be brave and ask me anything...  

Amanda▫️21▫️New York City▫️Princess


morthils:

ranger-truth:

sushinfood:

great-tweets:

image

watch the whole thing, i’m begging you

this is NUTS

Reblogging this again because I found out he’s actually the drummer in an all-mascot metal band called Charamel.

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wait a second

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(Source: twitter.com, via lubricates)

— 4 years ago with 502012 notes

lesbiansassemble:

chuzzus:

welcome to the age of female superheroes

this video is my sexuality

(via inferno-lily)

— 5 years ago with 213112 notes

twitchytyrant:

I can’t believe he killed Harrison Ford twice

(via sorry)

— 5 years ago with 588272 notes

gosh:

“If flowers can grow through blankets of melting snow, there is hope for me.”

Tyler Knott Gregson, Haiku on Love

(via
adrenaline
)

(via gosh)

— 5 years ago with 115346 notes
disparition:
“ afloydianslip:
“ fencehopping:
“ Electron microscope video of a needle on a vinyl record.
”
H O W
like you can tell me all you want how the sound is stored in the grooves but fucking H O W
HOW DOES THAT GET INTO THE NEEDLE
HOW ARE THE...

disparition:

afloydianslip:

fencehopping:

Electron microscope video of a needle on a vinyl record.

H O W 

like you can tell me all you want how the sound is stored in the grooves but fucking H O W 

HOW DOES THAT GET INTO THE NEEDLE

HOW ARE THE VIBRATIONS TURNED INTO MUSIC THAT YOU CAN HEAR???

H O W

The vibrations aren’t “turned into” music, they are music. When vibrations occur inside your inner ear, your brain processes this as sound.

The grooves in a record are an analogy for these vibrations, a method of remembering them so that they can be recreated later on. 

Put your hand on a speaker while loud music is playing and you’ll feel the vibrations. Those are exactly the same vibrations happening inside your ear when you hear the music. 

But how do you capture that? 

Take a surface that vibrates strongly when a sound is played, like the skin of a drumhead for example. Connect that surface to a little tool - when sound causes the surface to vibrate, the tool digs a little bit into some wax, leaving behind a pattern that matches - in proportion - the vibrations of the surface caused by the sound. This is your analogy (hence: analog music). 

Now, when there’s no sound playing, you run that little tool back over the pattern. This causes the skin to vibrate again, this time in response to the tool running over the pattern instead of because of an external sound. The vibrations should match, proportionally, the original vibrations of the music.. and thus these new vibrations, if you were to amplify them, would be a recreation or “recording” of the original music. 

That’s oversimplified of course and things have changed a lot since the days of wax, but that is very basically how the process of recording music worked at first, and the general idea of how sound gets from a groove in a record into your brain. 

(via hijerking)

— 5 years ago with 259520 notes

theladychelsea:

honeyyvanille:

Sometimes you need to remind yourself that you were the one who carried you through the heartache. You are the one who sits with the cold body on the shower floor, and picks it up. You are the one who feeds it, who clothes it, who tucks it into bed, and you should be proud of that. Having the strength to take care of yourself when everyone around you is trying to bleed you dry, that is the strongest thing in the universe.

I absolutely needed to read that.

(via beautifullydxmned)

— 5 years ago with 1179755 notes

gosh:

“If flowers can grow through blankets of melting snow, there is hope for me.”

Tyler Knott Gregson, Haiku on Love

(via
adrenaline
)

(via gosh)

— 5 years ago with 115346 notes

manuel-jacinto:

Roman Holiday (1953), dir. William Wyler

By all means, Rome. I will cherish my visit here in memory as long as I live.

(via bestfunny)

— 5 years ago with 5393 notes

parksandwreckreation:

why would they ever delete this scene

(via lubricates)

— 5 years ago with 416782 notes

lookthroughmylookingglass:

angel-baez:

this is way too fucking relatable

This is a KIDS show?!?

(via spongebobssquarepants)

— 5 years ago with 423788 notes