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danny | 27 | đź’›

About me

hey there my name is christina!

i guess if you’re here then you want to know more about me so here goes:

  • my preferred pronouns are she/her/hers
  • i play trombone in like a billion different bands
  • trombones are like my family
  • at this point i’m like 90% positive i’m asexual
  • but i’m either aromantic or panromantic
  • depends on your definition of “romantic attraction” tbh
  • i want some sort of a relationship though so there’s that????
  • i refuse to accept indigo as a color on the visible spectrum
  • i’m a sucker for russian communism jokes
  • uh i know 225 digits of pi cause i’m a loser
  • i also know the greek and cyrillic alphabets cause i’m a massive loser
  • i go to college at RPI like the fabulous nerd i am
  • i’m a biochem/biophysics major
  • this is more like a list of christina trivia isn’t it oops sorry

BONUS the three quickest ways to my heart:

  • piano covers
  • ceLLO COVERS
  • FERRERO ROCHERS

pls talk to me i like friends but i’m too nervous to make them

thismandotorg:

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compilation

scrumpygoat:

taffydragonblog:

Gonna tell my grandnieces and grandnephews this was Barbenheimer

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theawkwardterrier:

I think one of the reasons that the fakeout in The Long Goodbye Job works so well is also one of the reasons I love Leverage as a show. Yes, we’re so deeply invested in these characters that the idea of them coming to harm is heartbreaking, but it feels believable because we’ve been conditioned, by media, but also by our own lived reality, that no one can always win. Maybe you make a mistake, forget or overlook something, maybe you’re outsmarted, maybe your luck simply runs out, but at some point you will come to the end of the line. (”Give all of us…the strength to remember that life is so very fragile. We are all vulnerable. And we will all, at some point in our lives… fall. We will all fall,” says Coach Taylor.)

And amid the competence porn, the show doesn’t shy away from that very human aspect of it all, gives us Hardison buried alive, Parker’s childhood and its lasting effects on her, Eliot’s violent past, Sophie’s uncertainty about herself. The show gives us Nate, troubled and gray and full of hubris and flawed all to hell - couldn’t save his father, couldn’t save his son. But it also gives us this, ends with this: the hammer never drops. The villains do not win in the end, do not come close to winning. This unlikely, outcast group, this family, wins, they keep winning, and sometimes, in shows like this, we’re allowed to have faith in that.

sketiana:

i said ‘explain physics to me like youre in love with me’ and after a while of quiet he went 'everything sings’. so i get it now

acid-headache:

A digital illustration of Wolfwood and Milly from Trigun. Their canon outfits have been redesigned for a more cowboy look—including chaps, fringe, boots with spurs, and cowboy hats. They are standing back to back in the middle of a gunfight. Motion lines on both sides of the composition indicate bullets flying towards them and clouds of dust are kicked up at their feet. Milly is firing her stungun with one hand and is using the other to hold her hat onto her head. Wolfwood fires Punisher from his shoulder and holds a sawed off shotgun in his other hand. They are backlit by a binary sunset and tall rock formations are visible on the horizon. The illustration is colored with saturated reds, oranges, and yellows with cool toned shadows.ALT

i’m afraid you’ve yee’d your last haw

herssian:

wormless behavior from some of you. absolute lack of dirt and burrowing. rethink 

punkpillywiggin:

i love being friends with bitches who won’t shut up. i never know what to talk about. please tell me your whole life story and then infodump to me about warrior cats or greek history

cloysterbell:

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It’s just not the same.
You’re right. It’s better.