and ya know what I actually do love eating sooo many sides of onions at kbbq and putting too many on the grill and then they burn but it’s so yummy and I do think it’s worth the money i’m paying to slightly fill up on them
The most underrated act of kindness is simply letting people be. Let them mispronounce a word, talk too much about a show they love, or get excited about something you don't quite understand. Everyone has something that lights them up, let them shine, even if it's not your thing.
13 going on 30 literally raised me, of course i think the sexiest thing a woman could possibly do is be in her 30s. the sexiest decade, the cuntiest and most exciting time in a girl’s life… i’ve been waiting for it all my life, age shaming could never work on me
to love struggle is to refuse to be a spectator in your own life. while most ppl spend their energy building walls against discomfort, you use that same discomfort as a compass knowing that where there is resistance, there is a proof of existence. it transforms every "hard" day into a confirmation that you're still hungry
sorry to break it to you but you literally have to face your fears and slaughter them. otherwise you will live a small life that you do not want. you literally have to view your biggest fears and attack them head on. you have to fall into the abyss to find your way out. the easy path does not exist. there is no get out of jail free card. you have to allow yourself to die a spiritual death over and over again in order to reinvent yourself into the person you are actually supposed to be. and you have to be painfully honest with yourself and the people around you. it's horrible but it's truly the only way.
Pope Francis was the rare leader who made us want to be better people. In his humility and his gestures at once simple and profound – embracing the sick, ministering to the homeless, washing the feet of young prisoners – he shook us out of our complacency and reminded us that we are all bound by moral obligations to God and one another.
Today, Michelle and I mourn with everyone around the world – Catholic and non-Catholic alike – who drew strength and inspiration from the Pope’s example. May we continue to heed his call to “never remain on the sidelines of this march of living hope.”