Seoul, S. Korea
Game of Thrones Daily
noise dept.

let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Kiana Khansmith
Show & Tell

ellievsbear
d e v o n
Fai_Ryy

oozey mess
RMH
Jules of Nature

â
Cosmic Funnies

hello vonnie

Andulka
will byers stan first human second
Mike Driver
NASA

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Colombia

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United Kingdom

seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from Spain

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from United States
seen from South Africa
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
@jesleo
Seoul, S. Korea

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Jeju-do, S. Korea
This is 100% how anxiety works
honestly why does Mr. Darcy, a man from the late 1700s and early 1800s, understand that an independent female is an awesome thing more than people from 2017? also he respects her decision to reject him?
#because he was written by a woman (via @sometimesrosy)
Busan, South Korea

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Hong Kong, HK, China
Osaka/Kyoto, Japan
Hanoi, Halong Bay, Vietnam
IUâs 4th Album âPaletteâ - ě´ëŚěę˛ Dear Name
âëěě´ ę¸¸ěë ě§ęł ě´ëě´ ë°¤ ěŹě´ëĄ 쥰ěŠí ěŹëźě§ ë¤ ěěě ěě ě¤ë 기ë¤ëŚ´ę˛ ë°ëě ë뼟 ě°žěę˛ ëł´ě´ě§ ěëëĄ ëŠě´ë ę°ě ě´ ěë˛˝ě´ ëëë ęłłěźëĄ.â
Dear Name - IU.
So, Iâve decided to give Kpop a chance and was recommended IUâs newest album. Â Despite the fact that I still canât quite understand it and still have a hard time hearing what sheâs saying, I love it.
Letâs Talk
Iâve always been the type to fear the worst in any situation. Â Growing up, Iâd somehow learned that the easiest way to avoid pain or failure was to plan for the worst - always the worst. Â Back then I thought this was just playing it smart: pragmatic planners would always know what they were up against because they had control over their lives. And by having the lowest expectation for anything, one could never be disappointed. Â In hindsight, I realize that this wasnât the smartest way to approach life. Â By planning for the worst, I somehow trained myself into believing that it was always lurking around the corner. Iâve lost great opportunities in life and love because I always believed in idea the that something bad would inevitably happen. Â Happiness wasnât meant to be long-term. Â In the end, avoiding failure always induced it. Â Instead of being stronger, I seemed to be scared of everything.
Iâm not sure how my anxiety started, but I know Iâve had it for quite some time. When I was a child, I had moments where I would lie on my bed with my eyes closed trying to envision the pain I was feeling in my head.  Sometimes it was a tea cup that would overflow; in an entirely black room, I would see an ornate porcelain teacup sitting on a phantom table somewhere.  Drips of water would fall from nowhere into it, and eventually it would get the point where the water would sit precariously at its brim.  It never actually overflowed; I donât know what would have happened if it ever did.  The cup had always magically accommodated more liquid, but each time a drop fell, I felt a throbbing in my head like it was going to split open and all that collected water would come rushing out. Other times, it was a ball - a black, hollow rubber ball.  A bell would ding, and it each time it did, that ball would get slightly bigger.  I remember lying there, hoping it would stop growing and feeling sicker as time went on.  It was only in my late twenties that I realized that these were severe child migraines that seemed to be spurred on after I was nervous about something at school or if I was upset, which as an emotional child, seemed to happen often.  Thankfully sleepwalking occurrences didnât last long for me. Coming to terms with my anxiety took a while. For a long time didnât want to believe I had it at all. I was different from a lot of other kids, and I knew it.  I think in some ways, they did, too.  I was too quiet, too sensitive, too introspective to ever be one of the cool kids. However, despite all this, I refused to believe that there was anything wrong with me. I was just too negative, and I had to fix that on my own because there was nothing wrong with me; what was wrong was the way I perceived the world.  âGet over it,â Iâd tell myself. âSuck it up.â  And while those two motivational speeches can work from time-to-time, theyâre only really band-aid solutions to a problem that has been ongoing since childhood.  Being older and learning tactics on how to approach my anxious thoughts has been really helpful in battling negative ideas.  It wasnât until just last year that I sought counselling after losing my grandmother, my apartment, a romantic interest, and - what felt like - my independence all in one go; my brain and body just couldnât take it anymore.  I was ready to accept any help I could get before it got worse.  It has been an ongoing process, some of it unsuccessful, but overall a positive result.  Iâm not always scared of whatâs around the proverbial corner, but at times I do like to cautiously take a peek now and then. Sometimes Iâm apologetic for who I am, though I know it really isnât anything to be ashamed of.  Iâve come to like the emotional, neurotic side of me, but I know that not everyone can or wants to understand it. It can be difficult at times for anyone Iâve let into my life.  Thatâs mostly what I tend to apologize for: Iâm sorry I canât be someone you can label; Iâm sorry for being complex.  But, while I do feel bad at times for having thrown someone I care for in a loop, at the end of the day, Iâm not entirely sorry.  Iâm not sorry for the way my mind works or how my heart feels.  Iâm not sorry that I cry.  Not sorry for being the human that I am. Iâm just not.  I know that this sound selfish, but it thatâs ok.  Sometimes I need to remind myself that being selfish can also be an example of good mental health.  So, no, I wonât apologize.  But I will promise something: I wonât ever take advantage of my anxiety - I wonât use it as a crutch.  I wonât take advantage of you, either.  If youâre in my life, itâs because I want you there, and I care about you.  So, while I wonât apologize for having anxiety, I also wonât stop trying to be a better person, and I hope youâll be there to support my growth as well as yours.  I hope thatâs enough for you.  Because it is for me. Â

