Wouldn’t be amazing if you could see all of your female ancestors at like age 25? All at once? Like you walk into a room and they’ll all in order there and you could talk with them all and see the story of your lineage? What were they doing at my age? What did they all look like? Would they be proud of me?
remember when you were a child and you thought the moon was following you in the car…gud times
Jovana Rikalo on Instagram
Don't you feel like exploring the old libraries,the past centuries,the Gothic castles ,the dukes,the maidens, with your lover holding hands and living there forever.
Heaven isn't it?
Home isn't somewhere you born but you're raised with care
"I rather like to be slugged, to walk away from the poem with old wounds reopened.... let the poem bruise me."
- Anne Sexton
Adonis, tr. by Samuel Hazo, from “The Crow’s Feather”, The Pages of Day and Night
It felt like Sunday after a long time.No alarms,no missed breakfast,no heading to the subway in a rush,no smoking with colleagues.Called a friend whom I ditched with a dinner party,my mother cooked me my favourite meal and I was full . Peeled an orange and drove to the vegetable market. The weather was hot and the day was slow.
And this is what I wanted since a very long time.
"If you would be a real seeker after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as far as possible, all things."
— René Descartes
“If you don’t love her, leave her. If you can’t picture her in a white dress walking down the aisle towards you, leave her.If you aren’t able to see her as the woman who will raise your children, leave her. If you don’t like the way she looks first thing in the morning, leave her. If her laugh doesn’t warm you up inside, leave her. If her smile doesn’t take your breath away, leave her. If her love for the sky bores you, leave her. If she in general doesn’t fascinate you, leave her because someone out in the world is searching for this extraordinary girl who you believe is just ordinary.”
— Qu0tationmarks {She’s far from ordinary}
Jeanette Winterson, Lighthousekeeping