(Source: janiiwantstofly, via l3sbians-and-guitar-riffs)
(Source: janiiwantstofly, via l3sbians-and-guitar-riffs)
It seems to be in a state of flux.
What does that mean?
I don’t know. It’s the sort of thing the Doctor would say!
(via deathvamp13)
(via deathvamp13)
—Unknown (via thatkindofwoman)
(Source: copulati0n, via l3sbians-and-guitar-riffs)
(Source: thisyearsgirls, via l3sbians-and-guitar-riffs)
David Foster Wallace was like, Art must be sincere! We must use every tool in the linguistic toolbox to cut through sentiment and dishonest cliche and build fresh ways to reveal the power and reality of unironized emotion.
And Mister Rogers was like, Basically the same thing, but without any shame or pretense or fear of sincerity.
(Source: marketwarriors, via serialfrost)
(Source: isolated-hearts, via l3sbians-and-guitar-riffs)
(Source: crystesque, via serialfrost)
During a solar flare, magnetic field lines on the sun are often visible due to the flow of plasma—charged particles—along the lines. According to theory, these magnetic lines should remain intact, but they are sometimes observed breaking and reconnecting with other lines. An interdisciplinary team of researchers suggests that turbulence may be the missing link. In their magnetohydrodynamic simulation, they found that the presence of chaotic turbulent motions made the magnetic line motion entirely unpredictable, whereas laminar flows behaved according to conventional flux-freezing theory. (Photo credit: NASA SDO; Research credit: G. Eyink et al.; via SpaceRef; submitted by jshoer)