
Just keep that in mind!!
This is me!
My aim is to be happy, so that is what I try to be. A lot of the time it doesn't work; but I'm trying!
Theme by Caroline Tucker.
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Brno, Czech Republic / Guest spots in Berlin, Germany
Email: mariekraus3@gmail.com
untitled by Lauris Love on Flickr.
Evening Skies by .monodrift on Flickr.

Just keep that in mind!!


Pretty colours on my ceiling ^_^ ..now to try and get myself out of bed……#morning #bed #ceiling #colours #pretty #red #green #yellow #tired #cambridge (at Cherry Hinton)
Crying myself to sleep is becoming the norm again… :’(
(via fuckingdreamy)

(Source: s-senpaai, via oddlittlebird)
— Libba Bray, The Sweet Far Thing (via ugh)
(Source: larmoyante, via katewils)
Nothing beats this kind of intimacy, when it’s about 3am and it feels like you’re the only two people in the world. There are no words or intentions, you’re just happy lying next to each other knowing that you never want to do this with anyone else. Just to consider that you’re each, essentially, a bag of bones and organs and muscles, and yet you’re both so much more than that because you’ve found each other and suddenly everything makes so much sense.
(Source: annieherweg, via arijuanna)
Unusual Weather-related Photographs
Top: is an image no one would be happy to replicate. Two seconds after Mary McQuilken snapped this shot of her brothers posing on top of Moro Rock in Sequoia National Park, California a powerful lightning bolt struck them. A hiker just outside the frame was killed and Sean (on the left) eventually also died from complications associated with his injuries. Michael McQuilken (on the right) survived. The family was hiking in the Sierra Nevada during August 1975 when the incident occurred. Photo by Mary McQuilken.
Bottom: The ‘pole of cold’ region in northeastern Siberia is the coldest permanently inhabited place on earth, especially the region centered around Oymyakon and Verkhoyansk where January temperatures average around -65°F. During the Soviet era children underwent ultraviolet treatment to make up for the long, dark, and cold Siberian winters with the consequent lack of sunlight. Photo by photographer Mark S. Wexler.