Oh no my sparkling green tea
Overheard in the school cafeteria
Genius idea: Life is strange saga, but a monkey island style point and click adventure
Chloe’s room pixelart by sunteam
reblog if:
your blog is lgbtq+ safe
your inbox is always open to cheer someone up even if it’s someone you don’t know
you think every life matters
you believe that depression is a real issue and not just “in your head”
you’re willing to talk a stranger out of suicide
your friends don’t know about your blog
your friends know nothing about you but you know a lot about them
i just wanna know how many people are like me
*getting ready for a pride parade* Don we now our gay apparel
@givemetoes #neverforget
Happy Wednesday!
Leikeze the bored, Hoarder of bratwursts and books about banksy
Loving that alliteration
Reprah the Anxious, Hoarder Of Ravioli And Books. (OMG LOL)
Keep the flame going for those we have lost to suicide.
I had to drive my mom’s car to Seattle and back. The bad part? I’ve never driven a car in my entire life, the gas and brake kept switching pedals, I live 3 hours away from Seattle, I wasn’t wearing my glasses,and my grandmother was in the front seat telling me everything I was doing wrong. Plus, when I got to Seattle I had to drive straight back because grandma forgot her handbag.
I got bored in class
During my last show as a stage manager, I had to manage not only the friendships (I was friends with most of the cast) but also my brand new relationship while still trying to remain in charge. "Yes babe I love you but yoU NEED TO GET ON STAGE BEFORE I HAVE AN ANEURYSM FROM THE STRESS YOU ALL CAUSE ME"
I saw a “shoutout to the theatre kids” post that was only about actors and I felt left out so this is for everyone else (please add to this if you feel you haven’t been represented!!):
shoutout to the theatre kids that aren’t actors
to the stage managers who manage to balance friendships and being authoritative in rehearsals
to the technicians that do extra training in welding and access equipment and so many other things to make themselves more hireable
to the techs and stage management who just sometimes want to wear colour but are instead in show blacks all the time
to the stage managers who get stuck mediating the tension between directors and designers who are older and supposed to be more mature than you
to the techs who injure themselves, deal with it, and keep working (or are told they aren’t allowed and are so annoyed about it)
to the designers that have to compromise what they want because the director doesn’t like it or there isn’t enough time/budget/equipment
to the casual crew members who just like theatre and want to be involved but aren’t trying to make a career of it
to everyone who tries (and sometimes fails) to fit in friends and healthy eating during tech week
to everyone who has ever done a year-long unpaid (or barely paid) internship in the hopes that it will lead to a job opportunity
to everyone who has ever worked really hard on making/finding a prop only to have it cut in tech or dress
to the design assistants that have to figure out when and how to become designers in their own right
to anyone who has ever managed to avert a crisis backstage where there’s barely any light and you can’t talk
to anyone who has ever had to make the decision to stop the show because some crises just can’t be averted
to everyone who struggles to understand unions
and the list goes on and on
you’re all fucking amazing