Theno1geek

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Anonymous asked: 3, 4, 8, 14, 21, 32, 41, 105, 118, 122, 134!

3. Spiders, walking in to a place full of people, being alone in a dark room
4. Concerts, reading a good book, being able to sleep
8. Potato
14. Hahaha No.
21. 39
32. My dog
41. Yes
105. yes, not so long ago
118. No
122. Haha no
134. Nothing, maybe just an anxiety-free day

I’m angry with the fact that everyone i feel comfortable talking to lives hours away
I’m angry with the fact that my dad is going to miss my birthday again
I’m angry with the fact that i’m failing the people who believe in me
I’m angry with the fact that i don’t have the strength to keep pretending

I’m just so goddamn angry at everyone and everything, but most of all i’m angry with myself

Monty Python and the Holy Grail | The Tale of Brave Sir Robin

(Source: mostly-british-comedy, via reggiesloth)

(Source: deanwicnhester, via jared--the-moose)

(Source: winchestrbrothrs, via jared--the-moose)

shadowstep-of-bast:

edgebug:

I think that a lot of the reason Jarvis has become so human is because Tony treats him like he’s human. Tony talks to Jarvis in a very colloquial way. He says “you up?” when he knows damn well that Jarvis is operational. He says “throw a little hot-rod red in there” instead of “paint components x, y, and z with red paint #20.” Tony treats all his machinery like that—Dummy and You, especially—and Jarvis is no exception.

Jarvis has become much more human since Iron Man 1. He actually displayed emotions in Iron Man 3—specifically when he feared for Tony’s life, his voice sounded terribly frightened, and in instances like the second gif where he said “I need to sleep” and not “My battery is depleted.” Jarvis has grown and changed, as any self-aware creature does. He has become human because he is treated as such.

(Source: runningawaywithaspaceman, via jared--the-moose)

How do you run away from something that’s in your head?