Iâd do it over and over and over again

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@jessentertainme
Iâd do it over and over and over again

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Proto Zoa - Supernova Girl
         Happy 37th birthday, Harry James Potter! (b. 31 July, 1980)
I plan on being an engineer at NASA, but I canât do that without taking them classes at that all-white high school, and I canât change the color of my skin. So I have no choice, but to be the first, which I canât do without you, sir. Your Honor, out of all the cases you gonna hear today, which one is gonna matter 100 years from now? Which one is gonna make you the first?
make me choose: @eerinaceousâ asked sheâs the man or bring it on

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friend
that deer though like âam I high or are you fucking seeing this too?â
Wife sent me this pic a coworker took in house in Connecticut and I just wanted to share
Black women are so encouraging. This is simply magical!đ #BlackGirlsMagicÂ
Thatâs mad beautiful â¨
way to break your old manâs heart kids ;)

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this McCree snuck up behind me while I was setting up turrets and said basically right in my ear âIâm your huckleberry.âÂ
so I had Symmetra say âWhat a frightening thought.â and he replied with ââŚAcknowledged.â and walked away
In class today, Trump was somehow brought up and someone said that Trump was a neo-nazi and my professor was like, âTrump hasnât ever said he was a neo-naziâ and another kid said, âI was still gay before I started calling myself gay!â and realized what he said and he looked just mortified but it was the greatest response to anything Iâve ever heard
what I love about overwatch is that the game is just as much about protecting your teammates as killing the other team!!
my twitter
im crying.. im watching this vet show and someone had moved from australia to china and everyone was afraid of his dog because she was so big but the vet put her in a lil panda hoodie and no one was scared anymore and some people even came up to pet her..
look at her..Â
Everyone has the date of their death tattooed on their arm at birth, however yours just says âTOMORROWâ and has said that all your life.
The confusion and anxiety started when I was first born; my parents were both in tears, and all of the doctors offered their condolences. The next day, I was alive and well, much to the confusion of everyone involved. Maybe it was a mistake? Or I would die the next day instead. But I kept living. My parents taught me to hide it, to lie about it. I always covered the tattoo up with long sleeves or âbandagesâ during the summer. My mother had panic attacks regularly and rarely slept. My father insisted on always knowing where I was going, and constantly checked up on me. I was never left alone. Eventually, when I was old enough to understand what the tattoo meant, and what death was, the anxiety hit me too. I was constantly worried, sometimes staring at the words late at night when I was alone in bed. It didnât make any sense to me. It didnât make sense to anyone. But my family and I had come to the agreement that under no circumstances was anyone to find out what the word on my arm really was. Throughout the years of my life, the anxiety would come and go - why would I die now? But moments of fear still passed through me whenever I got into a car, or a friend dared me to go on a roller coaster. Some people called me a coward. I wasnât a coward - I was confused. I was just trying to live. A part of me knew I should be grateful, grateful for living so long for no justified reason. But I was too confused to care. That is, until one day in my philosophy class, when we started discussing famous phrases and the meanings behind them. Class was normal - a little dull, a little quiet, but interesting enough. Phrases entered and exited the discussion, and I occasionally listened to the discussion. About ten minutes before we were suppose to leave, the professor asked for one last phrase. A girl behind me raised her hand. âYes? Whatâs your phrase?â âMy phrase is âtomorrow never comes.ââ Those words hit me, consumed me, making me struggle to breath. Class went on as normal as I sat there, making sense of the words. How had I never heard that phrase before? I suppose my parents protected me from it. But how? It seems like a simple phrase that could be thrown around without anyone making much out of it. But then again, I suppose thereâs really not many opportunities to use it. Tomorrow never comes. Tomorrow never comes. Tomorrow never comes. What did that mean for me? I sat through the rest of my classes, thinking and barely acknowledging my lessons, eventually reaching the end of the school day. I reached into my pocket, pulled out my phone, and went to text my dad the news. The statement. But as I typed the words, the realization hit me.
Everyone else had dates written on their arm. Dates like âSeptember 17, 2068.â Or âAugust 23, 2100.â But tomorrow isnât a date. Tomorrow isnât a date. âTomorrow never comes.â Iâm immortal.

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Everyone has the date of their death tattooed on their arm at birth, however yours just says âTOMORROWâ and has said that all your life.
The confusion and anxiety started when I was first born; my parents were both in tears, and all of the doctors offered their condolences. The next day, I was alive and well, much to the confusion of everyone involved. Maybe it was a mistake? Or I would die the next day instead. But I kept living. My parents taught me to hide it, to lie about it. I always covered the tattoo up with long sleeves or âbandagesâ during the summer. My mother had panic attacks regularly and rarely slept. My father insisted on always knowing where I was going, and constantly checked up on me. I was never left alone. Eventually, when I was old enough to understand what the tattoo meant, and what death was, the anxiety hit me too. I was constantly worried, sometimes staring at the words late at night when I was alone in bed. It didnât make any sense to me. It didnât make sense to anyone. But my family and I had come to the agreement that under no circumstances was anyone to find out what the word on my arm really was. Throughout the years of my life, the anxiety would come and go - why would I die now? But moments of fear still passed through me whenever I got into a car, or a friend dared me to go on a roller coaster. Some people called me a coward. I wasnât a coward - I was confused. I was just trying to live. A part of me knew I should be grateful, grateful for living so long for no justified reason. But I was too confused to care. That is, until one day in my philosophy class, when we started discussing famous phrases and the meanings behind them. Class was normal - a little dull, a little quiet, but interesting enough. Phrases entered and exited the discussion, and I occasionally listened to the discussion. About ten minutes before we were suppose to leave, the professor asked for one last phrase. A girl behind me raised her hand. âYes? Whatâs your phrase?â âMy phrase is âtomorrow never comes.ââ Those words hit me, consumed me, making me struggle to breath. Class went on as normal as I sat there, making sense of the words. How had I never heard that phrase before? I suppose my parents protected me from it. But how? It seems like a simple phrase that could be thrown around without anyone making much out of it. But then again, I suppose thereâs really not many opportunities to use it. Tomorrow never comes. Tomorrow never comes. Tomorrow never comes. What did that mean for me? I sat through the rest of my classes, thinking and barely acknowledging my lessons, eventually reaching the end of the school day. I reached into my pocket, pulled out my phone, and went to text my dad the news. The statement. But as I typed the words, the realization hit me.
Everyone else had dates written on their arm. Dates like âSeptember 17, 2068.â Or âAugust 23, 2100.â But tomorrow isnât a date. Tomorrow isnât a date. âTomorrow never comes.â Iâm immortal.