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- 704
"And when at last you find someone to whom you feel you can pour out your soul, you stop in shock at the words you utter— they are so rusty, so ugly, so meaningless and feeble from being kept in the small cramped dark inside you so long."
- Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath  (via the-procession-moves-on)

(Source: liquidnight, via herewithmyabsentfriend)

me: i’m gonna study when i get home
me: i’ll just study before i go to bed
me: i’ll just study in the morning
me: i’ll just study on the way to school
me: i’ll just study in this class
me: i’ll just study in the hall
me: i’ll just study before the test
me: i’ll just study during the test

(Source: laheymore, via un-unreal)

"I want to explain how exhausted I am. Even in my dreams. How I wake up tired. How I’m being drowned by some kind of black wave."
- Elizabeth Wurtzel   (via anditslove)

(Source: winterkristall, via anditslove)

- 27
"I always feel when I meet people that I am lower than all, and that they all take me for a buffon; so I say let me play the buffoon, for you are, every one of you, stupider and lower than I."
- Fyodor Dostoyevski, The Brothers Karamazov (via brandedbyflips)

(via herewithmyabsentfriend)

- 94
"I hadn’t understood how days could be both long and short at the same time: long to live through, maybe, but so drawn out that they ended up flowing into one another. They lost their names. Only ‘yesterday’ and ‘tomorrow’ still had any meaning for me."
- Albert Camus (via requiemforthepast)

(via herewithmyabsentfriend)

- 483
"For a long time, she held a special place in my heart. I kept this special place just for her, like a “Reserved” sign on a quiet corner table in a restaurant. Despite the fact that I was sure I’d never see her again."
- Haruki Murakami (South of the Border, West of the Sun)

(Source: quotellection, via mayqueenofmoho)

"He loved her in a subtle kind of way. It wasn’t the kind of love you see in movies, with swelling music and giant gestures and running through the streets to catch a departing train. It wasn’t the kind of love that Byron or Shakespeare wrote about, with flowery language and hyperbole and iambic pentameter. It was still and deep, like water that you might mistake for shallow if you just watched the surface. It was entirely his, not dependent on her own feelings for him, and it would still be there whether she, or him, or everyone else on the world disappeared. It was a subtle kind of love, but it was true."
- Jake Christie, Small Stories (via larmoyante)

(via swanss)

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