I have a friend who does this. I wish I had the time and energy to spend knocking down his walls so he can feel loved, but the honest truth is that I have lots of other things going on in my life, and plenty of other friends who aren’t such an energy drain.
afternoonsnoozebutton:
suicideblonde:
Star Trek fan proposing to his girlfriend during their photo with the entire TNG cast
Worth it for the look on Wil Wheaton’s face
Wil Wheaton looks like he was just proposed to
“OHMYGAWD OHMYGAWD OHMYGAWD”
(Source: bohemea)
I have only ever wanted, and am now married to, the one on the right!!
(Source: srslulz)
Hey everyone, I’m getting married in two days!
afternoonsnoozebutton:
A castle covers many personality deficiencies.
It’s exactly the same thing in Pride and Prejudice. Elizabeth only warms to Mr. Darcy after she sees his estate
What my fiancée and I are slowly becoming…
(via my new favorite tumblr, fuckyeah3rdrock!)
Is this girl a keeper or what??
Staying deeply in love with someone happens gradually and requires conscious decisions, made over and over again, for a lifetime. Too many people choose to get married based on attraction and don’t consider, or have enough perspective to recognize, whether their love can endure.
Relationships last long not because they’re destined to last long. Relationships last long because two brave people made a choice—to keep it, fight for it, and to work for it. Meanwhile, other relationships fail not because they’re destined to fail. They fail because one of the two, or both, made the choice—to set each other free.
franklieu:
“Science has finally confirmed what anyone who’s ever been in love already knows: Heartbreak really does hurt.
“In a new study using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), researchers have found that the same brain networks that are activated when you’re burned by hot coffee also light up when you think about a lover who has spurned you.
“In other words, the brain doesn’t appear to firmly distinguish between physical pain and intense emotional pain. Heartache and painful breakups are ‘more than just metaphors,’ says Ethan Kross, Ph.D., the lead researcher and an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor.”
(via cnn)