gwynndolin:

gwynndolin:

gwynndolin:

gonna watch midsommar noe

this guy makes such damn stressful movies

pussy blood?

tibets:
“ mariah carey in a pool while it’s raining.
she is experiencing many emotions, primarily extreme happiness.
she is a little bit drunk
”

tibets:

mariah carey in a pool while it’s raining.

she is experiencing many emotions, primarily extreme happiness.

she is a little bit drunk

(via babygirllll1996)

nutongzhi:

nutongzhi:

the funniest part of katmai fat bear week is the comments on the obviously smaller bears pictures like β€œi’m sorry king πŸ˜”βœŠ we love you but your opponent is simply very fat. we still love you”

image

(via unico2)

theentiregdtime:

fallingforyou - the 1975 // more - rupi kaur // i wanna be your girlfriend - girl in red // dennis and dee get a new dad (2006)

(via unico2)

heathyr:

Most people I know had that one movie as a kid; that one movie that they would watch over and over and over to the resigned acceptance of their parents. I’ve always thought that movie says something about a person. What was your movie?

(via goshdarnitjackwhite)

the-memedaddy:
“Meirl
”
catsindoors:
“ “Photo by Aftab Uzzaman
”
Do Cats Deliberately Misbehave? by Pam Johnson-Bennett
My office receives a large number of requests concerning cat behavior problems and it’s alarming to me whenever I hear people refer to their cats as...

catsindoors:

Photo by Aftab Uzzaman

Do Cats Deliberately Misbehave?

by Pam Johnson-Bennett

My office receives a large number of requests concerning cat behavior problems and it’s alarming to me whenever I hear people refer to their cats as spiteful or they’re sure a beloved cat’s motivation behind a particular behavior is anger or revenge. Really? Do you really believe your cat is capable of plotting a behavior as punishment for something you have or haven’t done?

Miscommunication Leads to Lousy Problem-Solving

There are a couple of major problems with thinking that your cat’s behavior is a punitive plan. First, it fuels miscommunication on your part so you waste valuable time in identifying the true underlying cause of the behavior. If you’re so sure the behavior is motivated by revenge then you will overlook some obvious and critical clues behind the true trigger.

Next, it may create anger on your part so you might end up punishing the cat for the behavior. I’ve received many calls and emails from cat parents who have spanked their cats, rubbed their noses in their messes or put their cats in “time out” as punishment. None of that works. It’s not only counter-productive, but it’s cruel as well.

Keep reading

(via fbwzoo)

blairwitchh:

the blair witch isn’t mean, like imagine a group of film majors showing up to ur house with a camera and screaming at u

(via unclefather)

sparrf:
“lumps
”

sparrf:

lumps

(via spitefulhag)

straycatj:

your-squid:

secretlyluigi:

dovescape:

image
image

@straycatj

We can’t understand why such a thing happens because we’re only a small cat and its partner