-
Par sarah rain le 25 Avril 2016 à 21:14how far have you walked for men who’ve never held your feet in their laps?
how often have you bartered with bone, only to sell yourself short?
why do you find the unavailable so alluring?
where did it begin? what went wrong? and who made you feel so worthless?
if they wanted you, wouldn’t they have chosen you?
all this time, you were begging for love silently, thinking they couldn’t hear you, but they smelt it on you, you must have known that they could taste the desperate on your skin?
and what about the others that would do anything for you, why did you make them love you until you could not stand it?
how are you both of these women, both flighty and needful?
where did you learn this, to want what does not want you?
where did you learn this, to leave those that want to stay?— Warsan Shire, “Questions for the Woman I was Last Night”
votre commentaire -
Par sarah rain le 25 Avril 2016 à 17:24
Le chagrin est une souffrance de l'esprit mais c'est une souffrance surmontable
L'angoisse , en revanche, est bien plus subtile , plus crispante et affecte tous nos actes ,quels qu'ils soient
votre commentaire -
Par sarah rain le 25 Avril 2016 à 16:27
(click on the pictures to be able to read the text)
was trying to search for pictures related to the word " hurt" in weheartit and the first thing that popped to me was this ...
wish more websites have this option
all my respect to the creators of this website
votre commentaire -
-
-
-
-
Par sarah rain le 6 Juillet 2015 à 18:18
(click on the picture to read full article)
Graphic designer John Koenig has sought for years to fill holes in language that describe the emotions that we all feel, but fail to communicate. Since 2009, his website: The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows has been a “a compendium of invented words”, as he calls it. According to Koening, “Each original definition aims to fill a hole in the language — to give a name to emotions we all might experience but don’t yet have a word for. Each word actually means something etymologically, having been built from one of a dozen languages or renovated jargon.”
votre commentaire
Suivre le flux RSS des articles de cette rubrique
Suivre le flux RSS des commentaires de cette rubrique