i can’t wait to not get kissed on new years eve
People are not milk cartons. You don’t pick and choose the ones you think will last the longest without going sour. If it feels right, you just go with it until it doesn’t feel right anymore. And sometimes when something goes wrong, it hurts. That doesn’t mean it wasn’t worth it in the first place.
books read in 2018: leah on the offbeat by becky albertally
“It’s like when a song changes key, or starts on the offbeat, or shifts its meter halfway through. It’s that hiccup you get in your chest. That tiny huh moment. Like maybe something’s kind of wrong. Or maybe something’s about to change.”

broken to pieces; a Sherlock/Jamie playlist dedicated to @tvandme
listen on spotify
scars (tove lo); waves (dean lewis); be alright (dean lewis); bruises (lewis capaldi); stone (jaymes young); das original (prinz pi, mark forster); first person on earth (robert delong); algorithm (muse); kill of the night (gin wigmore); colors (kulick)
”My greatest wish for humanity is not for peace or comfort or joy. It is that we all still die a little inside every time we witness the death of another. For only the pain of empathy will keep us human. There’s no version of God that can help us if we ever lose that.”
One Of Us Is Lying by Karen M. McManus
“I guess we’re almost friends now, or as friendly as you can get when you’re not one hundred percent sure the other person isn’t framing you for murder.”
Alone Together by Aristotle Roufanis
“Alone Together is an ongoing photographic project by Aristotle Roufanis, for which the London-based photographer takes photos of large metropoles in a way that only tiny, individual apartment lights are visible. Hardly recognisable in the dark, some of the world’s most famous metropoles such as London, Paris, Miami and Athens are transformed into sprawling canvases of anonymity, where countless people have decided to make their home but hardly connect to each other. The project takes this phenomenon of social alienation in urban centres as a starting point, and adds a positive, optimistic twist to it.”
Instagram: @crossconnectmag
“Sometimes you are going to miss a person who was an almost to you. And feel sad because there is no name for that feeling. You just feel it in a way that makes you tired to your very bones.”— Nikita Gill, Almost Feelings