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Itâs okay to put yourself first :))
đđđ
A bit of a Public Service Announcement, this is.
Magic!
More on wordsnquotes
This is beautiful.
Iâm away for a little bit, and all of a sudden I have a crapload of pornbots following me. Â Why are you so obsessed with me, bots?!Â
A Single Man (2009) dir. Tom Ford
RELEVANT

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Watch: Latina journalist Maria Hinojosa epically shuts down a condescending Trump adviser on the word âillegalsâ
EAT HIM ALIVE
Iâve been contemplating for several days something, and Iâve been trying to distill it into meaning, and put nice little bullet points on how this relates to things that have been bugging me about some common Discourses Iâve been seeing, but at the end, I only really have a story. So here, have a story.
About ten years ago, sometime in the eventful 2006-2007 George W. Bush-ruled hellscape of my identity development, I was just starting to figure out how I felt about my conservative upbringing (not great) and whether I was some brand of queer (probably, but too scared to think about what brand for too long). I was working as a server at a popular Italian-inspired sit-down restaurant that was the closest thing my tiny South Carolinian town had to âfancyâ at the time but isnât really fancy at all.
The host brought a party of four men to one of my tables. It was hard to tell their ages, but my guess is they were teenagers or in their early 20s in the 1980s. Mid-40s, at the time. It was standard to ask if anyone at the table was celebrating anything, so I did. They said they were business partners celebrating a great business deal and would like a bottle of wine.
It was a fairly busy night so I didnât have a LOT of time to spend at their table, but they were nice guys. They were polite and friendly to me, they didnât hit on me (as most men were prone to do â sometimes even in front of their girlfriends, a story Iâll tell later if anyone wants me to), and they were racking up a hell of a tab that was going to make my managers happy, so I checked on them as often as I could.
Toward the end of their second bottle of wine, as they were finishing their entrees, I stopped at the table and asked if they wanted any more drinks or dessert or coffee. They were well and truly tipsy by now, giggling, leaning back in their chairs â but so, so careful not to touch each other when anyone was near the table.
Theyâre all on the fence about dessert, so being a good server, I offered to bring out the dessert menu so they could glance it over and make a decision, âSince youâre celebrating.â
âSheâs right!â one of the men said, far too emphatically for a conversation on dessert. âItâs your anniversary! You should get dessert!â
It was like a movie. The whole table went absolutely silent. The clank of silverware at the next table sounded supernaturally loud. Dean Martin warbled âThatâs Amoreâ in some distorted alternate universe where the rest of the restaurant went on acting like this one tipsy man hadnât just shattered their carefully crafted cover story and blurted out in the middle of a tiny, South Carolina town, surrounded by conservatives and rednecks, that they were gay men celebrating a relationship milestone.Â
And I didnât know what I was yet, but I knew I wasnât an asshole, and I knew these men were family, and I felt their panic like a monster breathing down all our necks. Itâs impossible to emphasize how palpably terrified they were, and how justified their terror was, and how much I wanted them to be happy.
So I did the only thing I knew to do. I said, âCongratulations! How many years?â
The man whoâd spoken up burst into tears. His partner stood up and wrapped me in the tightest, warmest hug Iâve ever had â and Iâve never liked being touched by strangers, but this was different, and I hugged him back.
âThank you,â he whispered, halfway to crying himself. âThank you so much.â
When he finally let go of me and sat back down, they finally got around to telling me they were, in fact, two couples on a double date, and both celebrating anniversaries. Fifteen years for one of them, I think, and a few years off for the other. Itâs hard to remember. It was a jumble of tears and laughter and trembling relief for all of us. They got more relaxed. They started holding hands â under the table, out of sight of anyone but me, but happy.
They did get dessert, and I spent more time at their table, letting them tell me stories about how they met and how they started dating and their lives together, and feeling this odd sense of belonging, like Iâd just discovered a missing branch of my family.
When they finally left, all four of them took turns standing up and hugging me, and all four of them reached into their wallets to tip me. I tried to wave them off but they insisted, and the first man whoâd hugged me handed me forty dollars and said, âPlease. You are an angel. Please take this.â
After they left I hid in the bathroom and cried because I couldnât process all my thoughts and feelings.
Fast forward to three days ago, when my own partner and I showed up to a dinner reservation at a fancy-casual restaurant to celebrate our fifth anniversary. The whole time I was getting ready to leave, there was a worry in the back of my mind. The internet web form had asked if the reservation was celebrating anything in particular, and Iâd selected âAnniversary.â I stood in the bathroom blow-drying my hair, wondering what I would do if we showed up, two women, and the host or the server took one look at us and the âAnniversaryâ designation on our reservation and refused to serve us. Itâs not as ubiquitous anymore, but weâre still in the south, and these things still happen. Eight years of progressive leadership is over, and weâve got another conservative despot in office whoâs emboldening assholes everywhere.
It was on my mind the whole fifteen minutes it took to drive there. I didnât mention it to my partner because I didnât want to cast a shadow over the occasion. More than that, I didnât want to jinx us, superstitious bastard that I am.
We walked into the restaurant. I told the hostess we had a reservation, gave her my last name.
She looked at her screen, then looked back at us. She smiled, broadly and genuinely, and said, âHappy anniversary! Your table is right this way.â
Our server greeted us, said, âI heard you were celebrating!â
âItâs our anniversary,â Kellie said, and our server gasped, beaming.
âThatâs great! Congratulations! How many years?â
And I finally breathed a sigh of relief, and I thought about those men at that restaurant ten years ago. I hope theyâre still safe and happy, and I hope we all get the satisfaction of helping the world keep blooming into something thatâs not so unrelentingly terrible all the time.