through my eyes

give me love.   what do you like?   My beautiful lady   Me   for brynn <3   

Krystal. 19. Seattle.

best-of-funny:

quazza:

eridone:

it feels like someone…..
WANTS TO SELL ME SOMETHING




X

best-of-funny:

quazza:

eridone:

it feels like someone…..

WANTS TO SELL ME SOMETHING

image

image

X

— 1 hour ago with 69248 notes

bmoburns:

preteenager:

HOW DOES POPCORN EVEN DO THAT THING

HERE I SHOW YOU THE THING

image

(via onlylolgifs)

— 1 hour ago with 40385 notes
don't blink. don't even blink. blink and you're dead. don't turn your back, don't look away and don't blink. good luck.

(Source: jauros, via anahahah)

— 3 hours ago with 3570 notes
thefrogman:

The first casualty of the buyout. 

thefrogman:

The first casualty of the buyout. 

— 3 hours ago with 5183 notes
marissamvf:

nerdtothefifth:

sherlock-season-three:

17-is-lucky:

mindless-dalek-indulgence:

boothroyds:

cravenclaw:

liquidnight:

Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1892.
“In diaries and letter from the late nineteenth century, women medical students sometimes wrote of their resolve to prove that they could engage in all aspects of medical study and practice without compromising dignity or sacrificing the appearance of femininity. The choice of dress for the dissecting room was one common subject in such reflections.”
From Dissection: Photographs of a rite of passage in American Medicine: 1880-1930 by John Harley Warner and James M. Edmonson

marissamvf:

nerdtothefifth:

sherlock-season-three:

17-is-lucky:

mindless-dalek-indulgence:

boothroyds:

cravenclaw:

liquidnight:

Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1892.

“In diaries and letter from the late nineteenth century, women medical students sometimes wrote of their resolve to prove that they could engage in all aspects of medical study and practice without compromising dignity or sacrificing the appearance of femininity. The choice of dress for the dissecting room was one common subject in such reflections.”

From Dissection: Photographs of a rite of passage in American Medicine: 1880-1930 by John Harley Warner and James M. Edmonson

— 17 hours ago with 305 notes