret. They aren’t trying to manipulate others or draw attention to themselves. In fact, shame and fear can make it very difficult to come forward and ask for help.
Myth: People who self-injure are crazy and/or dangerous.
Fact: It is true that many people who self-harm suffer from anxiety, depression, or a previous trauma—just like millions of others in the general population. Self-injury is how they cope. Slapping them with a “crazy” or “dangerous” label isn’t accurate or helpful.
Myth: People who self-injure want to die.
Fact: Self-injurers usually do not want to die. When they self-harm, they are not trying to kill themselves—they are trying to cope with their pain. In fact, self-injury may be a way of helping themselves go on living. However, in the long-term, people who self-injure have a much higher risk of suicide, which is why it’s so important to seek help.
Myth: If the wounds aren’t bad, it’s not that serious.
Fact: The severity of a person’s wounds has very little to do with how much he or she may be suffering. Don’t assume that because the wounds or injuries are minor, there’s nothing to worry about.
Singing and dancing through your room to your favorite song until you cant breathe <3