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Posted on June 26, 2011 via wow shut up pitchblackglow with 700 notes
Source: pitchblackglow
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If there is no struggle there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom and yet depreciate agitation…want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters…Power concedes nothing without demand. It never did and it never will.
Fredrick Douglass (via tamaracg)(via beatsrhimesandlife)
Posted on June 26, 2011 via Dormant Genius with 8 notes
Source: tamaracg
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Posted on May 6, 2011 via i can read with 9,037 notes
Source: icanread
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Random
I love the weird and wonderful. If you aren’t different, then you’re just a clone.
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Log out, Wasted Rita
Posted on April 19, 2011 via this isn't happiness. with 673 notes
Source: nevver
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(via beatsrhimesandlife)
Posted on April 19, 2011 via Push The Movement ™ with 664 notes
Source: pushthemovement
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People’s Bullshit
People’s bullshit and fakeness are the main reasons why I like to be alone.
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I am free.
Posted on April 4, 2011 via The Whatever with 129 notes
Source: thewhatever
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Many Faces
Nah, I’ve been here. It’s just that I haven’t opened this chapter yet in the book.
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Risk
Risk is what you know and don’t know. So, what you don’t know is infinity minus what you know. Fear is the delta. - Sam Liles
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50 Cent’s Headphones
I heard the cost of materials to make 50 Cent’s head phones was 50 cents. USD of course.
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Inventor of ‘Like’ Button REVEALED
I heard Mark Zuckerberg’s girlfriend was the originator of the ‘Like’ button. Apparently Mark couldn’t find the ‘Love’ button.
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Hot Rumour
I heard that Bebo, Orkut, MySpace, Friendster, Hi5, Classmates.com and Asian Avenue will combine like Voltron to take on Facebook and Twitter.
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Relationships
Although we both lay close together, we feel miles apart inside
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Perspective
Found this and I wanted to share it:
During a seminar, a woman asked a common question. She said, “How do I know if I married the right person?” I noticed that there was a large man sitting next to her so I said, “It depends. Is that your husband?” In all seriousness, she answered “How do you know?”
Let me answer this question because the chances are good that it’s weighing on your mind. Here’s the answer. EVERY relationship has a cycle. In the beginning, you fell in love with your spouse. You anticipated their call, wanted their touch, and liked their idiosyncrasies. Falling in love with your spouse wasn’t hard. In fact, it was a completely natural and spontaneous experience. You didn’t have to DO anything. That’s why it’s called “falling” in love, because it’s happening TO YOU.
People in love sometimes say, “I was swept of my feet.” Think about the imagery of that expression. It implies that you were just standing there; doing nothing, and then something came along and it just happened TO YOU.
Falling in love is easy. It’s a passive and spontaneous experience. But after a few years of marriage, the euphoria of love fades. It’s the natural cycle of EVERY relationship. Slowly but surely, phone calls become a bother (if they come at all), touch is not always welcome (when it happens), and your spouse’s idiosyncrasies, instead of being cute, drive you nuts.
The symptoms of this stage vary with every relationship, but if you think about your marriage, you will notice a dramatic difference between the initial stage when you were in love and a much duller or even angry subsequent stage.
At this point, you and/or your spouse might start asking, “Did I marry the right person?” And as you and your spouse reflect on the euphoria of the love you once had, you may begin to desire that experience with someone else. This is when marriages breakdown. People blame their spouse for their unhappiness and look outside their marriage for fulfillment.
Extramarital fulfillment comes in all shapes and sizes. Infidelity is the most obvious. But sometimes people turn to work, a hobby, a friendship, excessive TV, or abusive substances. But the answer to this dilemma does NOT lie outside your marriage. It lies within it. I’m not saying that you couldn’t fall in love with someone else. You could.
And TEMPORARILY you’d feel better. But you’d be in the same situation a few years later. Because (listen carefully to this):
THE KEY TO SUCCEEDING IN MARRIAGE IS NOT FINDING THE RIGHT PERSON; IT’S LEARNING TO LOVE THE PERSON YOU FOUND.
SUSTAINING love is not a passive or spontaneous experience. It’ll NEVER just happen to you. You can’t “find” LASTING love. You have to “make” it day in and day out. That’s why we have the expression “the labor of love.”
Because it takes time, effort, and energy; and most importantly, it takes WISDOM. You have to know WHAT TO DO to make your marriage work.
Make no mistake about it. Love is NOT a mystery. There are specific things you can do (with or without your spouse) to succeed with your marriage.
Just as there are physical laws of the universe (such as gravity), there are also laws for relationships. Just as the right diet and exercise program makes you physically stronger, certain habits in your relationship WILL make your marriage stronger. It’s a direct cause and effect.
If you know and apply the laws, the results are predictable… you can “make” love.
Love in marriage is indeed a “decision”… Not just a feeling.


