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Every year is getting shorter never seem to find the time.
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Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
You fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way.
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your home town
Waiting for someone or something to show you the way.
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Posted on May 29, 2012 via si, otra vez :c with 316 notes
Source: fefelipeoezi
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(via coffeeblooded)
Posted on May 29, 2012 via wejustcametosayhello with 4,365 notes
Source: wejustcametosayhello
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(via derriere-un-masque)
Posted on May 27, 2012 via UBEO with 9,720 notes
Source: ubeo
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(via theanimalblog)
Posted on May 27, 2012 via Head Like an Orange with 4,778 notes
Source: headlikeanorange
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TABARFUCK D’OSTI D’CALICJOIWJRMJJJJJJJJJJJJJJION RMOURYHI(UWW***9wy9wynuhNguONAUGOAYOGtiuGuio oiUOGTOIUGWIGOWUIG OIUG igiUGOIUGHOIUGifjion fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck wufhwifuh nih fuwhufhfwuhfwufwifwhifw89w79q87-986q9866q0f868q6f87yf0897eyf0n80n8c07fy0emg98enyg8e7wgynw9e8gy 98 un098ewyf0w 9h wefhfu fnhfuu h uio oh ueof calice fuckc oiuef9iue fpm9e8uf p8efef9efu 978eye78yef87efy http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcOJbcMuJYs&feature=related
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Angels on the sideline,
Puzzled and amused.
Why did Father give these humans free will?
Now they’re all confused.(via bringitcloser)Posted on May 17, 2012 via Bring It Closer with 1 note
Source: bringitcloser
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Posted on April 11, 2012 via »» ąśtяФqῧeєḟ with 987 notes
Source: astroqueef
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Pictures of Saturn
1. A psychedelic view of Saturn. A composite image made from pictures taken by the Cassini spacecraft from a distance of approximately 511,000 miles (822,000 kilometers) from Saturn.
2. Saturn, The Lord of the Rings. A natural-color photograph of Saturn and its rings shot by Cassini spacecraft’s wide-angle camera from a distance of approximately 764,000 miles (1.23 million kilometers) from Saturn.
3. The Spectacular Rings of Saturn. A false-color image of Saturn’s main rings made by combining data from Cassini’s ultraviolet imaging spectrograph.
4. Saturn’s moon Rhea orbiting the giant gas-planet. Rhea is 949 miles (1,528 kilometers) across and it is the second largest moon of Saturn. This picture was shot by the Cassini spacecraft from a distance of about 700,000 miles (1.2 million kilometers) from Saturn and 422,000 miles (679,000 kilometers) from Rhea.
5. Saturn in infrared. An infrared view of Saturn and its rings captured by the Cassini spacecraft from a vantage point located 900,000 miles (1.4 million kilometers) above the planet’s northern latitudes.
6. Rhea, gliding in front of Saturn. Captured by the Cassini spacecraft.
7. Saturn in false color. A false color, near-infrared, Hubble Space Telescope image of Saturn. The varying compositions and heights of its cloud layers are indicated by different colors. The clouds are thought to consist mainly of ammonia ice crystals. Tethys and Dione, two of Saturn’s moon can be seen as tiny dots in the upper right and lower left portions of the image, respectively.
8. The Dark Side of Saturn/Saturn Eclipse. A photograph of Saturn eclipsing the Sun, captured by the Cassini spacecraft on September 15, 2006. The dark side of Saturn is partially lit by sunlight reflected from its own rings. The rings themselves are lit by slight forward scattering of sunlight. In the high resolution image, the Earth is visible as a pale blue dot just above the bright main rings, on the left side of the image.
Credits: NASA, ESA, JPL/Caltech
(via scinerds)

