Addicted to Life

"Once you taste the freedom the air's so sweet you don't want to go back you want the cold harsh air to keep hitting you and forever changing you because the worlds complex and there's infinite dimensions discovering them is my addiction"
firece

firece

(Source: themaddiejonesss)

~TRUE LOVE
The cutes out wiegh the hoots
The dos wiegh out the donts
Hope is constant weather
Happiness your normal song
The rights outwiegh the wrongs
Loving greater than thy self
Is the most enormous greif known
Warm hearts true fears
Opens your eyes to a world of peace.

overtheunivers:

life is art on @weheartit.com - http://whrt.it/XUqssy

overtheunivers:

life is art on @weheartit.com - http://whrt.it/XUqssy

jess-de-backs1:

thebohogarden.tumblr.

#freepeople

jess-de-backs1:

thebohogarden.tumblr.

#freepeople

I left my heart in San Francisco.

I left my heart in San Francisco.

(Source: left-handed-french)

immjustsayntho:

Thizz in peace furl

immjustsayntho:

Thizz in peace furl

dead-batman:

My name is Nicki, but you can call me Dre.

(Source: cynicismperfected)

idiosyncraticsounds:

Atmosphere - Guns & Cigarettes

Damn fine production from Ant.

I wanna bigger than Jesus and bigger than wrestling

Bigger than the Beatles and bigger than breast implants

I’m gonna be the biggest thing to hit these little kids

Bigger than guns, bigger than cigarettes

trinacenci:

I’m currently reading a great book called It’s Bigger Than Hip-Hop: The Rise of the Post Hip-Hop Generation by 29-year-old author, filmmaker, and college professor M.K. Asante, Jr. [who very much may be the next MLK Jr. in my opinion]. It’s about the horrible state of hip-hop today and what can be done to change and improve the future.  I felt like this quote from the book really spoke to me so I made a poster of it.

trinacenci:

I’m currently reading a great book called It’s Bigger Than Hip-Hop: The Rise of the Post Hip-Hop Generation by 29-year-old author, filmmaker, and college professor M.K. Asante, Jr. [who very much may be the next MLK Jr. in my opinion]. It’s about the horrible state of hip-hop today and what can be done to change and improve the future.  I felt like this quote from the book really spoke to me so I made a poster of it.